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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Musicians of To-Day, by Romain Rolland
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Musicians of To-Day
+
+Author: Romain Rolland
+
+Commentator: Claude Landi
+
+Translator: Mary Blaiklock
+
+Release Date: August 7, 2005 [EBook #16467]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MUSICIANS OF TO-DAY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Newman, Chuck Greif and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MUSICIANS OF TO-DAY
+
+BY
+
+ROMAIN ROLLAND
+
+AUTHOR OF "JEAN-CHRISTOPHE"
+
+TRANSLATED BY
+
+MARY BLAIKLOCK
+
+WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY
+
+CLAUDE LANDI
+
+[Illustration: Decorative]
+
+NEW YORK
+
+HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
+
+1915
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+BERLIOZ
+
+WAGNER:
+
+"Siegfried"
+
+"Tristan"
+
+CAMILLE SAINT-SAËNS
+
+VINCENT D'INDY
+
+RICHARD STRAUSS
+
+HUGO WOLF
+
+DON LORENZO PEROSI
+
+FRENCH AND GERMAN MUSIC
+
+CLAUDE DEBUSSY:
+
+"Pelléas et Mélisande"
+
+THE AWAKENING: A SKETCH OF THE MUSICAL MOVEMENT IN PARIS SINCE 1870
+
+Paris and Music
+
+Musical Institutions before 1870
+
+New Musical Institutions
+
+The Present Condition of French Music
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+
+It is perhaps fitting that the series of volumes comprising _The
+Musician's Bookshelf_ should be inaugurated by the present collection of
+essays. To the majority of English readers the name of that strange and
+forceful personality, Romain Rolland, is known only through his
+magnificent, intimate record of an artist's life and aspirations,
+embracing ten volumes, _Jean-Christophe_. This is not the place in which
+to discuss that masterpiece. A few biographical facts concerning the
+author may not, however, be out of place here.
+
+Romain Rolland is forty-eight years old. He was born on January 29,
+1866, at Clamecy (Nièvre), France. He came very early under the
+influence of Tolstoy and Wagner and displayed a remarkable critical
+faculty. In 1895 (at the age of twenty-nine) we find him awarded the
+coveted Grand Prix of the Académie Française for his work _Histoire de
+l'Opéra en Europe avant Lulli et Scarlatti_, and in the same year he
+sustained, before the faculty of the Sorbonne--where he now occupies the
+chair of musical criticism--a remarkable dissertation on _The Origin
+of_ _the Modern Lyrical Drama_--his thesis for the Doctorate. This, in
+reality, is a vehement protest against the indifference for the Art of
+Music which, up to that time, had always been displayed by the
+University. In 1903 he published a remarkable _Life of Beethoven_,
+followed by a _Life of Hugo Wolf_ in 1905. The present volume, together
+with its companion, _Musiciens d'Autrefois_, appeared in 1908. Both
+form remarkable essays and reveal a consummate and most intimate
+knowledge of the life and works of our great contemporaries. A just
+estimate of a composer's work is not to be arrived at without a study of
+his works and of the conditions under which these were produced. To
+take, for instance, the case of but one of the composers treated in this
+volume, Hector Berlioz. No composer has been so misunderstood, so
+vilified as he, simply because those who have written about him, either
+wilfully or through ignorance, have grossly misrepresented him.
+
+The essay on Berlioz, in the present volume, reveals a true insight into
+the personality of this unfortunate and great artist, and removes any
+false misconceptions which unsympathetic and superficial handling may
+have engendered. Indeed, the same introspective faculty is displayed in
+all the other essays which form this volume, which, it is believed, will
+prove of the greatest value not only to the professional student, but
+also to the _intelligent listener_, for whom the present series of
+volumes has been primarily planned. We hear much, nowadays, of the value
+of "Musical Appreciation." It is high time that something was done to
+educate our audiences and to dispel the hitherto prevalent fallacy that
+Music need not be regarded seriously. We do not want more creative
+artists, more executants; the world is full of them--good, bad and
+indifferent--but we _do_ want more _intelligent listeners_.
+
+I do not think it is an exaggeration to assert that the majority of
+listeners at a high-class concert or recital are absolutely bored. How
+can it be otherwise, when the composers represented are mere names to
+them? Why should the general public appreciate a Bach fugue, an
+intricate symphony or a piece of chamber-music? Do we professional
+musicians appreciate the technique of a wonderful piece of sculpture, of
+an equally wonderful feat of engineering or even of a miraculous
+surgical operation? It may be argued that an analogy between sculpture,
+engineering, surgery and music is absurd, because the three former do
+not appeal to the masses in the same manner as music does. Precisely: it
+is because of this universal appeal on the part of music that the public
+should be educated to _listen_ to _good_ music; that they should be
+given, in a general way, a chance to acquaint themselves with the laws
+underlying the "Beautiful in Music" and should be shown the demands
+which a right appreciation of the Art makes upon the Intellect and the
+Emotions.
+
+And, surely, such a "desideratum" may best be effected by a careful
+perusal of the manuals to be included in the present series. It is
+incontestable that the reader of the following pages--apart from a
+knowledge of the various musical forms, of orchestration, etc.--all of
+which will be duly treated in successive volumes--will be in a better
+position to appreciate the works of the several composers to which he
+may be privileged to listen. The last essay, especially, will be read
+with interest to-day, when we may hope to look forward to a cessation of
+race-hatred and distrust, and to what a writer in the _Musical Times_
+(September, 1914) has called, "a new sense of the emotional solidarity
+of mankind. From that sense alone," he adds, "can the real music of the
+future be born."
+
+ CLAUDE LANDI.
+
+
+
+
+MUSICIANS OF TO-DAY
+
+BERLIOZ
+
+I
+
+
+It may seem a paradox to say that no musician is so little known as
+Berlioz. The world thinks it knows him. A noisy fame surrounds his
+person and his work. Musical Europe has celebrated his centenary.
+Germany disputes with France the glory of having nurtured and shaped his
+genius. Russia, whose triumphal reception consoled him for the
+indifference and enmity of Paris,[1] has said, through the voice of
+Balakirew, that he was "the only musician France possessed." His chief
+compositions are often played at concerts; and some of them have the
+rare quality of appealing both to the cultured and the crowd; a few have
+even reached great popularity. Works have been dedicated to him, and he
+himself has been described and criticised by many writers. He is popular
+even to his face; for his face, like his music, was so striking and
+singular that it seemed to show you his character at a glance. No clouds
+hide his mind and its creations, which, unlike Wagner's, need no
+initiation to be understood; they seem to have no hidden meaning, no
+subtle mystery; one is instantly their friend or their enemy, for the
+first impression is a lasting one.
+
+[Footnote 1: "And you, Russia, who have saved me...." (Berlioz,
+_Mémoires_, II, 353, Calmann-Lévy's edition, 1897).]
+
+That is the worst of it; people imagine that they understand Berlioz
+with so very little trouble. Obscurity of meaning may harm an artist
+less than a seeming transparency; to be shrouded in mist may mean
+remaining long misunderstood, but those who wish to understand will at
+least be thorough in their search for the truth. It is not always
+realised how depth and complexity may exist in a work of clear design
+and strong contrasts--in the obvious genius of some great Italian of the
+Renaissance as much as in the troubled heart of a Rembrandt and the
+twilight of the North.
+
+That is the first pitfall; but there are many more that will beset us in
+the attempt to understand Berlioz. To get at the man himself one must
+break down a wall of prejudice and pedantry, of convention and
+intellectual snobbery. In short, one must shake off nearly all current
+ideas about his work if one wishes to extricate it from the dust that
+has drifted about it for half a century.
+
+Above all, one must not make the mistake of contrasting Berlioz with
+Wagner, either by sacrificing Berlioz to that Germanic Odin, or by
+forcibly trying to reconcile one to the other. For there are some who
+condemn Berlioz in the name of Wagner's theories; and others who, not
+liking the sacrifice, seek to make him a forerunner of Wagner, or kind
+of elder brother, whose mission was to clear a way and prepare a road
+for a genius greater than his own. Nothing is falser. To understand
+Berlioz one must shake off the hypnotic influence of Bayreuth. Though
+Wagner may have learnt something from Berlioz, the two composers have
+nothing in common; their genius and their art are absolutely opposed;
+each one has ploughed his furrow in a different field.
+
+The Classical misunderstanding is quite as dangerous. By that I mean the
+clinging to superstitions of the past, and the pedantic desire to
+enclose art within narrow limits, which still flourish among critics.
+Who has not met these censors of music? They will tell you with solid
+complacence how far music may go, and where it must stop, and what it
+may express and what it must not. They are not always musicians
+themselves. But what of that? Do they not lean on the example of the
+past? The past! a handful of works that they themselves hardly
+understand. Meanwhile, music, by its unceasing growth, gives the lie to
+their theories, and breaks down these weak barriers. But they do not see
+it, do not wish to see it; since they cannot advance themselves, they
+deny progress. Critics of this kind do not think favourably of Berlioz's
+dramatic and descriptive symphonies. How should they appreciate the
+boldest musical achievement of the nineteenth century? These dreadful
+pedants and zealous defenders of an art that they only understand after
+it has ceased to live are the worst enemies of unfettered genius, and
+may do more harm than a whole army of ignorant people. For in a country
+like ours, where musical education is poor, timidity is great in the
+presence of a strong, but only half-understood, tradition; and anyone
+who has the boldness to break away from it is condemned without
+judgment. I doubt if Berlioz would have obtained any consideration at
+all from lovers of classical music in France if he had not found allies
+in that country of classical music, Germany--"the oracle of Delphi,"
+"Germania alma parens,"[2] as he called her. Some of the young German
+school found inspiration in Berlioz. The dramatic symphony that he
+created flourished in its German form under Liszt; the most eminent
+German composer of to-day, Richard Strauss, came under his influence;
+and Felix Weingartner, who with Charles Malherbe edited Berlioz's
+complete works, was bold enough to write, "In spite of Wagner and Liszt,
+we should not be where we are if Berlioz had not lived." This unexpected
+support, coming from a country of traditions, has thrown the partisans
+of Classic tradition into confusion, and rallied Berlioz's friends.
+
+[Footnote 2: _Mémoires_, II, 149.]
+
+But here is a new danger. Though it is natural that Germany, more
+musical than France, should recognise the grandeur and originality of
+Berlioz's music before France, it is doubtful whether the German nature
+could ever fully understand a soul so French in its essence. It is,
+perhaps, what is exterior in Berlioz, his positive originality, that the
+Germans appreciate. They prefer the _Requiem_ to _Roméo_. A Richard
+Strauss would be attracted by an almost insignificant work like the
+_Ouverture du roi Lear_; a Weingartner would single out for notice
+works like the _Symphonic fantastique_ and _Harold_, and exaggerate
+their importance. But they do not feel what is intimate in him. Wagner
+said over the tomb of Weber, "England does you justice, France admires
+you, but only Germany loves you; you are of her own being, a glorious
+day of her life, a warm drop of her blood, a part of her heart...." One
+might adapt his words to Berlioz; it is as difficult for a German really
+to love Berlioz as it is for a Frenchman to love Wagner or Weber. One
+must, therefore, be careful about accepting unreservedly the judgment of
+Germany on Berlioz; for in that would lie the danger of a new
+misunderstanding. You see how both the followers and opponents of
+Berlioz hinder us from getting at the truth. Let us dismiss them.
+
+Have we now come to the end of our difficulties? Not yet; for Berlioz is
+the most illusive of men, and no one has helped more than he to mislead
+people in their estimate of him. We know how much he has written about
+music and about his own life, and what wit and understanding he shows in
+his shrewd criticisms and charming _Mémoires_.[3]
+
+[Footnote 3: The literary work of Berlioz is rather uneven. Beside
+passages of exquisite beauty we find others that are ridiculous in their
+exaggerated sentiment, and there are some that even lack good taste. But
+he had a natural gift of style, and his writing is vigorous, and full of
+feeling, especially towards the latter half of his life. The _Procession
+des Rogations_ is often quoted from the _Mémoires_; and some of his
+poetical text, particularly that in _L'Enfance du Christ_ and in _Les
+Troyens_, is written in beautiful language and with a fine sense of
+rhythm. His _Mémoires_ as a whole is one of the most delightful books
+ever written by an artist. Wagner was a greater poet, but as a prose
+writer Berlioz is infinitely superior. See Paul Morillot's essay on
+_Berlioz écrivain_, 1903, Grenoble.] One would think that such an
+imaginative and skilful writer, accustomed in his profession of critic
+to express every shade of feeling, would be able to tell us more exactly
+his ideas of art than a Beethoven or a Mozart. But it is not so. As too
+much light may blind the vision, so too much intellect may hinder the
+understanding. Berlioz's mind spent itself in details; it reflected
+light from too many facets, and did not focus itself in one strong beam
+which would have made known his power. He did not know how to dominate
+either his life or his work; he did not even try to dominate them. He
+was the incarnation of romantic genius, an unrestrained force,
+unconscious of the road he trod. I would not go so far as to say that he
+did not understand himself, but there are certainly times when he is
+past understanding himself. He allows himself to drift where chance will
+take him,[4] like an old Scandinavian pirate laid at the bottom of his
+boat, staring up at the sky; and he dreams and groans and laughs and
+gives himself up to his feverish delusions. He lived with his emotions
+as uncertainly as he lived with his art. In his music, as in his
+criticisms of music, he often contradicts himself, hesitates, and turns
+back; he is not sure either of his feelings or his thoughts. He has
+poetry in his soul, and strives to write operas; but his admiration
+wavers between Gluck and Meyerbeer. He has a popular genius, but
+despises the people. He is a daring musical revolutionary, but he
+allows the control of this musical movement to be taken from him by
+anyone who wishes to have it. Worse than that: he disowns the movement,
+turns his back upon the future, and throws himself again into the past.
+For what reason? Very often he does not know. Passion, bitterness,
+caprice, wounded pride--these have more influence with him than the
+serious things of life. He is a man at war with himself.
+
+[Footnote 4: "Chance, that unknown god, who plays such a great part in
+my life" (_Mémoires_, II, 161).]
+
+Then contrast Berlioz with Wagner. Wagner, too, was stirred by violent
+passions, but he was always master of himself, and his reason remained
+unshaken by the storms of his heart or those of the world, by the
+torments of love or the strife of political revolutions. He made his
+experiences and even his errors serve his art; he wrote about his
+theories before he put them into practice; and he only launched out when
+he was sure of himself, and when the way lay clear before him. And think
+how much Wagner owes to this written expression of his aims and the
+magnetic attraction of his arguments. It was his prose works that
+fascinated the King of Bavaria before he had heard his music; and for
+many others also they have been the key to that music. I remember being
+impressed by Wagner's ideas when I only half understood his art; and
+when one of his compositions puzzled me, my confidence was not shaken,
+for I was sure that the genius who was so convincing in his reasoning
+would not blunder; and that if his music baffled me, it was I who was at
+fault. Wagner was really his own best friend, his own most trusty
+champion; and his was the guiding hand that led one through the thick
+forest and over the rugged crags of his work.
+
+Not only do you get no help from Berlioz in this way, but he is the
+first to lead you astray and wander with you in the paths of error. To
+understand his genius you must seize hold of it unaided. His genius was
+really great, but, as I shall try to show you, it lay at the mercy of a
+weak character.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Everything about Berlioz was misleading, even his appearance. In
+legendary portraits he appears as a dark southerner with black hair and
+sparkling eyes. But he was really very fair and had blue eyes,[5] and
+Joseph d'Ortigue tells us they were deep-set and piercing, though
+sometimes clouded by melancholy or languor.[6] He had a broad forehead
+furrowed with wrinkles by the time he was thirty, and a thick mane of
+hair, or, as E. Legouvé puts it, "a large umbrella of hair, projecting
+like a movable awning over the beak of a bird of prey."[7]
+
+
+[Footnote 5: "I was fair," wrote Berlioz to Bülow (unpublished letters,
+1858). "A shock of reddish hair," he wrote in his _Mémoires_, I, 165.
+"Sandy-coloured hair," said Reyer. For the colour of Berlioz's hair I
+rely upon the evidence of Mme. Chapót, his niece.]
+
+[Footnote 6: Joseph d'Ortigue, _Le Balcon de l'Opéra_, 1833.]
+
+[Footnote 7: E. Legouvé, _Soixante ans de souvenirs_. Legouvé describes
+Berlioz here as he saw him for the first time.]
+
+His mouth was well cut, with lips compressed and puckered at the
+corners in a severe fold, and his chin was prominent. He had a deep
+voice,[8] but his speech was halting and often tremulous with emotion;
+he would speak passionately of what interested him, and at times be
+effusive in manner, but more often he was ungracious and reserved. He
+was of medium height, rather thin and angular in figure, and when seated
+he seemed much taller than he really was.[9] He was very restless, and
+inherited from his native land, Dauphiné, the mountaineer's passion for
+walking and climbing, and the love of a vagabond life, which remained
+with him nearly to his death.[10] He had an iron constitution, but he
+wrecked it by privation and excess, by his walks in the rain, and by
+sleeping out-of-doors in all weathers, even when there was snow on the
+ground.[11]
+
+[Footnote 8: "A passable baritone," says Berlioz _(Mémoires_, I, 58). In
+1830, in the streets of Paris, he sang "a bass part" _(Mémoires_, I,
+156). During his first visit to Germany the Prince of Hechingen made him
+sing "the part of the violoncello" in one of his compositions
+(_Mémoires_, II, 32).]
+
+[Footnote 9: There are two good portraits of Berlioz. One is a
+photograph by Pierre Petit, taken in 1863, which he sent to Mme. Estelle
+Fornier. It shows him leaning on his elbow, with his head bent, and his
+eyes fixed on the ground as if he were tired. The other is the
+photograph which he had reproduced in the first edition of his
+_Mémoires_, and which shows him leaning back, his hands in his pockets,
+his head upright, with an expression of energy in his face, and a fixed
+and stern look in his eyes.]
+
+[Footnote 10: He would go on foot from Naples to Rome in a straight line
+over the mountains, and would walk at one stretch from Subiaco to
+Tivoli.]
+
+[Footnote 11: This brought on several attacks of bronchitis and frequent
+sore throats, as well as the internal affection from which he died.]
+
+But in this strong and athletic frame lived a feverish and sickly soul
+that was dominated and tormented by a morbid craving for love and
+sympathy: "that imperative need of love which is killing me...."[12] To
+love, to be loved--he would give up all for that.
+
+[Footnote 12: "Music and love are the two wings of the soul," he wrote
+in his _Mémoires_.]
+
+But his love was that of a youth who lives in dreams; it was never the
+strong, clear-eyed passion of a man who has faced the realities of life,
+and who sees the defects as well as the charms of the woman he loves,
+Berlioz was in love with love, and lost himself among visions and
+sentimental shadows. To the end of his life he remained "a poor little
+child worn out by a love that was beyond him."[13] But this man who
+lived so wild and adventurous a life expressed his passions with
+delicacy; and one finds an almost girlish purity in the immortal love
+passages of _Les Troyens_ or the "_nuit sereine"_ of _Roméo et
+Juliette_. And compare this Virgilian affection with Wagner's sensual
+raptures. Does it mean that Berlioz could not love as well as Wagner? We
+only know that Berlioz's life was made up of love and its torments. The
+theme of a touching passage in the Introduction of the _Symphonic
+fantastique_ has been recently identified by M. Julien Tiersot, in his
+interesting book,[14] with a romance composed by Berlioz at the age of
+twelve, when he loved a girl of eighteen "with large eyes and pink
+shoes"--Estelle, _Stella mentis, Stella matutina_. These words--perhaps
+the saddest he ever wrote--might serve as an emblem of his life, a life
+that was a prey to love and melancholy, doomed to wringing of the heart
+and awful loneliness; a life lived in a hollow world, among worries that
+chilled the blood; a life that was distasteful and had no solace to
+offer him in its end.[15] He has himself described this terrible "_mal
+de l'isolement_," which pursued him all his life, vividly and
+minutely.[16] He was doomed to suffering, or, what was worse, to make
+others suffer.
+
+[Footnote 13: _Mémoires_, I, 11.]
+
+[Footnote 14: Julien Tiersot, _Hector Berlioz et la société de son
+temps_, 1903, Hachette.]
+
+[Footnote 15: See the _Mémoires_, I, 139.]
+
+[Footnote 16: "I do not know how to describe this terrible sickness....
+My throbbing breast seems to be sinking into space; and my heart,
+drawing in some irresistible force, feels as though it would expand
+until it evaporated and dissolved away. My skin becomes hot and tender,
+and flushes from head to foot. I want to cry out to my friends (even
+those I do not care for) to help and comfort me, to save me from
+destruction, and keep in the life that is ebbing from me. I have no
+sensation of impending death in these attacks, and suicide seems
+impossible; I do not want to die--far from it, I want very much to live,
+to intensify life a thousandfold. It is an excessive appetite for
+happiness, which becomes unbearable when it lacks food; and it is only
+satisfied by intense delights, which give this great overflow of feeling
+an outlet. It is not a state of spleen, though that may follow later ...
+spleen is rather the congealing of all these emotions--the block of ice.
+Even when I am calm I feel a little of this '_isolement_' on Sundays in
+summer, when our towns are lifeless, and everyone is in the country; for
+I know that people are enjoying themselves away from me, and I feel
+their absence. The _adagio_ of Beethoven's symphonies, certain scenes
+from Gluck's _Alceste_ and _Armide_, an air from his Italian opera
+_Telemacco_, the Elysian fields of his _Orfeo_, will bring on rather bad
+attacks of this suffering; but these masterpieces bring with them also
+an antidote--they make one's tears flow, and then the pain is eased. On
+the other hand, the _adagio_ of some of Beethoven's sonatas and Gluck's
+_Iphigénie en Tauride_ are full of melancholy, and therefore provoke
+spleen ... it is then cold within, the sky is grey and overcast with
+clouds, the north wind moans dully...." _(Mémoires_, I, 246).]
+
+Who does not know his passion for Henrietta Smithson? It was a sad
+story. He fell in love with an English actress who played Juliet (Was it
+she or Juliet whom he loved?). He caught but a glance of her, and it was
+all over with him. He cried out, "Ah, I am lost!" He desired her; she
+repulsed him. He lived in a delirium of suffering and passion; he
+wandered about for days and nights like a madman, up and down Paris and
+its neighbourhood, without purpose or rest or relief, until sleep
+overcame him wherever it found him--among the sheaves in a field near
+Villejuif, in a meadow near Sceaux, on the bank of the frozen Seine near
+Neuilly, in the snow, and once on a table in the Café Cardinal, where he
+slept for five hours, to the great alarm of the waiters, who thought he
+was dead.[17] Meanwhile, he was told slanderous gossip about Henrietta,
+which he readily believed. Then he despised her, and dishonoured her
+publicly in his _Symphonie fantastique_, paying homage in his bitter
+resentment to Camille Moke, a pianist, to whom he lost his heart without
+delay.
+
+[Footnote 17: _Mémoires_, I, 98.]
+
+After a time Henrietta reappeared. She had now lost her youth and her
+power; her beauty was waning, and she was in debt. Berlioz's passion was
+at once rekindled. This time Henrietta accepted his advances. He made
+alterations in his symphony, and offered it to her in homage of his
+love. He won her, and married her, with fourteen thousand francs debt.
+He had captured his dream--Juliet! Ophelia! What was she really? A
+charming Englishwoman, cold, loyal, and sober-minded, who understood
+nothing of his passion; and who, from the time she became his wife,
+loved him jealously and sincerely, and thought to confine him within the
+narrow world of domestic life. But his affections became restive, and he
+lost his heart to a Spanish actress (it was always an actress, a
+virtuoso, or a part) and left poor Ophelia, and went off with Marie
+Recio, the Inès of _Favorite_, the page of _Comte Ory_--a practical,
+hardheaded woman, an indifferent singer with a mania for singing. The
+haughty Berlioz was forced to fawn upon the directors of the theatre in
+order to get her parts, to write flattering notices in praise of her
+talents, and even to let her make his own melodies discordant at the
+concerts he arranged.[18] It would all be dreadfully ridiculous if this
+weakness of character had not brought tragedy in its train.
+
+So the one he really loved, and who always loved him, remained alone,
+without friends, in Paris, where she was a stranger. She drooped in
+silence and pined slowly away, bedridden, paralysed, and unable to speak
+during eight years of suffering. Berlioz suffered too, for he loved her
+still and was torn with pity--"pity, the most painful of all
+emotions."[19] But of what use was this pity? He left Henrietta to
+suffer alone and to die just the same. And, what was worse, as we learn
+from Legouvé, he let his mistress, the odious Recio, make a scene before
+poor Henrietta.[20] Recio told him of it and boasted about what she had
+done.
+
+[Footnote 18: "Isn't it really devilish," he said to Legouvé, "tragic
+and silly at the same time? I should deserve to go to hell if I wasn't
+there already."]
+
+[Footnote 19: _Mémoires_, II, 335. See the touching passages he wrote on
+Henrietta Smithson's death.]
+
+[Footnote 20: "One day, Henrietta, who was living alone at Montmartre,
+heard someone ring the bell, and went to open the door.
+
+"'Is Mme. Berlioz at home?'
+
+"'I am Mme. Berlioz.'
+
+"'You are mistaken; I asked for Mme. Berlioz.'
+
+"'And I tell you, I am Mme. Berlioz.'
+
+"'No, you are not. You are speaking of the old Mme. Berlioz, the one who
+was abandoned; I am speaking of the young and pretty and loved one.
+Well, that is myself!'
+
+"And Recio went out and banged the door after her.
+
+"Legouvé said to Berlioz, 'Who told you this abominable thing? I suppose
+she who did it; and then she boasted about it into the bargain. Why
+didn't you turn her out of the house?' 'How could I?' said Berlioz in
+broken tones, 'I love her'" _(Soixante ans de souvenirs_).]
+
+And Berlioz did nothing--"How could I? I love her."
+
+One would be hard upon such a man if one was not disarmed by his own
+sufferings. But let us go on. I should have liked to pass over these
+traits, but I have no right to; I must show you the extraordinary
+feebleness of the man's character. "Man's character," did I say? No, it
+was the character of a woman without a will, the victim of her
+nerves.[21]
+
+[Footnote 21: From this woman's nature came his love of revenge, "a
+thing needless, and yet necessary," he said to his friend Hiller, who,
+after having made him write the _Symphonie fantastique_ to spite
+Henrietta Smithson, next made him write the wretched fantasia _Euphonia_
+to spite Camille Moke, now Mme. Pleyel. One would feel obliged to draw
+more attention to the way he often adorned or perverted the truth if one
+did not feel it arose from his irrepressible and glowing imagination far
+more than from any intention to mislead; for I believe his real nature
+to have been a-very straightforward one. I will quote the story of his
+friend Crispino, a young countryman from Tivoli, as a characteristic
+example. Berlioz says in his _Mémoires_ (I, 229): "One day when Crispino
+was lacking in respect I made-him a present of two shirts, a pair of
+trousers, and three good kicks behind." In a note he added, "This is a
+lie, and is the result of an artist's tendency to aim at effect. I never
+kicked Crispino." But Berlioz took care afterwards to omit this note.
+One attaches as little importance to his other small boasts as to this
+one. The errors in the _Mémoires_ have been greatly exaggerated; and
+besides, Berlioz is the first to warn his readers that he only wrote
+what pleased him, and in his preface says that he is not writing his
+Confessions. Can one blame him for that?]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Such people are destined to unhappiness; and if they make other people
+suffer, one may be sure that it is only half of what they suffer
+themselves. They have a peculiar gift for attracting and gathering up
+trouble; they savour sorrow like wine, and do not lose a drop of it.
+Life seemed desirous that Berlioz should be steeped in suffering; and
+his misfortunes were so real that it would be unnecessary to add to them
+any exaggerations that history has handed down to us.
+
+People find fault with Berlioz's continual complaints; and I, too, find
+in them a lack of virility and almost a lack of dignity. To all
+appearances, he had far fewer material reasons for unhappiness than--I
+won't say Beethoven--Wagner and other great men, past, present, and
+future. When thirty-five years old he had achieved glory; and Paganini
+proclaimed him Beethoven's successor. What more could he want? He was
+discussed by the public, disparaged by a Scudo and an Adolphus Adam, and
+the theatre only opened its doors to him with difficulty. It was really
+splendid!
+
+But a careful examination of facts, such as that made by M. Julien
+Tiersot, shows the stifling mediocrity and hardship of his life. There
+were, first of all, his material cares. When thirty-six years old
+"Beethoven's successor" had a fixed salary of fifteen hundred francs as
+assistant keeper of the Conservatoire Library, and not quite as much for
+his contributions to the _Debits_-contributions which exasperated and
+humiliated him, and were one of the crosses of his life, as they obliged
+him to speak anything but the truth.[22]
+
+[Footnote 22: _Mémoires_, II, 158. The heartaches expressed in this
+chapter will be felt by every artist.]
+
+That made a total of three thousand francs, hardly gained on which he
+had to keep a wife and child--"_même deux_," as M. Tiersot says. He
+attempted a festival at the Opera; the result was three hundred and
+sixty francs loss. He organised a festival at the 1844 Exhibition; the
+receipts were thirty-two thousand francs, out of which he got eight
+hundred francs. He had the _Damnation de Faust_ performed; no one came
+to it, and he was ruined. Things went better in Russia; but the manager
+who brought him to England became bankrupt. He was haunted by thoughts
+of rents and doctors' bills. Towards the end of his life his financial
+affairs mended a little, and a year before his death he uttered these
+sad words: "I suffer a great deal, but I do not want to die now--I have
+enough to live upon."
+
+One of the most tragic episodes of his life is that of the symphony
+which he did not write because of his poverty. One wonders why the page
+that finishes his _Mémoires_ is not better known, for it touches the
+depths of human suffering.
+
+At the time when his wife's health was causing him most anxiety, there
+came to him one night an inspiration for a symphony. The first part of
+it--an allegro in two-four time in A minor--was ringing in his head. He
+got up and began to write, and then he thought,
+
+ "If I begin this bit, I shall have to write the whole symphony. It
+ will be a big thing, and I shall have to spend three or four months
+ over it. That means I shall write no more articles and earn no
+ money. And when the symphony is finished I shall not be able to
+ resist the temptation of having it copied (which will mean an
+ expense of a thousand or twelve hundred francs), and then of having
+ it played. I shall give a concert, and the receipts will barely
+ cover half the cost. I shall lose what I have not got; the poor
+ invalid will lack necessities; and I shall be able to pay neither
+ my personal expenses nor my son's fees when he goes on board
+ ship.... These thoughts made me shudder, and I threw down my pen,
+ saying, 'Bah! to-morrow I shall have forgotten the symphony.' The
+ next night I heard the allegro clearly, and seemed to see it
+ written down. I was filled with feverish agitation; I sang the
+ theme; I was going to get up ... but the reflections of the day
+ before restrained me; I steeled myself against the temptation, and
+ clung to the thought of forgetting it. At last I went to sleep; and
+ the next day, on waking, all remembrance of it had, indeed, gone
+ for ever."[23]
+
+That page makes one shudder. Suicide is less distressing. Neither
+Beethoven nor Wagner suffered such tortures. What would Wagner have done
+on a like occasion? He would have written the symphony without
+doubt--and he would have been right. But poor Berlioz, who was weak
+enough to sacrifice his duty to love, was, alas! also heroic enough to
+sacrifice his genius to duty.[24]
+
+[Footnote 23: _Mémoires_, II, 349.]
+
+[Footnote 24: Berlioz has already touchingly replied to any reproaches
+that might be made in the words that follow the story I have quoted.
+"'Coward!' some young enthusiast will say, 'you ought to have written
+it; you should have been bold.' Ah, young man, you who call me coward
+did not have to look upon what I did; had you done so you, too, would
+have had no choice. My wife was there, half dead, only able to moan; she
+had to have three nurses, and a doctor every day to visit her; and I was
+sure of the disastrous result of any musical adventure. No, I was not a
+coward; I know I was only human. I like to believe that I honoured art
+in proving that she had left me enough reason to distinguish between
+courage and cruelty" (_Mémoires_, II, 350).]
+
+And in spite of all this material misery and the sorrow of being
+misunderstood, people speak of the glory he enjoyed. What did his
+compeers think of him--at least, those who called themselves such? He
+knew that Mendelssohn, whom he loved and esteemed, and who styled
+himself his "good friend," despised him and did not recognise his
+genius.[25] The large-hearted Schumann, who was, with the exception of
+Liszt,[26] the only person who intuitively felt his greatness, admitted
+that he used sometimes to wonder if he ought to be looked upon as "a
+genius or a musical adventurer."[27]
+
+[Footnote 25: In a note in the _Mémoires_, Berlioz publishes a letter of
+Mendelssohn's which protests his "good friendship," and he writes these
+bitter words: "I have just seen in a volume of Mendelssohn's Letters
+what his friendship for me consisted of. He says to his mother, in what
+is plainly a description of myself, '---- is a perfect caricature,
+without a spark of talent ... there are times when I should like to
+swallow him up'" (_Mémoires_, II, 48). Berlioz did not add that
+Mendelssohn also said: "They pretend that Berlioz seeks lofty ideals in
+art. I don't think so at all. What he wants is to get himself married."
+The injustice of these insulting words will disgust all those who
+remember that when Berlioz married Henrietta Smithson she brought as
+dowry nothing but debts; and that he had only three hundred francs
+himself, which a friend had lent him.]
+
+[Footnote 26: Liszt repudiated him later.]
+
+[Footnote 27: Written in an article on the _Ouverture de Waverley_
+(_Neue Zeitschrift für Musik_).]
+
+Wagner, who treated his symphonies with scorn before he had even read
+them,[28] who certainly understood his genius, and who deliberately
+ignored him, threw himself into Berlioz's arms when he met him in London
+in 1855. "He embraced him with fervour, and wept; and hardly had he left
+him when _The Musical World_ published passages from his book, _Oper und
+Drama_, where he pulls Berlioz to pieces mercilessly."[29] In France,
+the young Gounod, _doli fabricator Epeus_, as Berlioz called him,
+lavished flattering words upon him, but spent his time in finding fault
+with his compositions,[30] or in trying to supplant him at the theatre.
+At the Opera he was passed over in favour of a Prince Poniatowski.
+
+[Footnote 28: Wagner, who had criticised Berlioz since 1840, and who
+published a detailed study of his works in his _Oper und Drama_ in 1851,
+wrote to Liszt in 1855: "I own that it would interest me very much to
+make the acquaintance of Berlioz's symphonies, and I should like to see
+the scores. If you have them, will you lend them to me?"]
+
+[Footnote 29: See Berlioz's letter, cited by J. Tiersot, _Hector Berlioz
+et la société de son temps_, p. 275.]
+
+[Footnote 30: _Roméo, Faust, La Nonne sanglante_.]
+
+He presented himself three times at the Academy, and was beaten the
+first time by Onslow, the second time by Clapisson, and the third time
+he conquered by a majority of one vote against Panseron, Vogel, Leborne,
+and others, including, as always, Gounod. He died before the _Damnation
+de Faust_ was appreciated in France, although it was the most remarkable
+musical composition France had produced. They hissed its performance?
+Not at all; "they were merely indifferent"--it is Berlioz who tells us
+this. It passed unnoticed. He died before he had seen _Les Troyens_
+played in its entirety, though it was one of the noblest works of the
+French lyric theatre that had been composed since the death of
+Gluck.[31] But there is no need to be astonished. To hear these works
+to-day one must go to Germany. And although the dramatic work of Berlioz
+has found its Bayreuth--thanks to Mottl, to Karlsruhe and Munich--and
+the marvellous _Benvenuto Cellini_ has been played in twenty German
+towns,[32] and regarded as a masterpiece by Weingartner and Richard
+Strauss, what manager of a French theatre would think of producing such
+works?
+
+But this is not all. What was the bitterness of failure compared with
+the great anguish of death? Berlioz saw all those he loved die one after
+the other: his father, his mother, Henrietta Smithson, Marie Recio. Then
+only his son Louis remained.
+
+[Footnote 31: I shall content myself here with noting a fact, which I
+shall deal with more fully in another essay at the end of this book: it
+is the decline of musical taste in France--and, I rather think, in all
+Europe--since 1835 or 1840. Berlioz says in his _Mémoires_: "Since the
+first performance of _Roméo et Juliette_ the indifference of the French
+public for all that concerns art and literature has grown incredibly"
+(_Mémoires_, II, 263). Compare the shouts of excitement and the tears
+that were drawn from the dilettanti of 1830 (_Mémoires_, I, 81), at the
+performances of Italian operas or Gluck's works, with the coldness of
+the public between 1840 and 1870. A mantle of ice covered art then. How
+much Berlioz must have suffered. In Germany the great romantic age was
+dead. Only Wagner remained to give life to music; and he drained all
+that was left in Europe of love and enthusiasm for music. Berlioz died
+truly of asphyxia.]
+
+[Footnote 32: Here is an official list of the towns where _Benvenuto_
+has been played since 1879 (I am indebted for this information to M.
+Victor Chapót, Berlioz's grandnephew). They are, in alphabetical order:
+Berlin, Bremen, Brunswick, Dresden, Frankfort-On-Main,
+Freiburg-im-Breisgau, Hamburg, Hanover, Karlsruhe, Leipzig, Mannheim,
+Metz, Munich, Prague, Schwerin, Stettin, Strasburg, Stuttgart, Vienna,
+and Weimar.]
+
+He was the captain of a merchant vessel; a clever, good-hearted boy,
+but restless and nervous, irresolute and unhappy, like his father. "He
+has the misfortune to resemble me in everything," said Berlioz; "and we
+love each other like a couple of twins."[33] "Ah, my poor Louis," he
+wrote to him, "what should I do without you?" A few months afterwards he
+learnt that Louis had died in far-away seas.
+
+He was now alone.[34] There were no more friendly voices; all that he
+heard was a hideous duet between loneliness and weariness, sung in his
+ear during the bustle of the day and in the silence of the night.[35] He
+was wasted with disease. In 1856, at Weimar, following great fatigue, he
+was seized with an internal malady. It began with great mental distress;
+he used to sleep in the streets. He suffered constantly; he was like "a
+tree without leaves, streaming with rain." At the end of 1861, the
+disease was in an acute stage. He had attacks of pain sometimes lasting
+thirty hours, during which he would writhe in agony in his bed. "I live
+in the midst of my physical pain, overwhelmed with weariness. Death is
+very slow."[36]
+
+[Footnote 33: _Mémoires_, II, 420.]
+
+[Footnote 34: "I do not know how Berlioz has managed to be cut off like
+this. He has neither friends nor followers; neither the warm sun of
+popularity nor the pleasant shade of friendship" (Liszt to the Princess
+of Wittgenstein, 16 May, 1861).]
+
+[Footnote 35: In a letter to Bennet he says, "I am weary, I am
+weary...." How often does this piteous cry sound in his letters towards
+the end of his life. "I feel I am going to die.... I am weary unto
+death" (21 August, 1868--six months before his death).]
+
+[Footnote 36: Letter to Asger Hammerick, 1865.]
+
+Worst of all, in the heart of his misery, there was nothing that
+comforted him. He believed in nothing--neither in God nor immortality.
+
+ "I have no faith.... I hate all philosophy and everything that
+ resembles it, whether religious or otherwise.... I am as incapable
+ of making a medicine of faith as of having faith in medicine."[37]
+
+ "God is stupid and cruel in his complete indifference."[38]
+
+He did not believe in beauty or honour, in mankind or himself.
+
+ "Everything passes. Space and time consume beauty, youth, love,
+ glory, genius. Human life is nothing; death is no better. Worlds
+ are born and die like ourselves. All is nothing. Yes, yes, yes! All
+ is nothing.... To love or hate, enjoy or suffer, admire or sneer,
+ live or die--what does it matter? There is nothing in greatness or
+ littleness, beauty or ugliness. Eternity is indifferent;
+ indifference is eternal."[39]
+
+ "I am weary of life; and I am forced to see that belief in
+ absurdities is necessary to human minds, and that it is born in
+ them as insects are born in swamps."[40]
+
+[Footnote 37: Letters to the Princess of Wittgenstein, 22 July, 21
+September, 1862; and August, 1864.]
+
+[Footnote 38: _Mémoires_, II, 335. He shocked Mendelssohn, and even
+Wagner, by his irreligion. (See Berlioz's letter to Wagner, 10
+September, 1855.)]
+
+[Footnote 39: _Les Grotesques de la Musique_, pp. 295-6.]
+
+[Footnote 40: Letter to the Abbé Girod. See Hippeau, _Berlioz intime_,
+p. 434.]
+
+ "You make me laugh with your old words about a mission to fulfil.
+ What a missionary! But there is in me an inexplicable mechanism
+ which works in spite of all arguments; and I let it work because I
+ cannot stop it. What disgusts me most is the certainty that beauty
+ does not exist for the majority of these human monkeys."[41]
+
+ "The unsolvable enigma of the world, the existence of evil and
+ pain, the fierce madness of mankind, and the stupid cruelty that it
+ inflicts hourly and everywhere on the most inoffensive beings and
+ on itself--all this has reduced me to the state of unhappy and
+ forlorn resignation of a scorpion surrounded by live coals. The
+ most I can do is not to wound myself with my own dart."[42]
+
+ "I am in my sixty-first year; and I have no more hopes or illusions
+ or aspirations. I am alone; and my contempt for the stupidity and
+ dishonesty of men, and my hatred for their wicked cruelty, are at
+ their height. Every hour I say to Death, 'When you like!' What is
+ he waiting for?"[43]
+
+[Footnote 41: Letter to Bennet. He did not believe in patriotism.
+"Patriotism? Fetichism! Cretinism!" (_Mémoires_, II, 261).]
+
+[Footnote 42: Letter to the Princess of Wittgenstein, 22 July, 1862.]
+
+[Footnote 43: _Mémoires_, II, 391.]
+
+And yet he fears the death he invites. It is the strongest, the
+bitterest, the truest feeling he has. No musician since old Roland de
+Lassus has feared it with that intensity. Do you remember Herod's
+sleepless nights in _L'Enfance du Christ_, or Faust's soliloquy, or the
+anguish of Cassandra, or the burial of Juliette?--through all this you
+will find the whispered fear of annihilation. The wretched man was
+haunted by this fear, as a letter published by M. Julien Tiersot
+shows:--
+
+ "My favourite walk, especially when it is raining, really raining
+ in torrents, is the cemetery of Montmartre, which is near my house.
+ I often go there; there is much that draws me to it. The day before
+ yesterday I passed two hours in the cemetery; I found a comfortable
+ seat on a costly tomb, and I went to sleep.... Paris is to me a
+ cemetery and her pavements are tomb-stones. Everywhere are memories
+ of friends or enemies that are dead.... I do nothing but suffer
+ unceasing pain and unspeakable weariness. I wonder night and day if
+ I shall die in great pain or with little of it--I am not foolish
+ enough to hope to die without any pain at all. Why are we not
+ dead?"[44]
+
+His music is like these mournful words; it is perhaps even more
+terrible, more gloomy, for it breathes death.[45] What a contrast: a
+soul greedy of life and preyed upon by death. It is this that makes his
+life such an awful tragedy. When Wagner met Berlioz he heaved a sigh of
+relief--he had at last found a man more unhappy than himself.[46]
+
+[Footnote 44: Letters to the Princess of Wittgenstein, 22 January, 1859;
+30 August, 1864; 13 July, 1866; and to A. Morel, 21 August, 1864.]
+
+[Footnote 45: " ... Qui viderit illas
+ De lacrymis factas sentiet esse meis,"
+wrote Berlioz, as an inscription for his _Tristes_ in 1854.]
+
+[Footnote 46: "One instantly recognises a companion in misfortune; and I
+found I was a happier man than Berlioz" (Wagner to Liszt, 5 July,
+1855).]
+
+On the threshold of death he turned in despair to the one ray of light
+left him--_Stella montis_, the inspiration of his childish love;
+Estelle, now old, a grandmother, withered by age and grief. He made a
+pilgrimage to Meylan, near Grenoble, to see her. He was then sixty-one
+years old and she was nearly seventy. "The past! the past! O Time!
+Nevermore! Nevermore!"[47]
+
+Nevertheless, he loved her, and loved her desperately. How pathetic it
+is. One has little inclination to smile when one sees the depths of that
+desolate heart. Do you think he did not see, as clearly as you or I
+would see, the wrinkled old face, the indifference of age, the "_triste
+raison_," in her he idealised? Remember, he was the most ironical of
+men. But he did not wish to see these things, he wished to cling to a
+little love, which would help him to live in the wilderness of life.
+
+ "There is nothing real in this world but that which lives in the
+ heart.... My life has been wrapped up in the obscure little village
+ where she lives.... Life is only endurable when I tell myself:
+ 'This autumn I shall spend a month beside her.' I should die in
+ this hell of a Paris if she did not allow me to write to her, and
+ if from time to time I had not letters from her."
+
+So he spoke to Legouvé; and he sat down on a stone in a Paris street,
+and wept. In the meantime, the old lady did not understand this
+foolishness; she hardly tolerated it, and sought to undeceive him.
+
+[Footnote 47: _Mémoires_, II, 396.]
+
+ "When one's hair is white one must leave dreams--even those of
+ friendship.... Of what use is it to form ties which, though they
+ hold to-day, may break to-morrow?"
+
+What were his dreams? To live with her? No; rather to die beside her; to
+feel she was by his side when death should come.
+
+ "To be at your feet, my head on your knees, your two hands in
+ mine--so to finish."[48]
+
+He was a little child grown old, and felt bewildered and miserable and
+frightened before the thought of death.
+
+Wagner, at the same age, a victor, worshipped, flattered, and--if we are
+to believe the Bayreuth legend--crowned with prosperity; Wagner, sad and
+suffering, doubting his achievements, feeling the inanity of his bitter
+fight against the mediocrity of the world, had "fled far from the
+world"[49] and thrown himself into religion; and when a friend looked at
+him in surprise as he was saying grace at table, he answered: "Yes, I
+believe in my Saviour."[50]
+
+[Footnote 48: _Mémoires_, II, 415.]
+
+[Footnote 49: "Yes, it is to that escape from the world that _Parsifal_
+owes its birth and growth. What man can, during a whole lifetime, gaze
+into the depths of this world with a calm reason and a cheerful heart?
+When he sees murder and rapine organised and legalised by a system of
+lies, impostures, and hypocrisy, will he not avert his eyes and shudder
+with disgust?" (Wagner, _Representations of the Sacred Drama of Parsifal
+at Bayreuth, in 1882_.)]
+
+[Footnote 50: The scene was described to me by his friend, Malwida von
+Meysenbug, the calm and fearless author of _Mémoires d'une Idéaliste_.]
+
+Poor beings! Conquerors of the world, conquered and broken!
+
+But of the two deaths, how much sadder is that of the artist who was
+without a faith, and who had neither strength nor stoicism enough to be
+happy without one; who slowly died in that little room in the rue de
+Calais amid the distracting noise of an indifferent and even hostile
+Paris;[51] who shut himself up in savage silence; who saw no loved face
+bending over him in his last moments; who had not the comfort of belief
+in his work;[52] who could not think calmly of what he had done, nor
+look proudly back over the road he had trodden, nor rest content in the
+thought of a life well lived; and who began and closed his _Mémoires_
+with Shakespeare's gloomy words, and repeated them when dying:--
+
+ "Life's but a walking shadow, a poor player
+ That struts and frets his hour upon the stage
+ And then is heard no more: it is a tale
+ Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
+ Signifying nothing."[53]
+
+[Footnote 51: "I have only blank walls before my windows. On the side of
+the street a pug dog has been barking for an hour, a parrot screaming,
+and a parroqueet imitating the chirp of sparrows. On the side of the
+yard the washerwomen are singing, and another parroqueet cries
+incessantly, 'Shoulder arrms!' How long the day is!"
+
+"The maddening noise of carriages shakes the silence of the night. Paris
+wet and muddy! Parisian Paris! Now everything is quiet ... she is
+sleeping the sleep of the unjust" (Written to Ferrand, _Lettres
+intimes_, pp. 269 and 302).]
+
+[Footnote 52: He used to say that nothing would remain of his work; that
+he had deceived himself; and that he would have liked to burn his
+scores.]
+
+[Footnote 53: Blaze de Bury met him one autumn evening, on the quay,
+just before his death, as he was returning from the Institute. "His face
+was pale, his figure wasted and bent, and his expression dejected and
+nervous; one might have taken him for a walking shadow. Even his eyes,
+those large round hazel eyes, had extinguished their fire. For a second
+he clasped my hand in his own thin, lifeless one, and repeated, in a
+voice that was hardly more than a whisper, Aeschylus's words: 'Oh, this
+life of man! When he is happy a shadow is enough to disturb him; and
+when he is unhappy his trouble may be wiped away, as with a wet sponge,
+and all is forgotten'" (_Musiciens d'hier et d'aujourd'hui_).]
+
+Such was the unhappy and irresolute heart that found itself united to
+one of the most daring geniuses in the world. It is a striking example
+of the difference that may exist between genius and greatness--for the
+two words are not synonymous. When one speaks of greatness, one speaks
+of greatness of soul, nobility of character, firmness of will, and,
+above all, balance of mind. I can understand how people deny the
+existence of these qualities in Berlioz; but to deny his musical genius,
+or to cavil about his wonderful power--and that is what they do daily in
+Paris--is lamentable and ridiculous. Whether he attracts one or not, a
+thimbleful of some of his work, a single part in one of his works, a
+little bit of the _Fantastique_ or the overture of _Benvenuto_, reveal
+more genius--I am not afraid to say it--than all the French music of his
+century. I can understand people arguing about him in a country that
+produced Beethoven and Bach; but with us in France, who can we set up
+against him? Gluck and César Franck were much greater men, but they were
+never geniuses of his stature. If genius is a creative force, I cannot
+find more than four or five geniuses in the world who rank above him.
+When I have named Beethoven, Mozart, Bach, Händel, and Wagner, I do not
+know who else is superior to Berlioz; I do not even know who is his
+equal.
+
+He is not only a musician, he is music itself. He does not command his
+familiar spirit, he is its slave. Those who know his writings know how
+he was simply possessed and exhausted by his musical emotions. They were
+really fits of ecstasy or convulsions. At first "there was feverish
+excitement; the veins beat violently and tears flowed freely. Then came
+spasmodic contractions of the muscles, total numbness of the feet and
+hands, and partial paralysis of the nerves of sight and hearing; he saw
+nothing, heard nothing; he was giddy and half faint." And in the case of
+music that displeased him, he suffered, on the contrary, from "a painful
+sense of bodily disquiet and even from nausea."[54]
+
+The possession that music held over his nature shows itself clearly in
+the sudden outbreak of his genius.[55] His family opposed the idea of
+his becoming a musician; and until he was twenty-two or twenty-three
+years old his weak will sulkily gave way to their wishes. In obedience
+to his father he began his studies in medicine at Paris. One evening he
+heard _Les Danaïdes_ of Salieri. It came upon him like a thunderclap. He
+ran to the Conservatoire library and read Gluck's scores.
+
+[Footnote 54: _A travers chants_, pp. 8-9.]
+
+[Footnote 55: In truth, this genius was smouldering since his childhood;
+it was there from the beginning; and the proof of it lies in the fact
+that he used for his _Ouverture des Francs-Juges_ and for the _Symphonie
+fantastique_ airs and phrases of quintets which he had written when
+twelve years old (see _Mémoires_, I, 16-18).]
+
+He forgot to eat and drink; he was like a man in a frenzy. A
+performance of _Iphigénie en Tauride_ finished him. He studied under
+Lesueur and then at the Conservatoire. The following year, 1827, he
+composed _Les Francs-Juges_; two years afterwards the _Huit scènes de
+Faust_, which was the nucleus of the future _Damnation_;[56] three years
+afterwards, the _Symphonie fantastique_ (commenced in 1830).[57] And he
+had not yet got the _Prix de Rome_! Add to this that in 1828 he had
+already ideas for _Roméo et Juliette_, and that he had written a part of
+_Lelio_ in 1829. Can one find elsewhere a more dazzling musical debut?
+Compare that of Wagner who, at the same age, was shyly writing _Les
+Fées, Défense d'aimer_, and _Rienzi_.
+
+[Footnote 56: The _Huit scènes de Faust_ are taken from Goethe's
+tragedy, translated by _Gérard de Nerval_, and they include: (1) _Chants
+de la fête de Pâques_; (2) _Paysans sous les tilleuls_; (3) _Concert des
+Sylphes_; (4 and 5) _Taverne d'Auerbach_, with the two songs of the Rat
+and the Flea; (6) _Chanson du roi de Thulé_; (7) _Romance de
+Marguerite_, "D'amour, l'ardente flamme," and _Choeur de soldats_; (8)
+_Sérénade de Méphistophélès_--that is to say, the most celebrated and
+characteristic pages of the _Damnation_ (see M. Prudhomme's essays on
+_Le Cycle de Berlioz_).]
+
+[Footnote 57: One could hardly find a better manifestation of the soul
+of a youthful musical genius than that in certain letters written at
+this time; in particular the letter written to Ferrand on 28 June, 1828,
+with its feverish postscript. What a life of rich and overflowing
+vigour! It is a joy to read it; one drinks at the source of life
+itself.]
+
+He wrote them at the same age, but ten years later; for _Les Fées_
+appeared in 1833, when Berlioz had already written the _Fantastique_,
+the _Huit scènes de Faust, Lelio_, and _Harold; Rienzi_ was only played
+in 1842, after _Benvenuto_ (1835), _Le Requiem_ (1837), _Roméo_ (1839),
+_La Symphonie funèbre et triomphale_ (1840)--that is to say, when
+Berlioz had finished all his great works, and after he had achieved his
+musical revolution. And that revolution was effected alone, without a
+model, without a guide. What could he have heard beyond the operas of
+Gluck and Spontini while he was at the Conservatoire? At the time when
+he composed the _Ouverture des Francs-Juges_ even the name of Weber was
+unknown to him,[58] and of Beethoven's compositions he had only heard an
+_andante_.[59]
+
+Truly, he is a miracle and the most startling phenomenon in the history
+of nineteenth-century music. His audacious power dominates all his age;
+and in the face of such a genius, who would not follow Paganini's
+example, and hail him as Beethoven's only successor?[60] Who does not
+see what a poor figure the young Wagner cut at that time, working away
+in laborious and self-satisfied mediocrity? But Wagner soon made up for
+lost ground; for he knew what he wanted, and he wanted it obstinately.
+
+[Footnote 58: _Mémoires_, I, 70.]
+
+[Footnote 59: _Ibid_. To make amends for this he published, in 1829, a
+biographical notice of Beethoven, in which his appreciation of him is
+remarkably in advance of his age. He wrote there: "The _Choral Symphony_
+is the culminating point of Beethoven's genius," and he speaks of the
+Fourth Symphony in C sharp minor with great discernment.]
+
+[Footnote 60: Beethoven died in 1827, the year when Berlioz was writing
+his first important work, the _Ouverture des Francs-Juges_.]
+
+The zenith of Berlioz's genius was reached, when he was thirty-five
+years old, with the _Requiem_ and _Roméo_. They are his two most
+important works, and are two works about which one may feel very
+differently. For my part, I am very fond of the one, and I dislike the
+other; but both of them open up two great new roads in art, and both are
+placed like two gigantic arches on the triumphal way of the revolution
+that Berlioz started. I will return to the subject of these works later.
+
+But Berlioz was already getting old. His daily cares and stormy domestic
+life,[61] his disappointments and passions, his commonplace and often
+degrading work, soon wore him out and, finally, exhausted his power.
+"Would you believe it?" he wrote to his friend Ferrand, "that which used
+to stir me to transports of musical passion now fills me with
+indifference, or even disdain. I feel as if I were descending a mountain
+at a great rate. Life is so short; I notice that thoughts of the end
+have been with me for some time past." In 1848, at forty-five years old,
+he wrote in his _Mémoires_: "I find myself so old and tired and lacking
+inspiration." At forty-five years old, Wagner had patiently worked out
+his theories and was feeling his power; at forty-five he was writing
+_Tristan_ and _The Music of the Future_. Abused by critics, unknown to
+the public, "he remained calm, in the belief that he would be master of
+the musical world in fifty years' time."[62]
+
+[Footnote 61: He left Henrietta Smithson in 1842; she died in 1854.]
+
+[Footnote 62: Written by Berlioz himself, in irony, in a letter of
+1855.]
+
+Berlioz was disheartened. Life had conquered him. It was not that he had
+lost any of his artistic mastery; on the contrary, his compositions
+became more and more finished; and nothing in his earlier work attained
+the pure beauty of some of the pages of _L'Enfance du Christ_ (1850-4),
+or of _Les Troyens_ (1855-63). But he was losing his power; and his
+intense feeling, his revolutionary ideas, and his inspiration (which in
+his youth had taken the place of the confidence he lacked) were failing
+him. He now lived on the past--the _Huit scènes de Faust_ (1828) held
+the germs of _La Damnation de Faust_ (1846); since 1833, he had been
+thinking of _Béatrice et Bénédict_ (1862); the ideas in _Les Troyens_
+were inspired by his childish worship of Virgil, and had been with him
+all his life. But with what difficulty he now finished his task! He had
+only taken seven months to write _Roméo_, and "on account of not being
+able to write the _Requiem_ fast enough, he had adopted a kind of
+musical shorthand";[63] but he took seven or eight years to write _Les
+Troyens_, alternating between moods of enthusiasm and disgust, and
+feeling indifference and doubt about his work. He groped his way
+hesitatingly and unsteadily; he hardly understood what he was doing. He
+admired the more mediocre pages of his work: the scene of the Laocoon,
+the finale of the last act of the _Les Troyens à Troie_, the last scene
+with Aeneas in _Les Troyens à Carthage_.[64] The empty pomposities of
+Spontini mingle with the loftiest conceptions. One might say that his
+genius became a stranger to him: it was the mechanical work of an
+unconscious force, like "stalactites in a dripping grotto." He had no
+impetus. It was only a matter of time before the roof of the grotto
+would give way. One is struck with the mournful despair with which he
+works; it is his last will and testament that he is making. And when he
+has finished it, he will have finished everything. His work is ended; if
+he lived another hundred years he would not have the heart to add
+anything more to it. The only thing that remains--and it is what he is
+about to do--is to wrap himself in silence and die.
+
+[Footnote 63: _Mémoires_, I, 307.]
+
+[Footnote 64: About this time he wrote to Liszt regarding _L'Enfance du
+Christ_: "I think I have hit upon something good in Herod's scena and
+air with the soothsayers; it is full of character, and will, I hope,
+please you. There are, perhaps, more graceful and pleasing things, but
+with the exception of the Bethlehem duet, I do not think they have the
+same quality of originality" (17 December, 1854).]
+
+Oh, mournful destiny! There are great men who have outlived their
+genius; but with Berlioz genius outlived desire. His genius was still
+there; one feels it in the sublime pages of the third act of _Les
+Troyens à Carthage_. But Berlioz had ceased to believe in his power; he
+had lost faith in everything. His genius was dying for want of
+nourishment; it was a flame above an empty tomb. At the same hour of his
+old age the soul of Wagner sustained its glorious flight; and, having
+conquered everything, it achieved a supreme victory in renouncing
+everything for its faith. And the divine songs of Parsifal resounded as
+in a splendid temple, and replied to the cries of the suffering Amfortas
+by the blessed words: "_Selig in Glauben! Selig in Liebe_!"
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+Berlioz's work did not spread itself evenly over his life; it was
+accomplished in a few years. It was not like the course of a great
+river, as with Wagner and Beethoven; it was a burst of genius, whose
+flames lit up the whole sky for a little while, and then died gradually
+down.[65] Let me try to tell you about this wonderful blaze.
+
+Some of Berlioz's musical qualities are so striking that it is
+unnecessary to dwell upon them here. His instrumental colouring, so
+intoxicating and exciting,[66] his extraordinary discoveries concerning
+timbre, his inventions of new nuances (as in the famous combining of
+flutes and trombones in the _Hostias et preces_ of the _Requiem_, and
+the curious use of the harmonics of violins and harps), and his huge and
+nebulous orchestra--all this lends itself to the most subtle expression
+of thought.[67]
+
+[Footnote 65: In 1830, old Rouget de Lisle called Berlioz, "a volcano in
+eruption" (_Mémoires_, I, 158).]
+
+[Footnote 66: M. Camille Saint-Saëns wrote in his _Portraits et
+Souvenirs_, 1900: "Whoever reads Berlioz's scores before hearing them
+played can have no real idea of their effect. The instruments appear to
+be arranged in defiance of all common sense; and it would seem, to use
+professional slang, that _cela ne dut pas sonner_, but _cela sonne_
+wonderfully. If we find here and there obscurities of style, they do not
+appear in the orchestra; light streams into it and plays there as in the
+facets of a diamond."]
+
+[Footnote 67: See the excellent essay of H. Lavoix, in his _Histoire de
+l'Instrumentation_. It should be noticed that Berlioz's observations in
+his _Traité d'instrumentation et d'orchestration modernes_ (1844) have
+not been lost upon Richard Strauss, who has just published a German
+edition of the work, and some of whose most famous orchestral effects
+are realisations of Berlioz's ideas.]
+
+Think of the effect that such works must have produced at that period.
+Berlioz was the first to be astonished when he heard them for the first
+time. At the _Ouverture des Francs-Juges_ he wept and tore his hair, and
+fell sobbing on the kettledrums. At the performance of his _Tuba mirum_,
+in Berlin, he nearly fainted. The composer who most nearly approached
+him was Weber, and, as we have already seen, Berlioz only knew him late
+in life. But how much less rich and complex is Weber's music, in spite
+of its nervous brilliance and dreaming poetry. Above all, Weber is much
+more mundane and more of a classicist; he lacks Berlioz's revolutionary
+passion and plebeian force; he is less expressive and less grand.
+
+How did Berlioz come to have this genius for orchestration almost from
+the very first? He himself says that his two masters at the
+Conservatoire taught him nothing in point of instrumentation:--
+
+ "Lesueur had only very limited ideas about the art. Reicha knew the
+ particular resources of most of the wind instruments; but I think
+ that he had not very advanced ideas on the subject of grouping
+ them."
+
+Berlioz taught himself. He used to read the score of an opera while it
+was being performed.
+
+ "It was thus," he says,[68] "that I began to get familiar with the
+ use of the orchestra, and to know its expression and timbre, as
+ well as the range and mechanism of most of the instruments. By
+ carefully comparing the effect produced with the means used to
+ produce it, I learned the hidden bond which unites musical
+ expression to the special art of instrumentation; but no one put me
+ in the way of this. The study of the methods of the three modern
+ masters, Beethoven, Weber, and Spontini, the impartial examination
+ of the traditions of instrumentation and of little-used forms and
+ combinations, conversations with virtuosi, and the effects I made
+ them try on their different instruments, together with a little
+ instinct, did the rest for me."[69]
+
+[Footnote 68: One may judge of this instinct by one fact: he wrote the
+overtures of _Les Francs-Juges_ and _Waverley_ without really knowing if
+it were possible to play them. "I was so ignorant," he says, "of the
+mechanism of certain instruments, that after having written the solo in
+D flat for the trombone in the Introduction of _Les Francs-Juges_, I
+feared it would be terribly difficult to play. So I went, very anxious,
+to one of the trombonists of the Opera orchestra. He looked at the
+passage and reassured me. 'The key of D flat is,' he said, 'one of the
+pleasantest for that instrument; and you can count on a splendid effect
+for that passage'" _(Mémoires_, I, 63).]
+
+[Footnote 69: _Mémoires_, I, 64.]
+
+That he was an originator in this direction no one doubts. And no one
+disputes, as a rule, "his devilish cleverness," as Wagner scornfully
+called it, or remains insensible to his skill and mastery in the
+mechanism of expression, and his power over sonorous matter, which make
+him, apart from his creative power, a sort of magician of music, a king
+of tone and rhythm. This gift is recognised even by his enemies--by
+Wagner, who seeks with some unfairness to restrict his genius within
+narrow limits, and to reduce it to "a structure with wheels of infinite
+ingenuity and extreme cunning ... a marvel of mechanism."[70]
+
+But though there is hardly anyone that Berlioz does not irritate or
+attract, he always strikes people by his impetuous ardour, his glowing
+romance, and his seething imagination, all of which makes and will
+continue to make his work one of the most picturesque mirrors of his
+age. His frenzied force of ecstasy and despair, his fulness of love and
+hatred, his perpetual thirst for life, which "in the heart of the
+deepest sorrow lights the Catherine wheels and crackers of the wildest
+joy"[71]--these are the qualities that stir up the crowds in _Benvenuto_
+and the armies in the _Damnation_, that shake earth, heaven, and hell,
+and are never quenched, but remain devouring and "passionate even when
+the subject is far removed from passion, and yet also express sweet and
+tender sentiments and the deepest calm."[72]
+
+[Footnote 70: "Berlioz displayed, in calculating the properties of
+mechanism, a really astounding scientific knowledge. If the inventors of
+our modern industrial machinery are to be considered benefactors of
+humanity to-day, Berlioz deserves to be considered as the true saviour
+of the musical world; for, thanks to him, musicians can produce
+surprising effects in music by the varied use of simple mechanical
+means.... Berlioz lies hopelessly buried beneath the ruins of his own
+contrivances" (_Oper und Drama_, 1851).]
+
+[Footnote 71: Letter from Berlioz to Ferrand.]
+
+[Footnote 72: "The chief characteristics of my music are passionate
+expression, inward warmth, rhythmic in pulses, and unforeseen effects.
+When I speak of passionate expression, I mean an expression that
+desperately strives to reproduce the inward feeling of its subject, even
+when the theme is contrary to passion, and deals with gentle emotions or
+the deepest calm. It is this kind of expression that may be found in
+_L'Enfance du Christ_, and, above all, in the scene of _Le Ciel_ in the
+_Damnation de Faust_ and in the _Sanctus_ of the _Requiem_" (_Mémoires_,
+II, 361).]
+
+Whatever one may think of this volcanic force, of this torrential stream
+of youth and passion, it is impossible to deny them; one might as well
+deny the sun.
+
+And I shall not dwell on Berlioz's love of Nature, which, as M.
+Prudhomme shows us, is the soul of a composition like the _Damnation_
+and, one might say, of all great compositions. No musician, with the
+exception of Beethoven, has loved Nature so profoundly. Wagner himself
+did not realise the intensity of emotion which she roused in
+Berlioz,[73] and how this feeling impregnated the music of the
+_Damnation_, of _Roméo_, and of _Les Troyens_.
+
+[Footnote 73: "So you are in the midst of melting glaciers in your
+_Niebelungen_! To be writing in the presence of Nature herself must be
+splendid. It is an enjoyment which I am denied. Beautiful landscapes,
+lofty peaks, or great stretches of sea, absorb me instead of evoking
+ideas in me. I feel, but I cannot express what I feel. I can only paint
+the moon when I see its reflection in the bottom of a well" (Berlioz to
+Wagner, 10 September, 1855).]
+
+But this genius had other characteristics which are less well known,
+though they are not less unusual. The first is his sense of pure beauty.
+Berlioz's exterior romanticism must not make us blind to this. He had a
+Virgilian soul; and if his colouring recalls that of Weber, his design
+has often an Italian suavity. Wagner never had this love of beauty in
+the Latin sense of the word. Who has understood the Southern nature,
+beautiful form, and harmonious movement like Berlioz? Who, since Gluck,
+has recognised so well the secret of classical beauty? Since _Orfeo_ was
+composed, no one has carved in music a bas-relief so perfect as the
+entrance of Andromache in the second act of _Les Troyens à Troie_. In
+_Les Troyens à Carthage_, the fragrance of the Aeneid is shed over the
+night of love, and we see the luminous sky and hear the murmur of the
+sea. Some of his melodies are like statues, or the pure lines of
+Athenian friezes, or the noble gesture of beautiful Italian girls, or
+the undulating profile of the Albanian hills filled with divine
+laughter. He has done more than felt and translated into music the
+beauty of the Mediterranean--he has created beings worthy of a Greek
+tragedy. His Cassandre alone would suffice to rank him among the
+greatest tragic poets that music has ever known. And Cassandre is a
+worthy sister of Wagner's Brünnhilde; but she has the advantage of
+coming of a nobler race, and of having a lofty restraint of spirit and
+action that Sophocles himself would have loved.
+
+Not enough attention has been drawn to the classical nobility from which
+Berlioz's art so spontaneously springs. It is not fully acknowledged
+that he was, of all nineteenth-century musicians, the one who had in the
+highest degree the sense of plastic beauty. Nor do people always
+recognise that he was a writer of sweet and flowing melodies.
+Weingartner expressed the surprise he felt when, imbued with current
+prejudice against Berlioz's lack of melodic invention, he opened, by
+chance, the score of the overture of _Benvenuto_ and found in that short
+composition, which barely takes ten minutes to play, not one or two, but
+four or five melodies of admirable richness and originality:--
+
+"I began to laugh, both with pleasure at having discovered such a
+treasure, and with annoyance at finding how narrow human judgment is.
+Here I counted five themes, all of them plastic and expressive of
+personality; of admirable workmanship, varied in form, working up by
+degrees to a climax, and then finishing with strong effect. And this
+from a composer who was said by critics and the public to be devoid of
+creative power! From that day on there has been for me another great
+citizen in the republic of art."[74]
+
+[Footnote 74: _Musikführer_, 29 November, 1903.]
+
+Before this, Berlioz had written in 1864:--
+
+ "It is quite easy for others to convince themselves that, without
+ even limiting me to take a very short melody as the theme of a
+ composition--as the greatest musicians have often done--I have
+ always endeavoured to put a wealth of melody into my compositions.
+ One may, of course, dispute the worth of these melodies, their
+ distinction, originality, or charm--it is not for me to judge
+ them--but to deny their existence is either unfair or foolish. They
+ are often on a large scale; and an immature or short-sighted
+ musical vision may not clearly distinguish their form; or, again,
+ they may be accompanied by secondary melodies which, to a limited
+ vision, may veil the form of the principal ones. Or, lastly,
+ shallow musicians may find these melodies so unlike the funny
+ little things that they call melodies, that they cannot bring
+ themselves to give the same name to both."[75]
+
+And what a splendid variety there is in these melodies: there is the
+song in Gluck's style (Cassandre's airs), the pure German _lied_
+(Marguerite's song, "D'amour l'ardente flamme"), the Italian melody,
+after Bellini, in its most limpid and happy form (arietta of Arlequin in
+_Benvenuto_), the broad Wagnerian phrase (finale of _Roméo_), the
+folk-song (chorus of shepherds in _L'Enfance du Christ_), and the freest
+and most modern recitative (the monologues of Faust), which was
+Berlioz's own invention, with its full development, its pliant outline,
+and its intricate nuances.[76]
+
+[Footnote 75: _Mémoires_, II, 361.]
+
+[Footnote 76: M. Jean Marnold has remarked this genius for monody in
+Berlioz in his article on _Hector Berlioz, musicien (Mercure de France_,
+15 January, and 1 February, 1905).]
+
+I have said that Berlioz had a matchless gift for expressing tragic
+melancholy, weariness of life, and the pangs of death. In a general way,
+one may say that he was a great elegist in music. Ambros, who was a very
+discerning and unbiassed critic, said: "Berlioz feels with inward
+delight and profound emotion what no musician, except Beethoven, has
+felt before." And Heinrich Heine had a keen perception of Berlioz's
+originality when he called him "a colossal nightingale, a lark the size
+of an eagle." The simile is not only picturesque, but of remarkable
+aptness. For Berlioz's colossal force is at the service of a forlorn and
+tender heart; he has nothing of the heroism of Beethoven, or Händel, or
+Gluck, or even Schubert. He has all the charm of an Umbrian painter, as
+is shown in _L'Enfance du Christ_, as well as sweetness and inward
+sadness, the gift of tears, and an elegiac passion.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now I come to Berlioz's great originality, an originality which is
+rarely spoken of, though it makes him more than a great musician, more
+than the successor of Beethoven, or, as some call him, the forerunner of
+Wagner. It is an originality that entitles him to be known, even more
+fitly than Wagner himself, as the creator of "an art of the future," the
+apostle of a new music, which even to-day has hardly made itself felt.
+
+Berlioz is original in a double sense. By the extraordinary complexity
+of his genius he touched the two opposite poles of his art, and showed
+us two entirely different aspects of music--that of a great popular art,
+and that of music made free.
+
+We are all enslaved by the musical tradition of the past. For
+generations we have been so accustomed to carry this yoke that we
+scarcely notice it. And in consequence of Germany's monopoly of music
+since the end of the eighteenth century, musical traditions--which had
+been chiefly Italian in the two preceding centuries--now became almost
+entirely German. We think in German forms: the plan of phrases, their
+development, their balance, and all the rhetoric of music and the
+grammar of composition comes to us from foreign thought, slowly
+elaborated by German masters. That domination has never been more
+complete or more heavy since Wagner's victory. Then reigned over the
+world this great German period--a scaly monster with a thousand arms,
+whose grasp was so extensive that it included pages, scenes, acts, and
+whole dramas in its embrace. We cannot say that French writers have ever
+tried to write in the style of Goethe or Schiller; but French composers
+have tried and are still trying to write music after the manner of
+German musicians.
+
+Why be astonished at it? Let us face the matter plainly. In music we
+have not, so to speak, any masters of French style. All our greatest
+composers are foreigners. The founder of the first school of French
+opera, Lulli, was Florentine; the founder of the second school, Gluck,
+was German; the two founders of the third school were Rossini, an
+Italian, and Meyerbeer, a German; the creators of _opéra-comique_ were
+Duni, an Italian, and Gretry, a Belgian; Franck, who revolutionised our
+modern school of opera, was also Belgian. These men brought with them a
+style peculiar to their race; or else they tried to found, as Gluck did,
+an "international" style,[77] by which they effaced the more individual
+characteristics of the French spirit. The most French of all these
+styles is the _opéra-comique_, the work of two foreigners, but owing
+much more to the _opéra-bouffe_ than is generally admitted, and, in any
+case, representing France very insufficiently.
+
+[Footnote 77: Gluck himself said this in a letter to the _Mercure de
+France_, February, 1773.]
+
+Some more rational minds have tried to rid themselves of this Italian
+and German influence, but have mostly arrived at creating an
+intermediate Germano-Italian style, of which the operas of Auber and
+Ambroise Thomas are a type.
+
+Before Berlioz's time there was really only one master of the first rank
+who made a great effort to liberate French music: it was Rameau; and,
+despite his genius, he was conquered by Italian art.[78]
+
+By force of circumstance, therefore, French music found itself moulded
+in foreign musical forms. And in the same way that Germany in the
+eighteenth century tried to imitate French architecture and literature,
+so France in the nineteenth century acquired the habit of speaking
+German in music. As most men speak more than they think, even thought
+itself became Germanised; and it was difficult then to discover, through
+this traditional insincerity, the true and spontaneous form of French
+musical thought.
+
+But Berlioz's genius found it by instinct. From the first he strove to
+free French music from the oppression of the foreign tradition that was
+suffocating it.[79]
+
+[Footnote 78: I am not speaking of the Franco-Flemish masters at the end
+of the sixteenth century: of Jannequin, Costeley, Claude le Jeune, or
+Mauduit, recently discovered by M. Henry Expert, who are possessed of so
+original a flavour, and have yet remained almost entirely unknown from
+their own time to ours. Religious wars bruised France's musical
+traditions and denied some of the grandeur of her art.]
+
+[Footnote 79: It is amusing to find Wagner comparing Berlioz with Auber,
+as the type of a true French musician--Auber and his mixed Italian and
+German opera. That shows how Wagner, like most Germans, was incapable of
+grasping the real originality of French music, and how he saw only its
+externals. The best way to find out the musical characteristics of a
+nation is to study its folk-songs. If only someone would devote himself
+to the study of French folk-song (and there is no lack of material),
+people would realise perhaps how much it differs from German folk-song,
+and how the temperament of the French race shows itself there as being
+sweeter and freer, more vigorous and more expressive.]
+
+He was fitted in every way for the part, even by his deficiencies and
+his ignorance. His classical education in music was incomplete. M.
+Saint-Saëns tells us that "the past did not exist for him; he did not
+understand the old composers, as his knowledge of them was limited to
+what he had read about them." He did not know Bach. Happy ignorance! He
+was able to write oratorios like _L'Enfance du Christ_ without being
+worried by memories and traditions of the German masters of oratorio.
+There are men like Brahms who have been, nearly all their life, but
+reflections of the past. Berlioz never sought to be anything but
+himself. It was thus that he created that masterpiece, _La Fuite en
+Égypte_, which sprang from his keen sympathy with the people.
+
+He had one of the most untrammelled spirits that ever breathed. Liberty
+was for him a desperate necessity. "Liberty of heart, of mind, of
+soul--of everything.... Real liberty, absolute and immense!"[80] And
+this passionate love of liberty, which was his misfortune in life, since
+it deprived him of the comfort of any faith, refused him any refuge for
+his thoughts, robbed him of peace, and even of the soft pillow of
+scepticism--this "real liberty" formed the unique originality and
+grandeur of his musical conceptions.
+
+[Footnote 80: _Mémoires_, I, 221.]
+
+ "Music," wrote Berlioz to C. Lobe, in 1852, "is the most poetic,
+ the most powerful, the most living of all arts. She ought to be the
+ freest, but she is not yet.... Modern music is like the classic
+ Andromeda, naked and divinely beautiful. She is chained to a rock
+ on the shores of a vast sea, and awaits the victorious Perseus who
+ shall loose her bonds and break in pieces the chimera called
+ Routine."
+
+The business was to free music from its limited rhythms and from the
+traditional forms and rules that enclosed it;[81] and, above all, it
+needed to be free from the domination of speech, and to be released from
+its humiliating bondage to poetry. Berlioz wrote to the Princess of
+Wittgenstein, in 1856:--
+
+[Footnote 81: "Music to-day, in the vigour of her youth, is emancipated
+and free and can do what she pleases. Many old rules have no longer any
+vogue; they were made by unreflecting minds, or by lovers of routine for
+other lovers of routine. New needs of the mind, of the heart, and of the
+sense of hearing, make necessary new endeavours and, in some cases, the
+breaking of ancient laws. Many forms have become too hackneyed to be
+still adopted. The same thing may be entirely good or entirely bad,
+according to the use one makes of it, or the reasons one has for making
+use of it. Sound and sonority are secondary to thought, and thought is
+secondary to feeling and passion." (These opinions were given with
+reference to Wagner's concerts in Paris, in 1860, and are taken from _A
+travers chants_, p. 312.)
+
+Compare Beethoven's words: "There is no rule that one may not break for
+the advancement of beauty."]
+
+ "I am for free music. Yes, I want music to be proudly free, to be
+ victorious, to be supreme. I want her to take all she can, so that
+ there may be no more Alps or Pyrenees for her. But she must
+ achieve her victories by fighting in person, and not rely upon her
+ lieutenants. I should like her to have, if possible, good verse
+ drawn up in order of battle; but, like Napoleon, she must face the
+ fire herself, and, like Alexander, march in the front ranks of the
+ phalanx. She is so powerful that in some cases she would conquer
+ unaided; for she has the right to say with Medea: 'I, myself, am
+ enough.'"
+
+Berlioz protested vigorously against Gluck's impious theory[82] and
+Wagner's "crime" in making music the slave of speech. Music is the
+highest poetry and knows no master.[83] It was for Berlioz, therefore,
+continually to increase the power of expression in pure music.
+
+[Footnote 82: Is it necessary to recall the _épître dédicatoire_ of
+_Alceste_ in 1769, and Gluck's declaration that he "sought to bring
+music to its true function--that of helping poetry to strengthen the
+expression of the emotions and the interest of a situation ... and to
+make it what fine colouring and the happy arrangement of light and shade
+are to a skilful drawing"?]
+
+[Footnote 83: This revolutionary theory was already Mozart's: "Music
+should reign supreme and make one forget everything else.... In an opera
+it is absolutely necessary that Poetry should be Music's obedient
+daughter" (Letter to his father, 13 October, 1781). Despairing probably
+at being unable to obtain this obedience, Mozart thought seriously of
+breaking up the form of opera, and of putting in its place, in 1778, a
+sort of melodrama (of which Rousseau had given an example in 1773),
+which he called "duodrama," where music and poetry were loosely
+associated, yet not dependent on each other, but went side by side on
+two parallel roads (Letter of 12 November, 1778).]
+
+And while Wagner, who was more moderate and a closer follower of
+tradition, sought to establish a compromise (perhaps an impossible one)
+between music and speech, and to create the new lyric drama, Berlioz,
+who was more revolutionary, achieved the dramatic symphony, of which the
+unequalled model to-day is still _Roméo et Juliette_.
+
+The dramatic symphony naturally fell foul of all formal theories. Two
+arguments were set up against it: one derived from Bayreuth, and by now
+an act of faith; the other, current opinion, upheld by the crowd that
+speaks of music without understanding it.
+
+The first argument, maintained by Wagner, is that music cannot really
+express action without the help of speech and gesture. It is in the name
+of this opinion that so many people condemn _a priori_ Berlioz's
+_Roméo_. They think it childish to try and _translate_ action into
+music. I suppose they think it less childish to _illustrate_ an action
+by music. Do they think that gesture associates itself very happily with
+music? If only they would try to root up this great fiction, which has
+bothered us for the last three centuries; if only they would open their
+eyes and see--what great men like Rousseau and Tolstoy saw so
+clearly--the silliness of opera; if only they would see the anomalies of
+the Bayreuth show. In the second act of _Tristan_ there is a celebrated
+passage, where Ysolde, burning with desire, is waiting for Tristan; she
+sees him come at last, and from afar she waves her scarf to the
+accompaniment of a phrase repeated several times by the orchestra. I
+cannot express the effect produced on me by that _imitation_ (for it is
+nothing else) of a series of sounds by a series of gestures; I can never
+see it without indignation or without laughing. The curious thing is
+that when one hears this passage at a concert, one sees the gesture. At
+the theatre either one does not "see" it, or it appears childish. The
+natural action becomes stiff when clad in musical armour, and the
+absurdity of trying to make the two agree is forced upon one. In the
+music of _Rheingold_ one pictures the stature and gait of the giants,
+and one sees the lightning gleam and the rainbow reflected on the
+clouds. In the theatre it is like a game of marionettes; and one feels
+the impassable gulf between music and gesture. Music is a world apart.
+When music wishes to depict the drama, it is not real action which is
+reflected in it, it is the ideal action transfigured by the spirit, and
+perceptible only to the inner vision. The worst foolishness is to
+present two visions--one for the eyes and one for the spirit. Nearly
+always they kill each other.
+
+The other argument urged against the symphony with a programme is the
+pretended classical argument (it is not really classical at all).
+"Music," they say, "is not meant to express definite subjects; it is
+only fitted for vague ideas. The more indefinite it is, the greater its
+power, and the more it suggests." I ask, What is an indefinite art? What
+is a vague art? Do not the two words contradict each other? Can this
+strange combination exist at all? Can an artist write anything that he
+does not clearly conceive? Do people think he composes at random as his
+genius whispers to him? One must at least say this: A symphony of
+Beethoven's is a "definite" work down to its innermost folds; and
+Beethoven had, if not an exact knowledge, at least a clear intuition of
+what he was about. His last quartets are descriptive symphonies of his
+soul, and very differently carried out from Berlioz's symphonies. Wagner
+was able to analyse one of the former under the name of "A Day with
+Beethoven." Beethoven was always trying to translate into music the
+depths of his heart, the subtleties of his spirit, which are not to be
+explained clearly by words, but which are as definite as words--in fact,
+more definite; for a word, being an abstract thing, sums up many
+experiences and comprehends many different meanings. Music is a hundred
+times more expressive and exact than speech; and it is not only her
+right to express particular emotions and subjects, it is her duty. If
+that duty is not fulfilled, the result is not music--it is nothing at
+all.
+
+Berlioz is thus the true inheritor of Beethoven's thought. The
+difference between a work like _Roméo_ and one of Beethoven's symphonies
+is that the former, it would seem, endeavours to express objective
+emotions and subjects in music. I do not see why music should not follow
+poetry in getting away from introspection and trying to paint the drama
+of the universe. Shakespeare is as good as Dante. Besides, one may add,
+it is always Berlioz himself that is discovered in his music: it is his
+soul starving for love and mocked at by shadows which is revealed
+through all the scenes of _Roméo_.
+
+I will not prolong a discussion where so many things must be left
+unsaid. But I would suggest that, once and for all, we get rid of these
+absurd endeavours to fence in art. Do not let us say: Music can....
+Music cannot express such-and-such a thing. Let us say rather, If genius
+pleases, everything is possible; and if music so wishes, she may be
+painting and poetry to-morrow. Berlioz has proved it well in his
+_Roméo_.
+
+This _Roméo_ is an extraordinary work: "a wonderful isle, where a temple
+of pure art is set up." For my part, not only do I consider it equal to
+the most powerful of Wagner's creations, but I believe it to be richer
+in its teaching and in its resources for art--resources and teaching
+which contemporary French art has not yet fully turned to account. One
+knows that for several years the young French school has been making
+efforts to deliver our music from German models, to create a language of
+recitative that shall belong to France and that the _leitmotif_ will not
+overwhelm; a more exact and less heavy language, which in expressing the
+freedom of modern thought will not have to seek the help of the
+classical or Wagnerian forms. Not long ago, the _Schola Cantorum_
+published a manifesto that proclaimed "the liberty of musical
+declamation ... free speech in free music ... the triumph of natural
+music with the free movement of speech and the plastic rhythm of the
+ancient dance"--thus declaring war on the metrical art of the last three
+centuries.[84]
+
+[Footnote 84: _Tribune de Saint Gervais_, November, 1903.]
+
+Well, here is that music; you will nowhere find a more perfect model. It
+is true that many who profess the principles of this music repudiate
+the model, and do not hide their disdain for Berlioz. That makes me
+doubt a little, I admit, the results of their efforts. If they do not
+feel the wonderful freedom of Berlioz's music, and do not see that it
+was the delicate veil of a very living spirit, then I think there will
+be more of archaism than real life in their pretensions to "free music."
+Study, not only the most celebrated pages of his work, such as the
+_Scène d'amour_ (the one of all his compositions that Berlioz himself
+liked best),[85] _La Tristesse de Roméo_, or _La Fête des Capulet_
+(where a spirit like Wagner's own unlooses and subdues again tempests of
+passion and joy), but take less well-known pages, such as the
+_Scherzetto chanté de la reine Mab_, or the _Réveil de Juliette_, and
+the music describing the death of the two lovers.[86] In the one what
+light grace there is, in the other what vibrating passion, and in both
+of them what freedom and apt expression of ideas. The language is
+magnificent, of wonderful clearness and simplicity; not a word too much,
+and not a word that does not reveal an unerring pen. In nearly all the
+big works of Berlioz before 1845 (that is up to the _Damnation_) you
+will find this nervous precision and sweeping liberty.
+
+[Footnote 85: _Mémoires_, II, 365.]
+
+[Footnote 86: "This composition contains a dose of sublimity much too
+strong for the ordinary public; and Berlioz, with the splendid insolence
+of genius, advises the conductor, in a note, to turn the page and pass
+it over" (Georges de Massougnes, _Berlioz_). This fine study by Georges
+de Massougnes appeared in 1870, and is very much in advance of its
+time.]
+
+Then there is the freedom of his rhythms. Schumann, who was nearest to
+Berlioz of all musicians of that time, and, therefore, best able to
+understand him, had been struck by this since the composition of the
+_Symphonic fantastique_,[87] He wrote:--
+
+ "The present age has certainly not produced a work in which similar
+ times and rhythms combined with dissimilar times and rhythms have
+ been more freely used. The second part of a phrase rarely
+ corresponds with the first, the reply to the question. This anomaly
+ is characteristic of Berlioz, and is natural to his southern
+ temperament."
+
+Far from objecting to this, Schumann sees in it something necessary to
+musical evolution.
+
+ "Apparently music is showing a tendency to go back to its
+ beginnings, to the time when the laws of rhythm did not yet trouble
+ her; it seems that she wishes to free herself, to regain an
+ utterance that is unconstrained, and raise herself to the dignity
+ of a sort of poetic language."
+
+And Schumann quotes these words of Ernest Wagner: "He who shakes off the
+tyranny of time and delivers us from it will, as far as one can see,
+give back freedom to music."[88]
+
+[Footnote 87: "Oh, how I love, honour, and reverence Schumann for having
+written this article alone" (Hugo Wolf, 1884).]
+
+[Footnote 88: _Neue Zeitschrift für Musik_. See _Hector Berlioz und
+Robert Schumann_. Berlioz was constantly righting for this freedom of
+rhythm--for "those harmonies of rhythm," as he said. He wished to form a
+Rhythm class at the Conservatoire (_Mémoires_, II, 241), but such a
+thing was not understood in France. Without being as backward as Italy
+on this point, France is still resisting the emancipation of rhythm
+(_Mémoires_, II, 196). But during the last ten years great progress in
+music has been made in France.]
+
+Remark also Berlioz's freedom of melody. His musical phrases pulse and
+flow like life itself. "Some phrases taken separately," says Schumann,
+"have such an intensity that they will not bear harmonising--_as in many
+ancient folk-songs_--and often even an accompaniment spoils their
+fulness."[89] These melodies so correspond with the emotions, that they
+reproduce the least thrills of body and mind by their vigorous
+workings-up and delicate reliefs, by splendid barbarities of modulation
+and strong and glowing colour, by gentle gradations of light and shade
+or imperceptible ripples of thought, which flow over the body like a
+steady tide. It is an art of peculiar sensitiveness, more delicately
+expressive than that of Wagner; not satisfying itself with the modern
+tonality, but going back to old modes--a rebel, as M. Saint-Saëns
+remarks, to the polyphony which had governed music since Bach's day, and
+which is perhaps, after all, "a heresy destined to disappear."[90]
+
+[Footnote 89: _Ibid_. "A rare peculiarity," adds Schumann, "which
+distinguishes nearly all his melodies." Schumann understands why Berlioz
+often gives as an accompaniment to his melodies a simple bass, or chords
+of the augmented and diminished fifth--ignoring the intermediate parts.]
+
+[Footnote 90: "What will then remain of actual art? Perhaps Berlioz will
+be its sole representative. Not having studied the pianoforte, he had an
+instinctive aversion to counterpoint. He is in this respect the opposite
+of Wagner, who was the embodiment of counterpoint, and drew the utmost
+he could from its laws" (Saint-Saëns).]
+
+How much finer, to my idea, are Berlioz's recitatives, with their long
+and winding rhythms,[91] than Wagner's declamations, which--apart from
+the climax of a subject, where the air breaks into bold and vigorous
+phrases, whose influence elsewhere is often weak--limit themselves to
+the quasi-notation of spoken inflections, and jar noisily against the
+fine harmonies of the orchestra. Berlioz's orchestration, too, is of a
+more delicate temper, and has a freer life than Wagner's, flowing in an
+impetuous stream, and sweeping away everything in its course; it is also
+less united and solid, but more flexible; its nature is undulating and
+varied, and the thousand imperceptible impulses of the spirit and of
+action are reflected there. It is a marvel of spontaneity and caprice.
+
+[Footnote 91: Jacques Passy notes that with Berlioz the most frequent
+phrases consist of twelve, sixteen, eighteen, or twenty bars. With
+Wagner, phrases of eight bars are rare, those of four more common, those
+of two still more so, while those of one bar are most frequent of all
+(_Berlioz et Wagner_, article published in _Le Correspondant_, 10 June,
+1888).]
+
+In spite of appearances, Wagner is a classicist compared with Berlioz;
+he carried on and perfected the work of the German classicists; he made
+no innovations; he is the pinnacle and the close of one evolution of
+art. Berlioz began a new art; and one finds in it all the daring and
+gracious ardour of youth. The iron laws that bound the art of Wagner are
+not to be found in Berlioz's early works, which give one the illusion of
+perfect freedom.[92]
+
+
+
+[Footnote 92: One must make mention here of the poorness and awkwardness
+of Berlioz's harmony--which is incontestable--since some critics and
+composers have been able to see (Am I saying something
+ridiculous?--Wagner would say it for me) nothing but "faults of
+orthography" in his genius. To these terrible grammarians--who, two
+hundred years ago, criticised Molière on account of his "jargon"--I
+shall reply by quoting Schumann.
+
+ "Berlioz's harmonies, in spite of the diversity of their effect,
+ obtained from very scanty material, are distinguished by a sort of
+ simplicity, and even by a solidity and conciseness, which one only
+ meets with in Beethoven.... One may find here and there harmonies
+ that are commonplace and trivial, and others that are incorrect--at
+ least according to the old rules. In some places his harmonies have
+ a fine effect, and in others their result is vague and
+ indeterminate, or it sounds badly, or is too elaborate and
+ far-fetched. Yet with Berlioz all this somehow takes on a certain
+ distinction. If one attempted to correct it, or even slightly to
+ modify it--for a skilled musician it would be child's play--the
+ music would become dull" (Article on the _Symphonie fantastique_).
+
+But let us leave that "grammatical discussion" as well as what Wagner
+wrote on "the childish question as to whether it is permitted or not to
+introduce 'neologisms' in matters of harmony and melody" (Wagner to
+Berlioz, 22 February, 1860). As Schumann has said, "Look out for fifths,
+and then leave us in peace."]
+
+As soon as the profound originality of Berlioz's music has been grasped,
+one understands why it encountered, and still encounters, so much secret
+hostility. How many accomplished musicians of distinction and learning,
+who pay honour to artistic tradition, are incapable of understanding
+Berlioz because they cannot bear the air of liberty breathed by his
+music. They are so used to thinking in German, that Berlioz's speech
+upsets and shocks them. I can well believe it. It is the first time a
+French musician has dared to think in French; and that is the reason why
+I warned you of the danger of accepting too meekly German ideas about
+Berlioz. Men like Weingartner, Richard Strauss, and Mottl--thoroughbred
+musicians--are, without doubt, able to appreciate Berlioz's genius
+better and more quickly than we French musicians. But I rather mistrust
+the kind of appreciation they feel for a spirit so opposed to their own.
+It is for France and French people to learn to read his thoughts; they
+are intimately theirs, and one day will give them their salvation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Berlioz's other great originality lay in his talent for music that was
+suited to the spirit of the common people, recently raised to
+sovereignty, and the young democracy. In spite of his aristocratic
+disdain, his soul was with the masses. M. Hippeau applies to him Taine's
+definition of a romantic artist: "the plebeian of a new race, richly
+gifted, and filled with aspirations, who, having attained for the first
+time the world's heights, noisily displays the ferment of his mind and
+heart." Berlioz grew up in the midst of revolutions and stories of
+Imperial achievement. He wrote his cantata for the _Prix de Rome_ in
+July, 1830, "to the hard, dull noise of stray bullets, which whizzed
+above the roofs, and came to flatten themselves against the wall near
+his window."[93] When he had finished this cantata, he went, "pistol in
+hand, to play the blackguard in Paris with the _sainte canaille_." He
+sang the _Marseillaise_, and made "all who had a voice and heart and
+blood in their veins"[94] sing it too. On his journey to Italy he
+travelled from Marseilles to Livourne with Mazzinian conspirators, who
+were going to take part in the insurrection of Modena and Bologna.
+Whether he was conscious of it or not, he was the musician of
+revolutions; his sympathies were with the people.
+
+[Footnote 93: _Mémoires_, I, 155.]
+
+[Footnote 94: These words are taken from Berlioz's directions on the
+score of his arrangement of the _Marseillaise_ for full orchestra and
+double choir.] Not only did he fill his scenes in the theatre with
+swarming and riotous crowds, like those of the Roman Carnival in the
+second act of _Benvenuto_ (anticipating by thirty years the crowds of
+_Die Meistersinger_), but he created a music of the masses and a
+colossal style. His model here was Beethoven; Beethoven of the Eroica,
+of the C minor, of the A, and, above all, of the Ninth Symphony. He was
+Beethoven's follower in this as well as other things, and the apostle
+who carried on his work.[95] And with his understanding of material
+effects and sonorous matter, he built edifices, as he says, that were
+"Babylonian and Ninevitish,"[96] "music after Michelangelo,"[97] "on an
+immense scale."[98]
+
+[Footnote 95: "From Beethoven," says Berlioz, "dates the advent in art
+of colossal forms" (_Mémoires_, II, 112). But Berlioz forgot one of
+Beethoven's models--Händel. One must also take into account the
+musicians of the French revolution: Mehul, Gossec, Cherubini, and
+Lesueur, whose works, though they may not equal their intentions, are
+not without grandeur, and often disclose the intuition of a new and
+noble and popular art.]
+
+[Footnote 96: Letter to Morel, 1855. Berlioz thus describes the
+_Tibiomnes_ and the _Judex_ of his _Te Deum_. Compare Heine's judgment:
+"Berlioz's music makes me think of gigantic kinds of extinct animals, of
+fabulous empires.... Babylon, the hanging gardens of Semiramis, the
+wonders of Nineveh, the daring buildings of Mizraim."]
+
+[Footnote 97: _Mémoires_, I, 17.]
+
+[Footnote 98: Letter to an unknown person, written probably about 1855,
+in the collection of Siegfried Ochs, and published in the _Geschichte
+der französischen Musik_ of Alfred Bruneau, 1904. That letter contains a
+rather curious analytical catalogue of Berlioz's works, drawn up by
+himself. He notes there his predilection for compositions of a "colossal
+nature," such as the _Requiem_, the _Symphonie funèbre et triomphale_,
+and the _Te Deum_, or those of "an immense style," such as the
+_Impériale_.]
+
+It was the _Symphonie funèbre et triomphale_ for two orchestras and a
+choir, and the _Te Deum_ for orchestra, organ, and three choirs, which
+Berlioz loved (whose finale _Judex crederis_ seemed to him the most
+effective thing he had ever written[99]), as well as the _Impériale_,
+for two orchestras and two choirs, and the famous _Requiem_, with its
+"four orchestras of brass instruments, placed round the main orchestra
+and the mass of voices, but separated and answering one another at a
+distance." Like the _Requiem_, these compositions are often crude in
+style and of rather commonplace sentiment, but their grandeur is
+overwhelming. This is not due only to the hugeness of the means
+employed, but also to "the breadth of the style and to the formidable
+slowness of some of the progressions--whose final aim one cannot
+guess--which gives these compositions a strangely gigantic
+character."[100] Berlioz has left in these compositions striking
+examples of the beauty that may reveal itself in a crude mass of music.
+Like the towering Alps, they move one by their very immensity. A German
+critic says: "In these Cyclopean works the composer lets the elemental
+and brute forces of sound and pure rhythm have their fling."[101] It is
+scarcely music, it is the force of Nature herself. Berlioz himself calls
+his _Requiem_ "a musical cataclysm."[102]
+
+
+
+[Footnote 99: _Mémoires_, II, 364. See also the letter quoted above.]
+
+[Footnote 100: _Mémoires_, II, 363. See also II, 163, and the
+description of the great festival of 1844, with its 1,022 performers.]
+
+[Footnote 101: Hermann Kretzschmar, _Führer durch den Konzertsaal_.]
+
+[Footnote 102: _Mémoires_, I, 312.]
+
+These hurricanes are let loose in order to speak to the people, to stir
+and rouse the dull ocean of humanity. The _Requiem_ is a Last Judgment,
+not meant, like that of the Sixtine Chapel (which Berlioz did not care
+for at all) for great aristocracies, but for a crowd, a surging,
+excited, and rather savage crowd. The _Marche de Rakoczy_ is less an
+Hungarian march than the music for a revolutionary fight; it sounds the
+charge; and Berlioz tells us it might bear Virgil's verses for a
+motto:--
+
+ " ... Furor iraque mentes
+ Praecipitant, pulchrumque mori succurrit in armis."[103]
+
+When Wagner heard the _Symphonic funèbre et triomphale_ he was forced to
+admit Berlioz's "skill in writing compositions that were popular in the
+best sense of the word."
+
+ "In listening to that symphony I had a lively impression that any
+ little street boy in a blue blouse and red bonnet would understand
+ it perfectly. I have no hesitation in giving precedence to that
+ work over Berlioz's other works; it is big and noble from the first
+ note to the last; a fine and eager patriotism rises from its first
+ expression of compassion to the final glory of the apotheosis, and
+ keeps it from any unwholesome exaggeration. I want gladly to
+ express my conviction that that symphony will fire men's courage
+ and will live as long as a nation bears the name of France."[104]
+
+[Footnote 103: Letter to some young Hungarians, 14 February, 1861. See
+the _Mémoires_, II, 212, for the incredible emotion which the _Marche de
+Rakoczy_ roused in the audience at Budapest, and, above all, for the
+astonishing scene at the end:--
+
+ "I saw a man enter unexpectedly. He was miserably clad, but his
+ face shone with a strange rapture. When he saw me, he threw himself
+ upon me and embraced me with fervour; his eyes filled with tears,
+ and he was hardly able to get out the words, 'Ah, monsieur,
+ monsieur! moi Hongrois ... pauvre diable ... pas parler Français
+ ... un poco Italiano. Pardonnez mon extase.... Ah! ai compris votre
+ canon.... Oui, oui, la grande-bataille.... Allemands chiens!' And
+ then striking his breast violently: 'Dans le coeur, moi ... je vous
+ porte.... _Ah! Français ... révolutionnaire ... savoir faire la
+ musique des révolutions_!'"]
+
+[Footnote 104: Written 5 May, 1841.]
+
+How do such works come to be neglected by our Republic? How is it they
+have not a place in our public life? Why are they not part of our great
+ceremonies? That is what one would wonderingly ask oneself if one had
+not seen, for the last century, the indifference of the State to Art.
+What might not Berlioz have done if the means had been given him, or if
+his works had found a place in the fêtes of the Revolution? Unhappily,
+one must add that here again his character was the enemy of his genius.
+As this apostle of musical freedom, in the second part of his life,
+became afraid of himself and recoiled before the results of his own
+principles, and returned to classicism, so this revolutionary fell to
+sullenly disparaging the people and revolutions; and he talks about "the
+republican cholera," "the dirty and stupid republic," "the republic of
+street-porters and rag-gatherers," "the filthy rabble of humanity a
+hundred times more stupid and animal in its twitchings and revolutionary
+grimacings than the baboons and orang-outangs of Borneo."[105]
+
+[Footnote 105: Berlioz never ceased to inveigh against the Revolution of
+1848--which should have had his sympathies. Instead of finding material,
+like Wagner, in the excitement of that time for impassioned
+compositions, he worked at _L'Enfance du Christ_. He affected absolute
+indifference--he who was so little made for indifference. He approved
+the State's action, and despised its visionary hopes.] What
+ingratitude! He owed to these revolutions, to these democratic storms,
+to these human tempests, the best of all his genius--and he disowned it
+all. This musician of a new era took refuge in the past.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Well, what did it matter? Whether he wished it or not, he opened out
+some magnificent roads for Art. He has shown the music of France the way
+in which her genius should tread; he has shown her possibilities she had
+never before dreamed of. He has given us a musical utterance at once
+truthful and expressive, free from foreign traditions, coming from the
+depths of our being, and reflecting our spirit; an utterance which
+responded to his imagination, to his instinct for what was picturesque,
+to his fleeting impressions, and his delicate shades of feeling. He has
+laid the strong foundation of a national and popular music for the
+greatest republic in Europe.
+
+These are shining qualities. If Berlioz had had Wagner's reasoning power
+and had made the utmost use of his intuitions, if he had had Wagner's
+will and had shaped the inspirations of his genius and welded them into
+a solid whole, I venture to say that he would have made a revolution in
+music greater than Wagner's own; for Wagner, though stronger and more
+master of himself, was less original and, at bottom, but the close of a
+glorious past.
+
+Will that revolution still be accomplished? Perhaps; but it has suffered
+half a century's delay. Berlioz bitterly calculated that people would
+begin to understand him about the year 1940.[106]
+
+After all, why be astonished that his mighty mission was too much for
+him? He was so alone.[107] As people forsook him, his loneliness stood
+out in greater relief. He was alone in the age of Wagner, Liszt,
+Schumann, and Franck; alone, yet containing a whole world in himself, of
+which his enemies, his friends, his admirers, and he himself, were not
+quite conscious; alone, and tortured by his loneliness. Alone--the word
+is repeated by the music of his youth and his old age, by the _Symphonie
+fantastique_ and _Les Troyens_. It is the word I read in the portrait
+before me as I write these lines--the beautiful portrait of the
+_Mémoires_, where his face looks out in sad and stern reproach on the
+age that so misunderstood him.
+
+[Footnote 106: "My musical career would finish very pleasingly if only I
+could live for a hundred and forty years" _(Mémoires_, II, 390).]
+
+[Footnote 107: This solitude struck Wagner. "Berlioz's loneliness is not
+only one of external circumstances; its origin is in his temperament.
+Though he is a Frenchman, with quick sympathies and interests like those
+of his fellow-citizens, yet he is none the less alone. He sees no one
+before him who will hold out a helping hand, there is no one by his side
+on whom he may lean" (Article written 5 May, 1841). As one reads these
+words, one feels it was Wagner's lack of sympathy and not his
+intelligence that prevented him from understanding Berlioz. In his heart
+I do not doubt that he knew well who was his great rival. But he never
+said anything about it--unless perhaps one counts an odd document,
+certainly not intended for publication, where he (even he) compares him
+to Beethoven and to Bonaparte (Manuscript in the collection of Alfred
+Bovet, published by Mottl in German magazines, and by M. Georges de
+Massougnes in the _Revue d'art dramatique_, 1 January, 1902).]
+
+
+
+
+WAGNER
+
+"SIEGFRIED"
+
+
+There is nothing so thrilling as first impressions. I remember when, as
+a child, I heard fragments of Wagner's music for the first time at one
+of old Pasdeloup's concerts in the Cirque d'Hiver. I was taken there one
+dull and foggy Sunday afternoon; and as we left the yellow fog outside
+and entered the hall we were met by an overpowering warmth, a dazzling
+blaze of light, and the murmuring voice of the crowd. My eyes were
+blinded, I breathed with difficulty, and my limbs soon became cramped;
+for we sat on wooden benches, crushed in a narrow space between solid
+walls of human beings. But with the first note of the music all was
+forgotten, and one fell into a state of painful yet delicious torpor.
+Perhaps one's very discomfort made the pleasure keener. Those who know
+the intoxication of climbing a mountain know also how closely it is
+associated with the discomforts of the climb--with fatigue and the
+blinding light of the sun, with out-of-breathness, and all the other
+sensations that rouse and stimulate life and make the body tingle, so
+that the remembrance of it all is carved indelibly on the mind. The
+comfort of a playhouse adds nothing to the illusion of a play; and it
+may even be due to the entire inconvenience of the old concert-rooms
+that I owe my vivid recollection of my first meeting with Wagner's work.
+
+How mysterious it was, and what a strange agitation it filled me with!
+There were new effects of orchestration, new timbres, new rhythms, and
+new subjects; it held the wild poetry of the far-away Middle Ages and
+old legends, it throbbed with the fever of our hidden sorrows and
+desires. I did not understand it very well. How should I? The music was
+taken from works quite unknown to me. It was almost impossible to seize
+the connection of the ideas on account of the poor acoustics of the
+room, the bad arrangement of the orchestra, and the unskilled
+players--all of which served to break up the musical design and spoil
+the harmony of its colouring. Passages that should have been made
+prominent were slurred over, and others were distorted by faulty time or
+want of precision. Even to-day, when our orchestras are seasoned by
+years of study, I should often be unable to follow Wagner's thought
+throughout a whole scene if I did not happen to know the score, for the
+outline of a melody is often smothered by the accompaniment, and so its
+sentiment is lost. If we still find obscurity of meaning in Wagner's
+works you can imagine how much worse it was then. But what did it
+matter? I used to feel myself stirred with passions that were not human:
+some magnetic influence seemed to thrill me with both pleasure and pain,
+and I felt invigorated and happy, for it brought me strength. It seemed
+as if my child's heart were torn from me and the heart of a hero put in
+its place.
+
+Nor was I alone in the experience. On the faces of the people round
+about me I saw the reflection of my own emotions. What was the meaning
+of it? The audience consisted chiefly of poor and commonplace people,
+whose faces were lined with the wear and tear of a life without interest
+or ideals; their minds were dull and heavy, and yet here they responded
+to the divine spirit of the music. There is no more impressive sight
+than that of thousands of people held spellbound by a melody; it is by
+turns sublime, grotesque, and touching.
+
+What a place in my life those Sunday concerts held! All the week I lived
+for those two hours; and when they were over I thought about them until
+the following Sunday. The fascination of Wagner's music for youth has
+often troubled people; they think it poisons the thoughts and dulls the
+activities. But the generation that was then intoxicated by Wagner does
+not seem to have shown signs of demoralisation since. Why do not people
+understand that if we had need of that music it was not because it was
+death to us, but life. Cramped by the artificiality of a town, far from
+action, or nature, or any strong or real life, we expanded under the
+influence of this noble music--music which flowed from a heart filled
+with understanding of the world and the breath of Nature. In _Die
+Meistersinger_, in _Tristan_, and in _Siegfried_, we went to find the
+joy, the love, and the vigour that we so lacked.
+
+At the time when I was feeling Wagner's seductiveness so strongly there
+were always some carping people among my elders ready to quench my
+admiration and say with a superior smile: "That is nothing. One can't
+judge Wagner at a concert. You must hear him in the opera-house at
+Bayreuth." Since then I have been several times to Bayreuth; I have seen
+Wagner's works performed in Berlin, in Dresden, in Munich, and in other
+German towns, but I have never again felt the old intoxication. People
+are wrong to pretend that closer acquaintance with a fine work adds to
+one's enjoyment of it. It may throw light upon it, but it nips one's
+imagination and dispels the mystery. The puzzling fragments one hears at
+concerts will take on splendid proportions on account of all the mind
+adds to them. That epic poem of the _Niebelungen_ was once like a forest
+in our dreams, where strange and awful beings flashed before our vision
+and then vanished. Later on, when we had explored all its paths, we
+discovered that order and reason reigned in the midst of this apparent
+jungle; and when we came to know the least wrinkle on the faces of its
+inhabitants, the confusion and emotion of other days no longer filled
+us.
+
+But this may be the result of growing older; and if I do not recognise
+the Wagner of other days, it is perhaps because I do not recognise my
+former self. A work of art, and above all a work of musical art, changes
+with ourselves. _Siegfried_, for example, is for me no longer full of
+mystery. The qualities in it that strike me to-day are its cheerful
+vigour, its clearness of form, its virile force and freedom, and the
+extraordinary healthiness of the hero, and, indeed, of the whole work.
+
+I sometimes think of poor Nietzsche and his passion for destroying the
+things he loved, and how he sought in others the decadence that was
+really in himself. He tried to embody this decadence in Wagner, and, led
+away by his flights of fancy and his mania for paradox (which would be
+laughable if one did not remember that his whims were not hatched in
+hours of happiness), he denied Wagner his most obvious qualities--his
+vigour, his determination, his unity, his logic, and his power of
+progress. He amused himself by comparing Wagner's style with that of
+Goncourt, by making him--with amusing irony--a great miniaturist
+painter, a poet of half-tones, a musician of affectations and
+melancholy, so delicate and effeminate in style that "after him all
+other musicians seemed too robust."[108] He has painted Wagner and his
+time delightfully. We all enjoy these little pictures of the Tetralogy,
+delicately drawn and worked up by the aid of a
+magnifying-glass--pictures of Wagner, languishing and beautiful, in a
+mournful salon, and pictures of the athletic meetings of the other
+musicians, who were "too robust"! The amusing part is that this piece of
+wit has been taken seriously by certain arbiters of elegance, who are
+only too happy to be able to run counter to any current opinion,
+whatever it may be.
+
+[Footnote 108: F. Nietzsche, _Der Fall Wagner_.]
+
+I do not say that there may not be a decadent side in Wagner, revealing
+super-sensitiveness or even hysteria and other modern nervous
+affections. And if this side was lacking he would not be representative
+of his time, and that is what every great artist ought to be. But there
+is certainly something more in him than decadence; and if women and
+young men cannot see anything beyond it, it only proves their inability
+to get outside themselves. A long time ago Wagner himself complained to
+Liszt that neither the public nor artists knew how to listen to or
+understand any side of his music but the effeminate side: "They do not
+grasp its strength," he said. "My supposed successes," he also tells us,
+"are founded on misunderstanding. My public reputation isn't worth a
+walnut-shell." And it is true he has been applauded, patronised, and
+monopolised for a quarter of a century by all the decadents of art and
+literature. Scarcely anyone has seen in him a vigorous musician and a
+classic writer, or has recognised him as Beethoven's direct successor,
+the inheritor of his heroic and pastoral genius, of his epic
+inspirations and battlefield rhythms, of his Napoleonic phrases and
+atmosphere of stirring trumpet-calls.
+
+Nowhere is Wagner nearer to Beethoven than in _Siegfried_. In _Die
+Walküre_ certain characters, certain phrases of Wotan, of Brünnhilde,
+and, especially, of Siegmund, bear a close relationship to Beethoven's
+symphonies and sonatas. I can never play the recitative _con espressione
+e semplice_ of the seventeenth sonata for the piano (Op. 31, No. 2)
+without being reminded of the forests of _Die Walküre_ and the fugitive
+hero. But in _Siegfried_ I find, not only a likeness to Beethoven in
+details, but the same spirit running through the work--both the poem and
+the music. I cannot help thinking that Beethoven would perhaps have
+disliked _Tristan_, but would have loved _Siegfried_; for the latter is
+a perfect incarnation of the spirit of old Germany, virginal and gross,
+sincere and malicious, full of humour and sentiment, of deep feeling, of
+dreams of bloody and joyous battles, of the shade of great oak-trees and
+the song of birds.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In my opinion, _Siegfried_, in spirit and in form, stands alone in
+Wagner's work. It breathes perfect health and happiness, and it
+overflows with gladness. Only _Die Meistersinger_ rivals it in
+merriment, though even there one does not find such a nice balance of
+poetry and music.
+
+And _Siegfried_ rouses one's admiration the more when one thinks that it
+was the offspring of sickness and suffering. The time at which Wagner
+wrote it was one of the saddest in his life. It often happens so in art.
+One goes astray in trying to interpret an artist's life by his work, for
+it is exceptional to find one a counterpart of the other. It is more
+likely that an artist's work will express the opposite of his life--the
+things that he did not experience. The object of art is to fill up what
+is missing in the artist's experience: "Art begins where life leaves
+off," said Wagner. A man of action is rarely pleased with stimulating
+works of art. Borgia and Sforza patronised Leonardo. The strong,
+full-blooded men of the seventeenth century; the apoplectic court at
+Versailles (where Fagon's lancet played so necessary a part); the
+generals and ministers who harassed the Protestants and burned the
+Palatinate--all these loved pastorales. Napoleon wept at a reading of
+_Paul et Virginie_, and delighted in the pallid music of Paesiello. A
+man wearied by an over-active life seeks repose in art; a man who lives
+a narrow, commonplace life seeks energy in art. A great artist writes a
+gay work when he is sad, and a sad work when he is gay, almost in spite
+of himself. Beethoven's symphony _To Joy_ is the offspring of his
+misery; and Wagner's _Meistersinger_ was composed immediately after the
+failure of _Tannhäuser_ in Paris. People try to find in _Tristan_ the
+trace of some love-story of Wagner's, but Wagner himself says: "As in
+all my life I have never truly tasted the happiness of love, I will
+raise a monument to a beautiful dream of it: I have the idea of _Tristan
+und Isolde_ in my head." And so it was with his creation of the happy
+and heedless _Siegfried_.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The first ideas of _Siegfried_ were contemporary with the Revolution of
+1848, which Wagner took part in with the same enthusiasm he put into
+everything else. His recognised biographer, Herr Houston Stewart
+Chamberlain--who, with M. Henri Lichtenberger, has succeeded best in
+unravelling Wagner's complex soul, though he is not without certain
+prejudices--has been at great pains to prove that Wagner was always a
+patriot and a German monarchist. Well, he may have been so later on, but
+it was not, I think, the last phase of his evolution. His actions speak
+for themselves. On 14 June, 1848, in a famous speech to the National
+Democratic Association, Wagner violently attacked the organisation of
+society itself, and demanded both the abolition of money and the
+extinction of what was left of the aristocracy. In _Das Kunstwerk der
+Zukunft_ (1849) he showed that beyond the "local nationalism" were signs
+of a "supernational universalism." And all this was not merely talk, for
+he risked his life for his ideas. Herr Chamberlain himself quotes the
+account of a witness who saw him, in May, 1849, distributing
+revolutionary pamphlets to the troops who were besieging Dresden. It was
+a miracle that he was not arrested and shot. We know that after Dresden
+was taken a warrant was out against him, and he fled to Switzerland,
+with a passport on which was a borrowed name. If it be true that Wagner
+later declared that he had been "involved in error and led away by his
+feelings" it matters little to the history of that time. Errors and
+enthusiasms are an integral part of life, and one must not ignore them
+in a man's biography under the pretext that he regretted them twenty or
+thirty years later, for they have, nevertheless, helped to guide his
+actions and impressed his imagination. It was out of the Revolution
+itself that _Siegfried_ directly sprang.
+
+In 1848, Wagner was not yet thinking of a Tetralogy, but of an heroic
+opera in three acts called _Siegfried's Tod_, in which the fatal power
+of gold was to be symbolised in the treasure of the Niebelungen; and
+Siegfried was to represent "a socialist redeemer come down to earth to
+abolish the reign of Capital." As the rough draft developed, Wagner went
+up the stream of his hero's life. He dreamed of his childhood, of his
+conquest of the treasure, of the awakening of Brünnhilde; and in 1851 he
+wrote the poem of _Der Junge Siegfried_. Siegfried and Brünnhilde
+represent the humanity of the future, the new era that should be
+realised when the earth was set free from the yoke of gold. Then Wagner
+went farther back still, to the sources of the legend itself, and Wotan
+appeared, the symbol of our time, a man such as you or I--in contrast to
+Siegfried, man as he ought to be, and one day will be. On this subject
+Wagner says, in a letter to Roeckel: "Look well at Wotan; he is the
+unmistakable likeness of ourselves, and the sum of the present-day
+spirit, while Siegfried is the man we wait and wish for--the future man
+whom we cannot create, but who will create himself by our
+annihilation--the most perfect man I can imagine." Finally Wagner
+conceived the Twilight of the Gods, the fall of the Valhalla--our
+present system of society--and the birth of a regenerated humanity.
+Wagner wrote to Uhlig in 1851 that the complete work was to be played
+after the great Revolution.
+
+The opera public would probably be very astonished to learn that in
+_Siegfried_ they applaud a revolutionary work, expressly directed by
+Wagner against this detested Capital, whose downfall would have been so
+dear to him. And he never doubted that he was expressing grief in all
+these pages of shining joy.
+
+Wagner went to Zurich after a stay in Paris, where he felt "so much
+distrust for the artistic world and horror for the restraint that he was
+forced to put upon himself" that he was seized with a nervous malady
+which nearly killed him. He returned to work at _Der Junge Siegfried_,
+and he says it brought him great joy.
+
+ "But I am unhappy in not being able to apply myself to anything but
+ music. I know I am feeding on an illusion, and that reality is the
+ only thing worth having. My health is not good, and my nerves are
+ in a state of increasing weakness. My life, lived entirely in the
+ imagination and without sufficient action, tires me so, that I can
+ only work with frequent breaks and long intervals of rest;
+ otherwise I pay the penalty with long and painful suffering.... I
+ am very lonely. I often wish for death.
+
+ "While I work I forget my troubles; but the moment I rest they come
+ flocking about me, and I am very miserable. What a splendid life is
+ an artist's! Look at it! How willingly would I part with it for a
+ week of real life.
+
+ "I can't understand how a really happy man could think of serving
+ art. If we enjoyed life, we should have no need of art. When the
+ present has nothing more to offer us we cry out our needs by means
+ of art. To have my youth again and my health, to enjoy nature, to
+ have a wife who would love me devotedly, and fine children--for
+ this I would give up _all my art_. Now I have said it--give me what
+ is left."
+
+Thus the poem of the Tetralogy was written with doubts, as he said, as
+to whether he should abandon art and all belonging to it and become a
+healthy, normal man--a son of nature. He began to compose the music of
+the poem while in a state of suffering, which every day became more
+acute.
+
+ "My nights are often sleepless; I get out of bed, wretched and
+ exhausted, with the thought of a long day before me, which will not
+ bring me a single joy. The society of others tortures me, and I
+ avoid it only to torture myself. Everything I do fills me with
+ disgust. It can't go on for ever. I can't stand such a life any
+ longer. I will kill myself rather than live like this.... I don't
+ believe in anything, and I have only one desire--to sleep so
+ soundly that human misery will exist no more for me. I ought to be
+ able to get such a sleep somehow; it should not be really
+ difficult."
+
+For distraction he went to Italy; Turin, Genoa, Spezia, and Nice. But
+there, in a strange world, his loneliness seemed so frightful that he
+became very depressed, and made all haste back to Zurich. It was there
+he wrote the happy music of _Das Rheingold_. He began the score of _Die
+Walküre_ at a time when his normal condition was one of suffering. Then
+he discovered Schopenhauer, whose philosophy only helped to confirm and
+crystallise his instinctive pessimism. In the spring of 1855 he went to
+London to give concerts; but he was ill there, and this fresh contact
+with the world only served to annoy him further. He had some difficulty
+in again taking up _Die Walküre_; but he finished it at last in spite of
+frequent attacks of facial erysipelas, for which he afterwards had to
+undergo a hydropathic cure at Geneva. He began the score of _Siegfried_
+towards the end of 1856, while the thought of Tristan was stirring
+within him. In _Tristan_ he wished to depict love as "a dreadful
+anguish"; and this idea obsessed him so completely that he could not
+finish _Siegfried_. He seemed to be consumed by a burning fever; and,
+abandoning _Siegfried_ in the middle of the second act, he threw himself
+madly into _Tristan_. "I want to gratify my desire for love," he says,
+"until it is completely satiated; and in the folds of the black flag
+that floats over its consummation I wish to wrap myself and die."[109]
+_Siegfried_ was not finished until 5 February, 1871, at the end of the
+Franco-Prussian war--that is fourteen years later, after several
+interruptions.
+
+Such is, in a few words, the history of this heroic idyll. It is perhaps
+as well to remind the public now and then that the hours of distraction
+they enjoy by means of art may represent years of suffering for the
+artist.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Footnote 109: The quotations from Wagner are taken from his letters to
+Roeckel, Uhlig, and Liszt, between 1851 and 1856.]
+
+Do you know the amusing account Tolstoy gave of a performance of
+_Siegfried_? I will quote it from his book, _What is Art_?--
+
+ "When I arrived, an actor in tight-fitting breeches was seated
+ before an object that was meant to represent an anvil. He wore a
+ wig and false beard; his white and manicured hands had nothing of
+ the workman about them; and his easy air, prominent belly, and
+ flabby muscles readily betrayed the actor. With an absurd hammer he
+ struck--as no one else would ever strike--a fantastic-looking
+ sword-blade. One guessed he was a dwarf, because when he walked he
+ bent his legs at the knees. He cried out a great deal, and opened
+ his mouth in a queer fashion. The orchestra also emitted peculiar
+ noises like several beginnings that had nothing to do with one
+ another. Then another actor appeared with a horn in his belt,
+ leading a man dressed up as a bear, who walked on all-fours. He let
+ loose the bear on the dwarf, who ran away, but forgot to bend his
+ knees this time. The actor with the human face represented the
+ hero, Siegfried. He cried out for a long time, and the dwarf
+ replied in the same way. Then a traveller arrived--the god Wotan.
+ He had a wig, too; and, settling himself down with his spear, in a
+ silly attitude, he told Mimi all about things he already knew, but
+ of which the audience was ignorant. Then Siegfried seized some bits
+ that were supposed to represent pieces of a sword, and sang:
+
+ 'Heaho, heaho, hoho! Hoho, hoho, hoho, hoho! Hoheo, haho, haheo,
+ hoho!' And that was the end of the first act. It was all so
+ artificial and stupid that I had great difficulty in sitting it
+ out. But my friends begged me to stay, and assured me that the
+ second act would be better.
+
+ "The next scene represented a forest. Wotan was waking up the
+ dragon. At first the dragon said, 'I want to go to sleep'; but
+ eventually he came out of his grotto. The dragon was represented by
+ two men clothed in a green skin with some scales stuck about it. At
+ one end of the skin they wagged a tail, and at the other end they
+ opened a crocodile's mouth, out of which came fire. The dragon,
+ which ought to have been a frightful beast--and perhaps he would
+ have frightened children about five years old--said a few words in
+ a bass voice. It was so childish and feeble that one was astonished
+ to see grown-up people present; even thousands of so-called
+ cultured people looked on and listened attentively, and went into
+ raptures. Then Siegfried arrived with his horn. He lay down during
+ a pause, which is reputed to be very beautiful; and sometimes he
+ talked to himself, and sometimes he was quite silent. He wanted to
+ imitate the song of the birds, and cut a rush with his horn, and
+ made a flute out of it. But he played the flute badly, and so he
+ began to blow his horn. The scene is intolerable, and there is not
+ the least trace of music in it. I was annoyed to see three thousand
+ people round about me, listening submissively to this absurdity
+ and dutifully admiring it.
+
+ "With some courage I managed to wait for the next
+ scene--Siegfried's fight with the dragon. There were roarings and
+ flames of fire and brandishings of the sword. But I could not stand
+ it any longer; and I fled out of the theatre with a feeling of
+ disgust that I have not yet forgotten."
+
+I admit I cannot read this delightful criticism without laughing; and it
+does not affect me painfully like Nietzsche's pernicious and morbid
+irony. It used to be a grief to me that two men whom I loved with an
+equal affection, and whom I reverenced as the finest spirits in Europe,
+remained strangers and hostile to each other. I could not bear the
+thought that a genius, hopelessly misunderstood by the crowd, should be
+bent on making his solitude more bitter and narrow by refusing, with a
+sort of jealous waywardness, to be reconciled to his equals, or to offer
+them the hand of friendship. But now I think that perhaps it was better
+so. The first virtue of genius is sincerity. If Nietzsche had to go out
+of his way _not_ to understand Wagner, it is natural, on the other hand,
+that Wagner should be a closed book to Tolstoy; it would be almost
+surprising if it were otherwise. Each one has his own part to play, and
+has no need to change it. Wagner's wonderful dreams and magic intuition
+of the inner life are not less valuable to us than Tolstoy's pitiless
+truth, in which he exposes modern society and tears away the veil of
+hypocrisy with which she covers herself. So I admire _Siegfried_, and
+at the same time enjoy Tolstoy's satire; for I like the latter's sturdy
+humour, which is one of the most striking features of his realism, and
+which, as he himself noticed, makes him closely resemble Rousseau. Both
+men show us an ultra-refined civilisation, and both are uncompromising
+apostles of a return to nature.
+
+Tolstoy's rough banter recalls Rousseau's sarcasm about an opera of
+Rameau's. In the _Nouvelle Héloïse_, he rails in a similar fashion
+against the sadly fantastic performances at the theatre. It was, even
+then, a question of monsters, "of dragons animated by a blockhead of a
+Savoyard, who had not enough spirit for the beast."
+
+ "They assured me that they had a tremendous lot of machinery to
+ make all this movement, and they offered several times to show it
+ to me; but I felt no curiosity about little effects achieved by
+ great efforts.... The sky is represented by some blue rags
+ suspended from sticks and cords, like a laundry display.... The
+ chariots of the gods and goddesses are made of four joists in a
+ frame, suspended by a thick rope, as a swing might be. Then a plank
+ is stuck across the joists, and on this is seated a god. In front
+ of him hangs a piece of daubed cloth, which serves as a cloud upon
+ which his splendid chariot may rest.... The theatre is furnished
+ with little square trap-doors which, opening as occasion requires,
+ show that the demons can be let loose from the cellars. When the
+ demons have to fly in the air, dummies of brown cloth are
+ substituted, or sometimes real chimney-sweeps, who swing in the
+ air, suspended by cords, until they are gloriously lost in the rag
+ sky....
+
+ "But you can have no idea of the dreadful cries and roarings with
+ which the theatre resounds.... What is so extraordinary is that
+ these howlings are almost the only things that the audience
+ applaud. By the way they clap their hands one would take them to be
+ a lot of deaf creatures, who were so delighted to catch a few
+ piercing sounds now and then that they wanted the actors to do them
+ all over again. I am quite sure that people applaud the bawling of
+ an actress at the opera as they would a mountebank's feats of skill
+ at a fair--one suffers while they are going on, but one is so
+ delighted to see them finish without an accident that one willingly
+ demonstrates one's pleasure.... With these beautiful sounds, as
+ true as they are sweet, those of the orchestra blend very worthily.
+ Imagine an unending clatter of instruments without any melody; a
+ lingering and endless groaning among the bass parts; and the whole
+ the most mournful and boring thing that I ever heard in my life. I
+ could not put up with it for half an hour without getting a violent
+ headache.
+
+ "All this forms a sort of psalmody, possessing neither tune nor
+ time. But if by any chance a lively air is played, there is a
+ general stamping; the audience is set in motion, and follows, with
+ a great deal of trouble and noise, some performer in the
+ orchestra. Delighted to feel for a few moments the rhythm that is
+ so lacking, they torment the ear, the voice, the arms, the legs,
+ and all the body, to chase after a tune that is ever ready to
+ escape them...."
+
+I have quoted this rather long passage to show how the impression made
+by one of Rameau's operas on his contemporaries resembled that made by
+Wagner on his enemies. It was not without reason that Rameau was said to
+be Wagner's forerunner, as Rousseau was Tolstoy's forerunner.
+
+In reality, it was not against _Siegfried_ itself that Tolstoy's
+criticism was directed; and Tolstoy was closer than he thought to the
+spirit of this drama. Is not Siegfried the heroic incarnation of a free
+and healthy man, sprung directly from Nature? In a sketch of
+_Siegfried_, written in 1848, Wagner says:
+
+ "To follow the impulses of my heart is my supreme law; what I can
+ accomplish by obeying my instincts is what I ought to do. Is that
+ voice of instinct cursed or blessed? I do not know; but I yield to
+ it, and never force myself to run counter to my inclination."
+
+Wagner fought against civilisation by quite other methods than those
+employed by Tolstoy; and if the efforts of the two were equally great,
+the practical result is--one must really say it--as poor on one side as
+on the other.
+
+What Tolstoy's raillery is really aimed at is not Wagner's work, but the
+way in which his work was represented. The splendours of the setting do
+not hide the childishness of the ideas behind them: the dragon Fafna,
+Fricka's rams, the bear, the serpent, and all the Valhalla menagerie
+have always been ridiculous. I will only add that the dragon's failure
+to be terrifying was not Wagner's fault, for he never attempted to
+depict a terrifying dragon. He gave it quite clearly, and of his own
+choice, a comic character. Both the text and the music make Fafner a
+sort of ogre, a simple creature, but, above all, a grotesque one.
+
+Besides, I cannot help feeling that scenic reality takes away rather
+than adds to the effect of these great philosophical fairylands. Malwida
+von Meysenbug told me that at the Bayreuth festival of 1876, while she
+was following one of the _Ring_ scenes very attentively with her
+opera-glasses, two hands were laid over her eyes, and she heard Wagner's
+voice say impatiently: "Don't look so much at what is going on. Listen!"
+It was good counsel. There are dilettanti who pretend that at a concert
+the best way to enjoy Beethoven's last works--where the sonority is
+defective--is to stop the ears and read the score. One might say with
+less of a paradox that the best way to follow a performance of Wagner's
+operas is to listen with the eyes shut. So perfect is the music, so
+powerful its hold on the imagination, that it leaves nothing to be
+desired; what it suggests to the mind is infinitely finer than what the
+eyes may see. I have never shared the opinion that Wagner's works may
+be best appreciated in the theatre. His works are epic symphonies. As a
+frame for them I should like temples; as scenery, the illimitable land
+of thought; as actors, our dreams.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The first act of _Siegfried_ is one of the most dramatic in the
+Tetralogy. Nothing satisfied me more completely at Bayreuth, both as
+regards the actors and the dramatic effects. Fantastic creatures like
+Alberich and Mimi, who seem to be out of their element in France, are
+rooted deep down in German imaginations. The Bayreuth actors surpassed
+themselves in making them startlingly lifelike, with a trembling and
+grimacing realism. Burgstaller, who was then making his debut in
+_Siegfried_, acted with an impetuous awkwardness which accorded well
+with the part. I remember with what zest--which seemed in no way
+affected--he played the hero smith, labouring like a true workman,
+blowing the fire and making the blade glow, dipping it in the steaming
+water, and working it on the anvil; and then, in a burst of Homeric
+gaiety, singing that fine hymn at the end of the first act, which sounds
+like an air by Bach or Händel.
+
+But in spite of all this, I felt how much better it was to dream, or to
+hear this poem of a youthful soul at a concert. It is then that the
+magic murmurs of the forest in the second act speak more directly to the
+heart. However beautiful the scenery of glades and woods, however
+cleverly the light is made to change and dance among the trees--and it
+is manipulated now like a set of organ stops--it still seems almost
+wrong to listen with open eyes to music that, unaided, can show us a
+glorious summer's day, and make us see the swaying of the tree-tops, and
+hear the brush of the wind against the leaves. Through the music alone
+the hum and murmur of a thousand little voices is about us, the glorious
+song of the birds floats into the depths of a blue sky; or comes a
+silence, vibrating with invisible life, when Nature, with her mysterious
+smile, opens her arms and hushes all things in a divine sleep.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Wagner left _Siegfried_ asleep in the forest in order to embark on the
+funereal vessel of _Tristan und Isolde_. But he left Siegfried with some
+anguish of heart. When writing to Liszt in 1857, he says:
+
+ "I have taken young Siegfried into the depths of a lonely forest;
+ there I have left him under a lime-tree, and said good-bye to him
+ with tears in my eyes. It has torn my heart to bury him alive, and
+ I had a hard and painful fight with myself before I could do it....
+ Shall I ever go back to him? No, it is all finished. Don't let us
+ speak of it again."
+
+Wagner had reason to be sad. He knew well that he would never find his
+young Siegfried again. He roused him up ten years later. But all was
+changed. That splendid third act has not the freshness of the first two.
+Wotan has become an important figure, and brought reason and pessimism
+with him into the drama. Wagner's later conceptions were perhaps
+loftier, and his genius was more master of itself (think of the classic
+dignity in the awakening of Brünnhilde); but the ardour and happy
+expression of youth is gone. I know that this is not the opinion of most
+of Wagner's admirers; but, with the exception of a few pages of sublime
+beauty, I have never altogether liked the love scenes at the end of
+_Siegfried_ and at the beginning of _Götterdämmerung_. I find their
+style rather pompous and declamatory; and their almost excessive
+refinement makes them border upon dulness. The form of the duet, too,
+seems cut and dried, and there are signs of weariness in it. The
+heaviness of the last pages of _Siegfried_ recalls _Die Meistersinger_,
+which is also of that period. It is no longer the same joy nor the same
+quality of joy that is found in the earlier acts.
+
+Yet it does not really matter, for joy is there, nevertheless; and so
+splendid was the first inspiration of the work that the years have not
+dimmed its brilliancy. One would like to end with _Siegfried_, and
+escape the gloomy _Götterdämmerung_. For those who have sensitive
+feelings the fourth day of the Tetralogy has a depressing effect. I
+remember the tears I have seen shed at the end of the _Ring_, and the
+words of a friend, as we left the theatre at Bayreuth and descended the
+hill at night: "I feel as though I were coming away from the burial of
+someone I dearly loved." It was truly a time of mourning. Perhaps there
+was something incongruous in building such a structure when it had
+universal death for its conclusion--or at least in making the whole an
+object of show and instruction. _Tristan_ achieves the same end with
+much more power, as the action is swifter. Besides that, the end of
+_Tristan_ is not without comfort, for life there is terrible. But it is
+not the same in _Götterdämmerung_; for in spite of the absurdity of the
+spell which is set upon the love of Siegfried and Brünnhilde, life with
+them is happy and desirable, since they are beings capable of love, and
+death appears to be a splendid but awful catastrophe. And one cannot say
+the _Ring_ breathes a spirit of renunciation and sacrifice like
+_Parsifal_; renunciation and sacrifice are only talked about in the
+_Ring_; and, in spite of the last transports which impel Brünnhilde to
+the funeral pyre, they are neither an inspiration nor a delight. One has
+the impression of a great gulf yawning at one's feet, and the anguish of
+seeing those one loves fall into it.
+
+I have often regretted that Wagner's first conception of _Siegfried_
+changed in the course of years; and in spite of the magnificent
+_dénouement_ of _Götterdämmerung_ (which is really more effective in a
+concert room, for the real tragedy ends with Siegfried's death), I
+cannot help thinking with regret how fine a more optimistic poem from
+this revolutionary of '48 might have been. People tell me that it would
+then have been less true to life. But why should it be truthful to
+depict life only as a bad thing? Life is neither good nor bad it is just
+what we make it, and the result of the way in which we look at it. Joy
+is as real as sorrow, and a very fertile source of action. What
+inspiration there is in the laugh of a great man! Let us welcome,
+therefore, the sparkling if transient gaiety of _Siegfried_.
+
+Wagner wrote to Malwida von Meysenbug: "I have, by chance, just been
+reading Plutarch's life of Timoleon. That life ended very happily--a
+rare and unheard-of thing, especially in history. It does one good to
+think that such a thing is possible. It moved me profoundly."
+
+I feel the same when I hear _Siegfried_. We are rarely allowed to
+contemplate happiness in great tragic art; but when we may, how splendid
+it is, and how good for one!
+
+
+
+
+"TRISTAN"
+
+
+Tristan towers like a mountain above all other love poems, as Wagner
+above all other artists of his century. It is the outcome of a sublime
+conception, though the work as a whole is far from perfect. Of perfect
+works there is none where Wagner is concerned. The effort necessary for
+the creation of them was too great to be long sustained; for a single
+work might means years of toil. And the tense emotions of a whole drama
+cannot be expressed by a series of sudden inspirations put into form the
+moment they are conceived. Long and arduous labour is necessary. These
+giants, fashioned like Michelangelo's, these concentrated tempests of
+heroic force and decadent complexity, are not arrested, like the work of
+a sculptor or painter, in one moment of their action; they live and go
+on living in endless detail of sensation. To expect sustained
+inspiration is to expect what is not human. Genius may reveal what is
+divine; it may call up and catch a glimpse of _die Mütter_, but it
+cannot always breathe in the exhausted air of this world. So will must
+sometimes take the place of inspiration; though the will is uncertain
+and often stumbles in its task. That is why we encounter things that jar
+and jolt in the greatest works--they are the marks of human weakness.
+Well, perhaps there is less weakness in _Tristan_ than in Wagner's
+other dramas--_Götterdämmerung_, for instance--for nowhere else is the
+effort of his genius more strenuous or its flight more dizzy. Wagner
+himself knew it well. His letters show the despair of a soul wrestling
+with its familiar spirit, which it clutches and holds, only to lose
+again. And we seem to hear cries of pain, and feel his anger and
+despair.
+
+ "I can never tell you what a really wretched musician I am. In my
+ inmost heart I know I am a bungler and an absolute failure. You
+ should see me when I say to myself, 'It ought to go now,' and sit
+ down to the piano and put together some miserable rubbish, which I
+ fling away again like an idiot. I know quite well the kind of
+ musical trash I produce.... Believe me, it is no good expecting me
+ to do anything decent. Sometimes I really think it was Reissiger
+ who inspired me to write _Tannhäuser_ and _Lohengrin_."
+
+This is how Wagner wrote to Liszt when he was finishing this amazing
+work of art. In the same way Michelangelo wrote to his father in 1509:
+"I am in agony. I have not dared to ask the Pope for anything, because
+my work does not make sufficient progress to merit any remuneration. The
+work is too difficult, and indeed it is not my profession. I am wasting
+my time to no purpose. Heaven help me!" For a year he had been working
+at the ceiling of the Sixtine chapel.
+
+This is something more than a burst of modesty. No one had more pride
+than Michelangelo or Wagner; but both felt the defects of their work
+like a sharp wound. And although those defects do not prevent their
+works from being the glory of the human spirit, they are there just the
+same.
+
+I do not want to dwell upon the inherent imperfections of Wagner's
+dramas; they are really dramatic or epic symphonies, impossible to act,
+and gaining nothing from representation. This is especially true of
+_Tristan_, where the disparity between the storm of sentiment depicted,
+and the cold convention and enforced timidity of action on the stage, is
+such that at certain moments--in the second act, for example--it pains
+and shocks one, and seems almost grotesque.
+
+But while admitting that _Tristan_ is a symphony that is not suitable
+for representation, one also recognises its blemishes and, above all,
+its unevenness. The orchestration in the first act is often rather thin,
+and the plot lacks solidity. There are gaps and unaccountable holes, and
+melodious lines left suspended in space. From beginning to end, lyrical
+bursts of melody are broken by declamations, or, what is worse, by
+dissertations. Frenzied whirlwinds of passion stop suddenly to give
+place to recitatives of explanation or argument. And although these
+recitatives are nearly always a great relief, although these
+metaphysical reveries have a character of barbarous cunning that one
+relishes, yet the superior beauty of the movements of pure poetry,
+emotion, and music is so evident, that this musical and philosophical
+drama serves to give one a distaste for philosophy and drama and
+everything else that cramps and confines music.
+
+But the musical part of _Tristan_ is not free either from the faults of
+the work as a whole, for it, too, lacks unity. Wagner's music is made up
+of very diverse styles: one finds in it Italianisms and Germanisms and
+even Gallicisms of every kind; there are some that are sublime, some
+that are commonplace; and at times one feels the awkwardness of their
+union and the imperfections of their form. Then again, perhaps two ideas
+of equal originality come together and spoil each other by making too
+strong a contrast. The fine lamentation of King Mark--that
+personification of a knight of the Grail--is treated with such
+moderation and with so noble a scorn for outward show, that its pure,
+cold light is entirely lost after the glowing fire of the duet.
+
+The work suffers everywhere from a lack of balance. It is an almost
+inevitable defect, arising from its very grandeur. A mediocre work may
+quite easily be perfect of its kind; but it is rarely that a work lofty
+aim attains perfection. A landscape of little dells and smiling meadows
+is brought more readily into pleasing harmony than a landscape of
+dazzling Alps, torrents, glaciers, and tempests; for the heights may
+sometimes overwhelm the picture and spoil the effect. And so it is with
+certain great pages of _Tristan_. We may take for example the verses
+which tell of excruciating expectation--in the second act, Isolde's
+expectation on the night filled with desire; and, in the third act,
+Tristan's expectation, as he lies wounded and delirious, waiting for the
+vessel that brings Isolde and death--or we may take the Prelude, that
+expression of eternal desire that is like a restless sea for ever
+moaning and beating itself upon the shore.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The quality that touches me most deeply in _Tristan_ is the evidence of
+honesty and sincerity in a man who was treated by his enemies as a
+charlatan that used superficial and grossly material means to arrest and
+amaze the public eye. What drama is more sober or more disdainful of
+exterior effect than _Tristan_? Its restraint is almost carried to
+excess. Wagner rejected any picturesque episode in it that was
+irrelevant to his subject. The man who carried all Nature in his
+imagination, who at his will made the storms of the _Walküre_ rage, or
+the soft light of Good Friday shine, would not even depict a bit of the
+sea round the vessel in the first act. Believe me, that must have been a
+sacrifice, though he wished it so. It pleased him to enclose this
+terrible drama within the four walls of a chamber of tragedy. There are
+hardly any choruses; there is nothing to distract one's attention from
+the mystery of human souls; there are only two real parts--those of the
+lovers; and if there is a third, it belongs to Destiny, into whose hands
+the victims are delivered. What a fine seriousness there is in this love
+play. Its passion remains sombre and stern; there is no laughter in it,
+only a belief which is almost religious, more religious perhaps in its
+sincerity than that of _Parsifal_.
+
+It is a lesson for dramatists to see a man suppressing all frivolous
+trifling and empty episodes in order to concentrate his subject entirely
+on the inner life of two living souls. In that Wagner is our master, a
+better, stronger, and more profitable master to follow, in spite of his
+mistakes, than all the other literary and dramatic authors of his time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I see that criticism has filled a larger place in these notes than I
+meant it to do. But in spite of that, I love _Tristan_; for me and for
+others of my time it has long been an intoxicating draught. And it has
+never lost anything of its grandeur; the years have left its beauty
+untouched, and it is for me the highest point of art reached by anyone
+since Beethoven's death.
+
+But as I was listening to it the other evening I could not help
+thinking: Ah, Wagner, you will one day go too, and join Gluck and Bach
+and Monteverde and Palestrina and all the great souls whose names still
+live among men, but whose thoughts are only felt by a handful of the
+initiated, who try in vain to revive the past. You, also, are already of
+the past, though you were the steady light of our youth, the strong
+source of life and death, of desire and renouncement, whence we drew our
+moral force and our power of resistance against the world. And the
+world, ever greedy for new sensations, goes on its way amid the
+unceasing ebb and flow of its desires. Already its thoughts have
+changed, and new musicians are making new songs for the future. But it
+is the voice of a century of tempest that passes with you.
+
+
+
+
+CAMILLE SAINT-SAËNS
+
+
+M. Saint-Saëns has had the rare honour of becoming a classic during his
+lifetime. His name, though it was long unrecognised, now commands
+universal respect, not less by his worth of character than by the
+perfection of his art. No artist has troubled so little about the
+public, or been more indifferent to criticism whether popular or expert.
+As a child he had a sort of physical repulsion for outward success:
+
+ "De l'applaudissement
+ J'entends encor le bruit qui, chose assez étrange,
+ Pour ma pudeur d'enfant était comme une fange
+ Dont le flot me venait toucher; je redoutais
+ Son contact, et parfois, malin, je l'évitais,
+ Affectant la raideur."[110]
+
+[Footnote 110:
+
+ Of applause
+ I still hear the noise; and, strangely enough,
+ In my childish shyness it seemed like mire
+ About to spot me; I feared
+ Its touch, and secretly shunned it,
+ Affecting obstinacy.
+
+These verses were read by M. Saint-Saëns at a concert given on 10 June,
+1896, in the Salle Pleyel, to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of his
+_début_, which he made in 1846. It was in this same Salle Pleyel that he
+gave his first concert.]
+
+Later on, he achieved success by a long and painful struggle, in which
+he had to fight against the kind of stupid criticism that condemned him
+"to listen to one of Beethoven's symphonies as a penance likely to give
+him the most excruciating torture."[111] And yet after this, and after
+his admission to the Academy, after _Henry VIII_ and the _Symphonie avec
+orgue_, he still remained aloof from praise or blame, and judged his
+triumphs with sad severity:
+
+ "Tu connaîtras les yeux menteurs, l'hypocrisie
+ Des serrements de mains,
+ Le masque d'amitié cachant la jalousie,
+ Les pâles lendemains
+
+ "De ces jours de triomphe où le troupeau vulgaire
+ Qui pèse au même poids
+ L'histrion ridicule et le génie austère
+ Vous mets sur le pavois."[112]
+
+M. Saint-Saëns has now grown old, and his fame has spread abroad, but he
+has not capitulated. Not many years ago he wrote to a German journalist:
+"I take very little notice of either praise or censure, not because I
+have an exalted idea of my own merits (which would be foolish), but
+because in doing my work, and fulfilling the function of my nature, as
+an apple-tree grows apples, I have no need to trouble myself with other
+people's views."[113]
+
+[Footnote 111: C. Saint-Saëns, _Harmonie et Mélodie_, 1885.]
+
+[Footnote 112: C. Saint-Saëns, _Rimes familières_, 1890.
+
+ You will know the lying eyes, the insincerity
+ Of pressures of the hand,
+ The mask of friendship that hides jealousy.
+ The tame to-morrows
+
+ Of these days of triumph, when the vulgar herd
+ Crowns you with honour;
+ Judging rare genius to be
+ Equal in merit to the wit of clowns.
+
+]
+
+[Footnote 113: Letter written to M. Levin, the correspondent of the
+_Boersen-Courier_ of Berlin, 9 September, 1901.]
+
+Such independence is rare at any time; but it is very rare in our day,
+when the power of public opinion is tyrannical; and it is rarest of all
+in France, where artists are perhaps more sociable than in other
+countries. Of all qualities in an artist it is the most precious; for it
+forms the foundation of his character, and is the guarantee of his
+conscience and innate strength. So we must not hide it under a bushel.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The significance of M. Saint-Saëns in art is a double one, for one must
+judge him from the inside as well as the outside of France. He stands
+for something exceptional in French music, something which was almost
+unique until just lately: that is, a great classical spirit and a fine
+breadth of musical culture--German culture, we must say, since the
+foundation of all modern art rests on the German classics. French music
+of the nineteenth century is rich in clever artists, imaginative writers
+of melody, and skilful dramatists; but it is poor in true musicians, and
+in good and solid workmanship. Apart from two or three splendid
+exceptions, our composers have too much the character of gifted amateurs
+who compose music as a pastime, and regard it, not as a special form of
+thought, but as a sort of dress for literary ideas. Our musical
+education is superficial: it may be got for a few years, in a formal
+way, at a Conservatoire, but it is not within reach of all; the child
+does not breathe music as, in a way, he breathes the atmosphere of
+literature and oratory; and although nearly everyone in France has an
+instinctive feeling for beautiful writing, only a very few people care
+for beautiful music. From this arise the common faults and failings in
+our music. It has remained a luxurious art; it has not become, like
+German music, the poetical expression of the people's thought.
+
+To bring this about we should need a combination of conditions that are
+very rare in France; though such conditions went to the making of
+Camille Saint-Saëns. He had not only remarkable natural talent, but came
+of a family of ardent musicians, who devoted themselves to his
+education. At five years of age he was nourished on the orchestral score
+of _Don Juan_;[114] as a little boy
+
+ "De dix ans, délicat, frêle, le teint jaunet,
+ Mais confiant, naïf, plein d'ardeur et de joie,"[115]
+
+he "measured himself against Beethoven and Mozart" by playing in a
+public concert; at sixteen years of age he wrote his _Première
+Symphonie_. As he grew older he soaked himself in the music of Bach and
+Händel, and was able to compose at will after the manner of Rossini,
+Verdi, Schumann, and Wagner.[116] He has written excellent music in all
+styles--the Grecian style, and that of the sixteenth, seventeenth, and
+eighteenth centuries. His compositions are of every kind: masses, grand
+operas, light operas, cantatas, symphonies, symphonic poems; music for
+the orchestra, the organ, the piano, the voice, and chamber music. He is
+the learned editor of Gluck and Rameau; and is thus not only an artist,
+but an artist who can talk about his art. He is an unusual figure in
+France--one would have thought rather to find his home in Germany.
+
+[Footnote 114: C. Saint-Saëns, _Charles Gounod et le Don Juan de
+Mozart_, 1894.]
+
+[Footnote 115:
+
+ But ten years old, slightly built and pale,
+ Yet full of simple confidence and joy (_Rimes familières_).
+
+]
+
+[Footnote 116: Charles Gounod, _Mémoires d'un Artiste_, 1896.]
+
+In Germany, however, they make no mistake about him. There, the name of
+Camille Saint-Saëns stands for the French classical spirit, and is
+thought worthiest to represent us in music from the time of Berlioz
+until the appearance of the young school of César Franck--though Franck
+himself is as yet little known in Germany. M. Saint-Saëns possesses,
+indeed, some of the best qualities of a French artist, and among them
+the most important quality of all--perfect clearness of conception. It
+is remarkable how little this learned artist is bothered by his
+learning, and how free he is from all pedantry. Pedantry is the plague
+of German art, and the greatest men have not escaped it. I am not
+speaking of Brahms, who was ravaged with it, but of delightful geniuses
+like Schumann, or of powerful ones like Bach. "This unnatural art
+wearies one like the sanctimonious salon of some little provincial town;
+it stifles one, it is enough to kill one."[117] "Saint-Saëns is not a
+pedant," wrote Gounod; "he has remained too much of a child and become
+too clever for that." Besides, he has always been too much of a
+Frenchman.
+
+[Footnote 117: Quoted from Saint-Saëns by Edmond Hippeau in _Henry VIII
+et L'Opéra français_, 1883. M. Saint-Saëns speaks elsewhere of "these
+works, well written, but heavy and unattractive, and reflecting in a
+tiresome way the narrow and pedantic spirit of certain little towns in
+Germany" (_Harmonie et Mélodie_).]
+
+Sometimes Saint-Saëns reminds me of one of our eighteenth-century
+writers. Not a writer of the _Encyclopédie_, nor one of Rousseau's camp,
+but rather of Voltaire's school. He has a clearness of thought, an
+elegance and precision of expression, and a quality of mind that make
+his music "not only noble, but very noble, as coming of a fine race and
+distinguished family."[118]
+
+He has also excellent discernment, of an unemotional kind; and he is
+"calm in spirit, restrained in imagination, and keeps his self-control
+even in the midst of the most disturbing emotions."[119] This
+discernment is the enemy of anything approaching obscurity of thought or
+mysticism; and its outcome was that curious book, _Problèmes et
+Mystères_--a misleading title, for the spirit of reason reigns there and
+makes an appeal to young people to protect "the light of a menaced
+world" against "the mists of the North, Scandinavian gods, Indian
+divinities, Catholic miracles, Lourdes, spiritualism, occultism, and
+obscurantism."[120]
+
+His love and need of liberty is also of the eighteenth century. One may
+say that liberty is his only passion. "I am passionately fond of
+liberty," he wrote.[121]
+
+[Footnote 118: Charles Gounod, _"Ascanio" de Saint-Saëns_, 1890.]
+
+[Footnote 119: _Id., ibid._]
+
+[Footnote 120: C. Saint-Saëns, _Problèmes et Mystères_, 1894.]
+
+[Footnote 121: _Harmonie et Mélodie_.]
+
+And he has proved it by the absolute fearlessness of his judgments on
+art; for not only has he reasoned soundly against Wagner, but dared to
+criticise the weaknesses of Gluck and Mozart, the errors of Weber and
+Berlioz, and the accepted opinions about Gounod; and this classicist,
+who was nourished on Bach, goes so far as to say: "The performance of
+works by Bach and Händel to-day is an idle amusement," and that those
+who wish to revive their art are like "people who would live in an old
+mansion that has been uninhabited for centuries."[122] He went even
+further; he criticised his own work and contradicted his own opinions.
+His love of liberty made him form, at different periods, different
+opinions of the same work. He thought that people had a right to change
+their opinions, as sometimes they deceived themselves. It seemed to him
+better boldly to admit an error than to be the slave of consistency. And
+this same feeling showed itself in other matters besides art: in ethics,
+as is shown by some verses which he addressed to a young friend, urging
+him not to be bound by a too rigid austerity:
+
+ "Je sens qu'une triste chimère
+ A toujours assombri ton âme: la Vertu...."[123]
+
+and in metaphysics also, where he judges religions, faith, and the
+Gospels with a quiet freedom of thought, seeking in Nature alone the
+basis of morals and society.
+
+[Footnote 122: C. Saint-Saëns, _Portraits et Souvenirs_, 1900.]
+
+[Footnote 123:
+
+ I know that a vain dream of virtue
+ Has always cast a shadow on your soul (_Rimes familières_).
+]
+
+Here are some of his opinions, taken at random from _Problèmes et
+Mystères_:
+
+ "As science advances, God recedes."
+
+ "The soul is only a medium for the expression of thought."
+
+ "The discouragement of work, the weakening of character, the
+ sharing of one's goods under pain of death--this is the Gospel
+ teaching on the foundation of society."
+
+ "The Christian virtues are not social virtues."
+
+ "Nature is without aim: she is an endless circle, and leads us
+ nowhere."
+
+His thoughts are unfettered and full of love for humanity and a sense of
+the responsibility of the individual. He called Beethoven "the greatest,
+the only really great artist," because he upheld the idea of universal
+brotherhood. His mind is so comprehensive that he has written books on
+philosophy, on the theatre, on classical painting,[124] as well as
+scientific essays,[125] volumes of verse, and even plays.[126]
+
+[Footnote 124: C. Saint-Saëns, _Note sur les décors de théâtre dans
+l'antiquité romaine_, 1880, where he discusses the mural paintings of
+Pompeii.]
+
+[Footnote 125: Lecture on the Phenomena of Mirages, given to the
+Astronomical Society of France in 1905.]
+
+[Footnote 126: C. Saint-Saëns, _La Crampe des Écrivains_, a comedy in
+one act, 1892.]
+
+He has been able to take up all sorts of things, I will not say with
+equal skill, but with discernment and undeniable ability. He shows a
+type of mind rare among artists and, above all, among musicians. The two
+principles that he enunciates and himself follows out are: "Keep free
+from all exaggeration" and "Preserve the soundness of your mind's
+health."[127] They are certainly not the principles of a Beethoven or a
+Wagner, and it would be rather difficult to find a noted musician of the
+last century who had applied them. They tell us, without need of
+comment, what is distinctive about M. Saint-Saëns, and what is defective
+in him. He is not troubled by any sort of passion. Nothing disturbs the
+clearness of his reason. "He has no prejudices; he takes no
+side"[128]--one might add, not even his own, since he is not afraid to
+change his views--"he does not pose as a reformer of anything"; he is
+altogether independent, perhaps almost too much so. He seems sometimes
+as if he did not know what to do with his liberty. Goethe would have
+said, I think, that he needed a little more of the devil in him.
+
+[Footnote 127: _Harmonie et Mélodie_.]
+
+[Footnote 128: Charles Gounod, _Mémoires d'un Artiste_.]
+
+His most characteristic mental trait seems to be a languid melancholy,
+which has its source in a rather bitter feeling of the futility of
+life;[129] and this is accompanied by fits of weariness which are not
+altogether healthy, followed by capricious moods and nervous gaiety, and
+a freakish liking for burlesque and mimicry. It is his eager, restless
+spirit that makes him rush about the world writing Breton and Auvergnian
+rhapsodies, Persian songs, Algerian suites, Portuguese barcarolles,
+Danish, Russian, or Arabian caprices, souvenirs of Italy, African
+fantasias, and Egyptian concertos; and, in the same way, he roams
+through the ages, writing Greek tragedies, dance music of the sixteenth
+and seventeenth centuries, and preludes and fugues of the eighteenth.
+But in all these exotic and archaic reflections of times and countries
+through which his fancy wanders, one recognises the gay, intelligent
+countenance of a Frenchman on his travels, who idly follows his
+inclinations, and does not trouble to enter very deeply into the spirit
+of the people he meets, but gleans all he can, and then reproduces it
+with a French complexion--after the manner of Montaigne in Italy, who
+compared Verona to Poitiers, and Padua to Bordeaux, and who, when he was
+in Florence, paid much less attention to Michelangelo than to "a very
+strangely shaped sheep, and an animal the size of a large mastiff,
+shaped like a cat and striped with black and white, which they called a
+tiger."
+
+[Footnote 129: _Les Heures; Mors; Modestie (Rimes familières_).]
+
+From a purely musical point of view there is some resemblance between M.
+Saint-Saëns and Mendelssohn. In both of them we find the same
+intellectual restraint, the same balance preserved among the
+heterogeneous elements of their work. These elements are not common to
+both of them, because the time, the country, and the surroundings in
+which they lived are not the same; and there is also a great difference
+in their characters. Mendelssohn is more ingenuous and religious; M.
+Saint-Saëns is more of a dilettante and more sensuous. They are not so
+much kindred spirits by their science as good company by a common purity
+of taste, a sense of rhythm, and a genius for method, which gave all
+they wrote a neo-classic character.
+
+As for the things that directly influenced M. Saint-Saëns, they are so
+numerous that it would be difficult and rather bold of me to pretend to
+be able to pick them out. His remarkable capacity for assimilation has
+often moved him to write in the style of Wagner or Berlioz, of Händel or
+Rameau, of Lulli or Charpentier, or even of some English harpsichord or
+clavichord player of the sixteenth century, like William Byrd--whose
+airs are introduced quite naturally in the music of _Henry VIII_; but we
+must remember that these are deliberate imitations, the amusements of a
+virtuoso, about which M. Saint-Saëns never deceives himself. His memory
+serves him as he pleases, but he is never troubled by it.
+
+As far as one can judge, M. Saint-Saëns' musical ideas are infused with
+the spirit of the great classics belonging to the end of the eighteenth
+century--far more, whatever people may say, with the spirit of
+Beethoven, Haydn, and Mozart, than with the spirit of Bach. Schumann's
+seductiveness also left its mark upon him, and he has felt the influence
+of Gounod, Bizet, and Wagner. But a stronger influence was that of
+Berlioz, his friend and master,[130] and, above all, that of Liszt. We
+must stop at this last name.
+
+[Footnote 130: "Thanks to Berlioz, all my generation has been shaped,
+and well shaped" _(Portraits et Souvenirs_).]
+
+M. Saint-Saëns has good reason for liking Liszt, for Liszt was also a
+lover of freedom, and had shaken off traditions and pedantry, and
+scorned German routine; and he liked him, too, because his music was a
+reaction from the stiff school of Brahms.[131] He was enthusiastic about
+Liszt's work, and was one of the earliest and most ardent champions of
+that new music of which Liszt was the leading spirit--of that
+"programme" music which Wagner's triumph seemed to have nipped in the
+bud, but which has suddenly and gloriously burst into life again in the
+works of Richard Strauss. "Liszt is one of the great composers of our
+time," wrote M. Saint-Saëns; "he has dared more than either Weber, or
+Mendelssohn, or Schubert, or Schumann. He has created the symphonic
+poem. He is the deliverer of instrumental music.... He has proclaimed
+the reign of free music."[132] This was not said impulsively in a moment
+of enthusiasm; M. Saint-Saëns has always held this opinion. All his life
+he has remained faithful to his admiration of Liszt--since 1858, when he
+dedicated a _Veni Creator_ to "the Abbé Liszt," until 1886, when, a few
+months after Liszt's death, he dedicated his masterpiece, the _Symphonic
+avec orgue_, "To the memory of Franz Liszt."[133]
+
+[Footnote 131: "I like Liszt's music so much, because he does not bother
+about other people's opinions; he says what he wants to say; and the
+only thing that he troubles about is to say it as well as he possibly
+can" (Quoted by Hippeau).]
+
+[Footnote 132: The quotations are taken from _Harmonie et Mélodie_ and
+_Portraits et Souvenirs_.]
+
+[Footnote 133: In _Harmonie et Mélodie_ M. Saint-Saëns tells us that he
+organised and directed a concert in the Théâtre-Italien where only
+Liszt's compositions were played. But all his efforts to make the French
+musical public appreciate Liszt were a failure.]
+
+"People have not hesitated to scoff at what they call my weakness for
+Liszt's works. But even if the feelings of affection and gratitude that
+he inspired in me did come like a prism and interpose themselves between
+my eyes and his face, I do not see anything greatly to be regretted in
+it.[134] I had not yet felt the charm of his personal fascination, I had
+neither heard nor seen him, and I did not owe him anything at all, when
+my interest was gripped in reading his first symphonic poems; and when
+later they pointed the way which was to lead to _La Danse macabre_, _Le
+Rouet d'Omphale_, and other works of the same nature, I am sure that my
+judgment was not biassed by any prejudice in his favour, and that I
+alone was responsible for what I did."[135]
+
+[Footnote 134: The admiration was mutual. M. Saint-Saëns even said that
+without Liszt he could not have written _Samson et Dalila_. "Not only
+did Liszt have _Samson et Dalila_ performed at Weimar, but without him
+that work would never have come into being. My suggestions on the
+subject had met with such hostility that I had given up the idea of
+writing it; and all that existed were some illegible notes.... Then at
+Weimar one day I spoke to Liszt about it, and he said to me, quite
+trustingly and without having heard a note, 'Finish your work; I will
+have it performed here.' The events of 1870 delayed its performance for
+several years." (_Revue Musicale_, 8 November, 1901).]
+
+[Footnote 135: _Portraits et Souvenirs_.]
+
+This influence seems to me to explain some of M. Saint-Saëns' work. Not
+only is this influence evident in his symphonic poems--some of his best
+work--but it is to be found in his suites for orchestra, his fantasias,
+and his rhapsodies, where the descriptive and narrative element is
+strong. "Music should charm unaided," said M. Saint-Saëns; "but its
+effect is much finer when we use our imagination and let it flow in some
+particular channel, thus imaging the music. It is then that all the
+faculties of the soul are brought into play for the same end. What art
+gains from this is not greater beauty, but a wider field for its
+scope--that is, a greater variety of form and a larger liberty."[136]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And so we find that M. Saint-Saëns has taken part in the vigorous
+attempt of modern German symphony writers to bring into music some of
+the power of the other arts: poetry, painting, philosophy, romance,
+drama--the whole of life. But what a gulf divides them and him! A gulf
+made up, not only of diversities of style, but of the difference between
+two races and two worlds. Beside the frenzied outpourings of Richard
+Strauss, who flounders uncertainly between mud and debris and genius,
+the Latin art of Saint-Saëns rises up calm and ironical. His delicacy of
+touch, his careful moderation, his happy grace, "which enters the soul
+by a thousand little paths,"[137] bring with them the pleasures of
+beautiful speech and honest thought; and we cannot but feel their charm.
+Compared with the restless and troubled art of to-day, his music strikes
+us by its calm, its tranquil harmonies, its velvety modulations, its
+crystal clearness, its smooth and flowing style, and an elegance that
+cannot be put into words. Even his classic coldness does us good by its
+reaction against the exaggerations, sincere as they are, of the new
+school. At times one feels oneself carried back to Mendelssohn, even to
+Spontini and the school of Gluck. One seems to be travelling in a
+country that one knows and loves; and yet in M. Saint-Saëns' works one
+does not find any direct resemblance to the works of other composers;
+for with no one are reminiscences rarer than with this master who
+carries all the old masters in his mind--it is his spirit that is akin
+to theirs. And that is the secret of his personality and his value to
+us; he brings to our artistic unrest a little of the light and sweetness
+of other times. His compositions are like fragments of another world.
+
+[Footnote 136: _Harmonie et Mélodie_.]
+
+[Footnote 137: C. Saint-Saëns, _Portraits et Souvenirs_.]
+
+"From time to time," he said, in speaking of _Don Giovanni_, "in the
+sacred earth of Hellene we find a fragment, an arm, the debris of a
+torso, scratched and damaged by the ravages of time; it is only the
+shadow of the god that the sculptor's chisel once created; but the charm
+is somehow still there, the sublime style is radiant in spite of
+everything."[138]
+
+And so with this music. It is sometimes a little pale, a little too
+restrained; but in a phrase, in a few harmonies, there will shine out a
+clear vision of the past.
+
+[Footnote 138: _Portraits et Souvenirs_.]
+
+
+
+
+VINCENT D'INDY
+
+ "I consider that criticism is useless, I would even say that it is
+ harmful.... Criticism generally means the opinion some man or other
+ holds about another person's work. How can that opinion help
+ forward the growth of art? It is interesting to know the ideas,
+ even the erroneous ideas, of geniuses and men of great talent, such
+ as Goethe, Schumann, Wagner, Sainte-Beuve, and Michelet, when they
+ wish to indulge in criticism; but it is of no interest at all to
+ know whether Mr. So-and-so likes, or does not like, such-and-such
+ dramatic or musical work."[139]
+
+So writes M. Vincent d'Indy.
+
+After such an expression of opinion one imagines that a critic ought to
+feel some embarrassment in writing about M. Vincent d'Indy. And I myself
+ought to be the more concerned in the matter, for in the number of the
+review where the above was written the only other opinions expressed
+with equal conviction belonged to the author of this book. There is only
+one thing to be done--to copy M. d'Indy's example; for that forsworn
+enemy of criticism is himself a keen critic.
+
+[Footnote 139: _Revue d'Art dramatique_, 5 February, 1899.]
+
+It is not altogether on M. d'Indy's musical gifts that I want to dwell.
+It is known that in Europe to-day he is one of the masters of dramatic
+musical expression, of orchestral colouring, and of the science of
+style. But that is not the end of his attainments; he has artistic
+originality, which springs from something deeper still. When an artist
+has some worth, you will find it not only in his work but in his being.
+So we will endeavour to explore M. d'Indy's being.
+
+M. d'Indy's personality is not a mysterious one. On the contrary, it is
+open and clear as daylight; and we see this in his musical work, in his
+artistic activities, and in his writings. To his own writings we may
+apply the exception of his rule about criticism in favour of a small
+number of men whose thoughts are interesting even when they are
+erroneous. It would be a pity indeed not to know M. d'Indy's
+thoughts--even the erroneous ones; for they let us catch a glimpse, not
+only of the ideas of an eminent artist, but of certain surprising
+characteristics of the thought of our time. M. d'Indy has closely
+studied the history of his art; but the chief interest of his writings
+lies rather in their unconscious expression of the spirit of modern art
+than in what they tell us about the past.
+
+M. d'Indy is not a man hedged in by the boundaries of his art; his mind
+is open and well fertilised. Musicians nowadays are no longer entirely
+absorbed in their notes, but let their minds go out to other interests.
+And it is not one of the least interesting phenomena of French music
+to-day that gives us these learned and thoughtful composers, who are
+conscious of what they create, and bring to their art a keen critical
+faculty, like that of M. Saint-Saëns, M. Dukas, or M. d'Indy. From M.
+d'Indy we have had scholarly editions of Rameau, Destouches, and Salomon
+de Rossi. Even in the middle of rehearsals of _L'Étranger_ at Brussels
+he was working at a reconstruction of Monteverde's _Orfeo_. He has
+published selections of folk-songs with critical notes, essays on
+Beethoven's predecessors, a history of Musical Composition, and debates
+and lectures. This fine intellectual culture is not, however, the most
+remarkable of M. d'Indy's characteristics, though it may have been the
+most remarked. Other musicians share this culture with him; and his real
+distinction lies in his moral and almost religious qualities, and it is
+this side of him that gives him an unusual interest for us among other
+contemporary artists.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Maneant in vobis Fides, Spes, Caritas.
+ Tria haec: major autem horum est Caritas.
+
+ "An artist must have at least Faith, faith in God and faith in his
+ art; for it is Faith that disposes him to _learn_, and by his
+ learning to raise himself higher and higher on the ladder of Being,
+ up to his goal, which is God.
+
+ "An artist should practise Hope; for he can expect nothing from the
+ present; he knows that his mission is to _serve_, and to give his
+ work for the life and teaching of the generations that shall come
+ after him.
+
+ "An artist should be inspired by a splendid Charity--'the greatest
+ of these.' To _love_ should be his aim in life; for the moving
+ principle of all creation is divine and charitable Love."
+
+Who speaks like this? Is it the monk Denys in his cell at Mount Athos?
+Or Cennini, who spread the pious teaching of the Giotteschi? Or one of
+the old painters of Sienna, who in their profession of faith called
+themselves "by the grace of God, those who manifest marvellous things to
+common and illiterate men, by the virtue of the holy faith, and to its
+glory"?
+
+No; it was the director of the _Schola Cantorum_, addressing the
+students in an inaugural speech, or giving them a lecture on
+Composition.[140]
+
+[Footnote 140: Vincent d'Indy: _Cours de Composition musicale_, Book I,
+drawn up from notes taken in Composition classes at the _Schola
+Cantorum_, 1897-1898, p. 16 (Durand, 1902). See also the inaugural
+speech given at the school, and published by the _Tribune de
+Saint-Gervais_, November, 1900.]
+
+We must consider a little this singular book, where a living science and
+a Gothic spirit are closely intermingled (I use the word "Gothic" in its
+best sense; I know it is the highest praise one can give M. d'Indy).
+This work has not received the attention it deserves. It is a record of
+the spirit of contemporary art; and if it stands rather apart from other
+writings, it should not be allowed to pass unnoticed on that account.
+
+In this book, Faith is shown to be everything--the beginning and the
+end. We learn how it fans the flame of genius, nourishes thought,
+directs work, and governs even the modulations and the style of a
+musician. There is a passage in it that one would think was of the
+thirteenth century; it is curious, but not without dignity:
+
+ "One should have an aim in the progressive march of modulations, as
+ one has in the different stages of life. The reason, instincts, and
+ faith that guide a man in the troubles of his life also guide the
+ musician in his choice of modulations. Thus useless and
+ contradictory modulations, an undecided balance between light and
+ shade, produce a painful and confusing impression on the hearer,
+ comparable to that which a poor human being inspires when he is
+ feeble and inconsistent, buffeted between the East and the West in
+ the course of his unhappy life, without an aim and without
+ belief."[141]
+
+[Footnote 141: Vincent d'Indy, _Cours de Composition musicale_, p. 132.]
+
+This book seems to be of the Middle Ages by reason of a sort of
+scholastic spirit of abstraction and classification.
+
+ "In artistic creation, seven faculties are called into play by the
+ soul: the Imagination, the Affections, the Understanding, the
+ Intelligence, the Memory, the Will, and the Conscience."[142]
+
+[Footnote 142: _Id._, _ibid._, p. 13.]
+
+And again its mediaeval spirit is shown by an extraordinary symbolism,
+which discovers in everything (as far as I understand it) the imprint
+of divine mysteries, and the mark of God in Three Persons in such things
+as the beating of the heart and ternary rhythms--"an admirable
+application of the principle of the Unity of the Trinity"![143]
+
+From these remote times comes also M. d'Indy's method of writing
+history, not by tracing facts back to laws, but by deducing, on the
+contrary, facts from certain great general ideas, which have once been
+admitted, but not proved by frequent recurrence, such as: "The origin of
+art is in religion"[144]--a fact which is anything but certain. From
+this reasoning it follows that folk-songs are derived from Gregorian
+chants, and not the Gregorian chants from the folk-songs--as I would
+sooner believe. The history of art may thus become a sort of history of
+the world in moral achievement. One could divide it into two parts: the
+world before the coming of Pride, and after it.
+
+"Subdued by the Christian faith, that formidable enemy of man, Pride,
+rarely showed itself in the soul of an artist in the Middle Ages. But
+with the weakening of religious belief, with the spirit of the
+Reformation applying itself almost at the same time to every branch of
+human learning, we see Pride reappear, and watch its veritable
+Renaissance."[145]
+
+[Footnote 143: _Id., ibid._, p. 25. In the thirteenth century, Philippe
+de Vitry, Bishop of Meaux, called triple time "perfect," because "it
+hath its name from the Trinity, that is to say, from the Father, the
+Son, and the Holy Ghost, in whom is divine perfection."]
+
+[Footnote 144: _Id., ibid._, pp. 66, 83, and _passim_.]
+
+[Footnote 145: _Id., ibid._]
+
+Finally, this Gothic spirit shows itself--in a less original way, it is
+true--in M. d'Indy's religious antipathies, which, in spite of the
+author's goodness of heart and great personal tolerance, constantly
+break out against the two faiths that are rivals to his own; and to them
+he attributes all the faults of art and all the vices of humanity. Each
+has its offence. Protestantism is made responsible for the extremes of
+individualism;[146] and Judaism, for the absurdities of its customs and
+the weakness of its moral sense.[147] I do not know which of the two is
+the more soundly belaboured; the second has the privilege of being so,
+not only in writing, but in pictures.[148] The worst of it is, these
+antipathies are apt to spoil the fairness of M. d'Indy's artistic
+judgment. It goes without saying that the Jewish musicians are treated
+with scant consideration; and even the great Protestant musicians,
+giants in their art, do not escape rebuke. If Goudimel is mentioned, it
+is because he was Palestrina's master, and his achievement of "turning
+the Calvinist psalms into chorales" is dismissed as being of little
+importance.[149]
+
+[Footnote 146: "Make war against Particularism, that unwholesome fruit
+of the Protestant heresy!" (Speech to the _Schola_, taken from the
+_Tribune de Saint-Gervais_, November, 1900.)]
+
+[Footnote 147: At least Judaism has the honour of giving its name to a
+whole period of art, the "Judaic period." "The modern style is the last
+phase of the Judaic school...." etc.]
+
+[Footnote 148: In the _Cours de Composition musicale_ M. d'Indy speaks
+of "the admirable initial T in the _Rouleau mortuaire_ of Saint-Vital
+(twelfth century), which represents Satan vomiting two Jews ... an
+expressive and symbolic work of art, if ever there was one." I should
+not mention this but for the fact that there are only two illustrations
+in the whole book.]
+
+[Footnote 149: _Cours de Composition musicale_, p. 160.]
+
+Händel's oratorios are spoken of as "chilling, and, frankly speaking,
+tedious."[150] Bach himself escapes with this qualification: "If he is
+great, it is not because of, but in spite of the dogmatic and parching
+spirit of the Reformation."[151]
+
+I will not try to play the part of judge; for a man is sufficiently
+judged by his own writings. And, after all, it is rather interesting to
+meet people who are sincere and not afraid to speak their minds. I will
+admit that I rather enjoy--a little perversely, perhaps--some of these
+extreme opinions, where the writer's personality stands strongly
+revealed.
+
+[Footnote 150: _L'Oratorio moderne_ (_Tribune de Saint-Gervais_, March,
+1899).]
+
+[Footnote 151: _Ibid._ As much as to say he was a Catholic without
+knowing it. And that is what a friend of the _Schola_, M. Edgar Tinel,
+declares: "Bach is a truly Christian artist and, without doubt, _a
+Protestant by mistake_, since in his immortal _Credo_ he confesses his
+faith in one holy, catholic, and apostolic Church" (_Tribune de
+Saint-Gervais_, August-September, 1902). M. Edgar Tinel was, as you
+know, one of the principal masters of Belgian oratorio.]
+
+So the old Gothic spirit still lives among us, and informs the mind of
+one of our best-known artists, and also, without doubt, the minds of
+hundreds of those who listen to him and admire him. M. Louis Laloy has
+shown the persistence of certain forms of plain-song in M. Debussy's
+_Pelléas_; and in a dim sense of far-away kinship he finds the cause of
+the mysterious charm that such music holds for some of us.[152] This
+learned paradox is possible. Why not? The mixtures of race and the
+vicissitudes of history have given us so full and complex a soul that we
+may very well find its beginnings there, if it pleases us--or the
+beginnings of quite other things. Of beginnings there is no end; the
+choice is quite embarrassing, and I imagine one's inclination has as
+much to do with the matter as one's temperament.
+
+[Footnote 152: _Revue musicale_, November, 1902.]
+
+However that may be, M. d'Indy hails from the Middle Ages, and not from
+antiquity (which does not exist for him[153]), or from the Renaissance,
+which he confounds with the Reformation (though the two sisters are
+enemies) in order to crush it the better.[154] "Let us take for models,"
+he says, "the fine workers in art of the Middle Ages."[155]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In this return to the Gothic spirit, in this awakening of faith, there
+is a name--a modern one this time--that they are fond of quoting at the
+_Schola_; it is that of César Franck, under whose direction the little
+Conservatoire in the Rue Saint-Jacques was placed. And indeed they could
+quote no better name than that of this simple-hearted man. Nearly all
+who came into contact with him felt his irresistible charm--a charm that
+has perhaps a great deal to do with the influence that his works still
+have on French music to-day. None has felt Franck's power, both morally
+and musically, more than M. Vincent d'Indy; and none holds a more
+profound reverence for the man whose pupil he was for so long.
+
+[Footnote 153: "The only documents extant on ancient music are either
+criticisms or appreciations, and not musical texts" (_Cours de
+Composition_).]
+
+[Footnote 154: "The influence of the Renaissance, with its pretension
+and vanity, caused a check in all the arts--the effect of which we are
+still feeling" (_Traité de Composition_, p. 89. See also the passage
+quoted before on Pride).]
+
+[Footnote 155: _Tribune de Saint-Gervais_, November, 1900.]
+
+The first time I saw M. d'Indy was at a concert of the _Société
+nationale_, in the Salle Pleyel, in 1888. They were playing several of
+Franck's works; among others, for the first time, his admirable _Thème,
+fugue, et variation_, for the harmonium and pianoforte, a composition in
+which the spirit of Bach is mingled with a quite modern tenderness.
+Franck was conducting, and M. d'Indy was at the pianoforte. I shall
+always remember his reverential manner towards the old musician, and how
+careful he was to follow his directions; one would have said he was a
+diligent and obedient pupil. It was a touching homage from one who had
+already proved himself a master by works like _Le Chant de la cloche_,
+_Wallenstein_, _La Symphonie sur un thème montagnard_, and who was
+perhaps at that time better known and more popular than César Franck
+himself. Since then twenty years have passed, and I still see M. d'Indy
+as I saw him that evening; and, whatever may happen in the future, his
+memory for me will be always associated with that of the grand old
+artist, presiding with his fatherly smile over the little gathering of
+the faithful.
+
+Of all the characteristics of Franck's fine moral nature, the most
+remarkable was his religious faith. It must have astonished the artists
+of his time, who were even more destitute of such a thing than they are
+now. It made itself felt in some of his followers, especially in those
+who were near the master's heart, as M. d'Indy was. The religious
+thought of the latter reflects in some degree the thought of his master;
+though the shape of that thought may have undergone unconscious
+alteration. I do not know if Franck altogether fits the conception
+people have of him to-day. I do not want to introduce personal memories
+of him here. I knew him well enough to love him, and to catch a glimpse
+of the beauty and sincerity of his soul; but I did not know him well
+enough to discover the secrets of his mind. Those who had the happiness
+of being his intimate friends seem always to represent him as a mystic
+who shut himself away from the spirit of his time. I hope at some future
+date one of his friends will publish some of the conversations that he
+had with him, of which I have heard. But this man who had so strong a
+faith was also very independent. In his religion he had no doubts: it
+was the mainspring of his life; though faith with him was much more a
+matter of feeling than a matter of doctrine. But all was feeling with
+Franck, and reason made little appeal to him. His religious faith did
+not disturb his mind, for he did not measure men and their works by its
+rules; and he would have been incapable of putting together a history of
+art according to the Bible. This great Catholic had at times a very
+pagan soul; and he could enjoy without a qualm the musical dilettantism
+of Renan and the sonorous nihilism of Leconte de Lisle. There were no
+limits to his vast sympathies. He did not attempt to criticise the thing
+he loved--understanding was already in his heart. Perhaps he was right;
+and perhaps there was more trouble in the depths of his heart than the
+valiant serenity of its surface would lead us to believe.
+
+His faith too.... I know how dangerous it is to interpret a musician's
+feelings by his music; but how can we do otherwise when we are told by
+Franck's followers that the expression of the soul is the only end and
+aim of music? Do we find his faith, as expressed through his music
+always full of peace and calm?[156] I ask those who love that music
+because they find some of their own sadness reflected there. Who has not
+felt the secret tragedies that some of his musical passages
+enfold--those short, characteristically abrupt phrases which seem to
+rise in supplication to God, and often fall back in sadness and in
+tears? It is not all light in that soul; but the light that is there
+does not affect us less because it shines from afar,
+
+ "Dans un écartement de nuages, qui laisse
+ Voir au-dessus des mers la céleste allégresse...."[157]
+
+[Footnote 156: I speak of the passages where he expresses himself
+freely, and is not interpreting a dramatic situation necessary to his
+subject, as in that fine symphonic part of the _Rédemption_, where he
+describes the triumph of Christ. But even there we find traces of
+sadness and suffering.]
+
+[Footnote 157: Through a break in the clouds, revealing Celestial joy
+shining above the deeps.]
+
+And so Franck seems to me to differ from M. d'Indy in that he has not
+the latter's urgent desire for clearness.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Clearness is the distinguishing quality of M. d'Indy's mind. There are
+no shadows about him. His ideas and his art are as clear as the look
+that gives so much youth to his face. For him to examine, to arrange,
+to classify, to combine, is a necessity. No one is more French in
+spirit. He has sometimes been taxed with Wagnerism, and it is true that
+he has felt Wagner's influence very strongly. But even when this
+influence is most apparent it is only superficial: his true spirit is
+remote from Wagner's. You may find in _Fervaal_ a few trees like those
+in _Siegfried's_ forest; but the forest itself is not the same; broad
+avenues have been cut in it, and daylight fills the caverns of the
+Niebelungs.
+
+This love of clearness is the ruling factor of M. d'Indy's artistic
+nature. And this is the more remarkable, for his nature is far from
+being a simple one. By his wide musical education and his constant
+thirst for knowledge he has acquired a very varied and almost
+contradictory learning. It must be remembered that M. d'Indy is a
+musician familiar with the music of other countries and other times; all
+kinds of musical forms are floating in his mind; and he seems sometimes
+to hesitate between them. He has arranged these forms into three
+principal classes, which seem to him to be models of musical art: the
+decorative art of the singers of plain-song, the architectural art of
+Palestrina and his followers, and the expressive art of the great
+Italians of the seventeenth century.[158] But in doing this is not his
+eclecticism trying to reconcile arts that are naturally disunited?
+Again, we must remember that M. d'Indy has had direct or indirect
+contact with some of the greatest musical personalities of our time:
+with Wagner, Liszt, Brahms, and César Franck.
+
+[Footnote 158: _Tribune de Saint-Gervais_ November, 1900.]
+
+And he has been readily attracted by them; for he is not one of those
+egotistic geniuses whose thoughts are fixed on his own interests, nor
+has he one of those carnivorous minds that sees nothing, looks for
+nothing, and relishes nothing, unless it may be afterwards useful to it.
+His sympathies are readily with others, he is happy in giving homage to
+their greatness, and quick to appreciate their charm. He speaks
+somewhere of the "irresistible need of transformation" that every artist
+feels.[159] But in order to escape being overwhelmed by conflicting
+elements and interests, one should have great force of feeling or will,
+in order to be able to eliminate what is not necessary, and choose out
+and transform what is. M. d'Indy eliminates hardly anything; he makes
+use of it. In his music he exercises the qualities of an army general:
+understanding of his purpose and the patience to attain it, a perfect
+knowledge of the means at his disposal, the spirit of order, and command
+over his work and himself. Despite the variety of the materials he
+employs, the whole is always clear. One might almost reproach him with
+being too clear; he seems to simplify too much.
+
+Nothing helps one to grasp the essence of M. d'Indy's personality more
+than his last dramatic work. His personality shows itself plainly in all
+his compositions, but nowhere is it more evident than in
+_L'Étranger_.[160]
+
+[Footnote 159: _Id._, September, 1899.]
+
+[Footnote 160: _L'Étranger_, "action musicale" in two acts. Poem and
+music by M. Vincent d'Indy. Played for the first time at Brussels in the
+Théâtre de la Monnaie, 7 January, 1903. The quotations from the drama,
+whose poetry is not as good as its music, are taken from the score.]
+
+The scene of _L'Étranger_ is laid in France, by the sea, whose murmuring
+calm we hear in a symphonic introduction. The fishermen are coming back
+to port; the fishing has been bad. But one among them, "a man about
+forty years old, with a sad and dignified air," has been more fortunate
+than the others. The fishermen envy him, and vaguely suspect him of
+sorcery. He tries to enter into friendly conversation with them, and
+offers his catch to a poor family. But in vain; his advances are
+repulsed and his generosity is eyed with suspicion. He is a
+stranger--the Stranger.[161] Evening falls, and the angelus rings. Some
+work-girls come trooping out of their workshop, singing a merry
+folk-song.[162] One of the young girls, Vita, goes up to the Stranger
+and speaks to him, for she alone, of all the village, is his friend. The
+two feel themselves drawn together by a secret sympathy. Vita confides
+artlessly in the unknown man; they love each other though they do not
+admit it. The Stranger tries to repress his feelings; for Vita is young
+and already affianced, and he thinks that he has no right to claim her.
+But Vita, offended by his coldness, seeks to wound him, and succeeds.
+In the end he betrays himself. "Yes, he loves her, and she knew it well.
+But now that he has told her so, he will never see her again; and he
+bids her good-bye."
+
+[Footnote 161: There is a certain likeness in the subject to Herr
+Richard Strauss's _Feuersnot_. There, too, the hero is a stranger who is
+persecuted, and treated as a sorcerer in the very town to which he has
+brought honour. But the _dénouement_ is not the same; and the
+fundamental difference of temperament between the two artists is
+strongly marked. M. d'Indy finishes with the renouncement of a
+Christian, and Herr Richard Strauss by a proud and joyous affirmation of
+independence.]
+
+[Footnote 162: Found by M. d'Indy in his own province, as he tells us in
+his _Chansons populaires du Vivarais_.]
+
+That is the first act. Up to this point we seem to be witnessing a very
+human and realistic drama--the ordinary story of the man who tries to do
+good and receives ingratitude, and the sad tragedy of old age that comes
+to a heart still young and unable to resign itself to growing old. But
+the music puts us on our guard. We had heard its religious tone when the
+Stranger was speaking, and it seemed to us that we recognised a
+liturgical melody in the principal theme. What secret is being hidden
+from us? Are we not in France? Yet, in spite of the folk-song and a
+passing breath of the sea, the atmosphere of the Church and César Franck
+is evident. Who is this Stranger?
+
+He tells us in the second act.
+
+ "My name? I have none. I am He who dreams; I am He who loves. I
+ have passed through many countries, and sailed on many seas, loving
+ the poor and needy, dreaming of the happiness of the brotherhood of
+ man."
+
+ "Where have I seen you?--for I know you."
+
+ "Where? you ask. But everywhere: under the warm sun of the East, by
+ the white oceans of the Pole.... I have found you everywhere, for
+ you are Beauty itself, you are immortal Love!"
+
+The music is not without a certain nobility, and bears the imprint of
+the calm, strong spirit of belief. But I was sorry that the story was
+only about a mere entity when I had been getting interested in a man. I
+can never understand the attraction of this kind of symbolism. Unless it
+is allied to sublime powers of creation in metaphysics or morals--such
+as that possessed by a Goethe or an Ibsen--I do not see what such
+symbolism can add to life, though I see very well what it takes away
+from it. But it is, after all, a matter of taste; and, anyway, there is
+nothing in this story to astonish us greatly. This transition from
+realism to symbolism is something in opera with which we have grown only
+too familiar since the time of Wagner.
+
+But the story does not stop there; for we leave symbolic abstractions to
+enter a still more extraordinary domain, which is removed even farther
+still from realities.
+
+There had been some talk at the beginning of an emerald that sparkled in
+the Stranger's cap; and this emerald now takes its turn in the action of
+the piece. "It had sparkled formerly in the bows of the boat that
+carried the body of Lazarus, the friend of our Master, Jesus; and the
+boat had safely reached the port of the Phoceans--without a helm or
+sails or oars. For by this miraculous stone a clean and upright heart
+could command the sea and the winds." But now that the Stranger has done
+amiss, by falling a victim to passion, its power is gone; so he gives it
+to Vita.
+
+Then follows a real scene in fairyland. Vita stands before the sea and
+invokes it in an incantation full of weird and beautiful vocal music:
+"O sea! Sinister sea with your angry charm, gentle sea with your kiss of
+death, hear me!" And the sea replies in a song. Voices mingle with the
+orchestra in a symphony of increasing anger. Vita swears she will give
+herself to no one but the Stranger. She lifts the emerald above her
+head, and it shines with a lurid light. "'Receive, O sea, as a token of
+my oath, the sacred stone, the holy emerald! Then may its power be no
+longer invoked, and none may know again its protecting virtue. Jealous
+sea, take back your own, the last offering of a betrothed!' With an
+impressive gesture she throws the emerald into the waves, and a dark
+green light suddenly shines out against the black sky. This supernatural
+light slowly spreads over the water until it reaches the horizon, and
+the sea begins to roll in great billows." Then the sea takes up its song
+in an angrier tone; the orchestra thunders, and the storm bursts.
+
+The boats put hurriedly back to land, and one of them seems likely to be
+dashed to pieces on the shore. The whole village turns out to watch the
+disaster; but the men refuse to risk their lives in aid of the
+shipwrecked crew. Then the Stranger gets into a boat, and Vita jumps in
+after him. The squall redoubles in violence. A wave of enormous height
+breaks on the jetty, flooding the scene with a dazzling green light. The
+crowd recoil in fear. There is a silence; and an old fisherman takes off
+his woollen cap and intones the _De Profundis_. The villagers take up
+the chant....
+
+One may see by this short account what a heterogeneous work it is. Two
+or three quite different worlds are brought into it: the realism of the
+bourgeois characters of Vita's mother and lover is mixed up with
+symbolisms of Christianity, represented by the Stranger, and with the
+fairy-tale of the magic emerald and the voices of the ocean. This
+complexity, which is evident enough in the poem, is even more evident in
+the music, where a union of different arts and different ideas is
+attempted. We get the art of the folk-song, religious art, the art of
+Wagner, the art of Franck, as well as a note of familiar realism (which
+is something akin to the Italian _opéra-bouffe_) and descriptions of
+sensation that are quite personal. As there are only two short acts, the
+rapidity of the action only serves to accentuate this impression. The
+changes are very abrupt: we are hurried from a world of human beings to
+a world of abstract ideas, and then taken from an atmosphere of religion
+to a land of fairies. The work is, however, clear enough from a musical
+point of view. The more complex the elements that M. d'Indy gathers
+round him the more anxious he is to bring them into harmony. It is a
+difficult task, and is only possible when the different elements are
+reduced to their simplest expression and brought down to their
+fundamental qualities--thus depriving them of the spice of their
+individuality. M. d'Indy puts different styles and ideas on the anvil,
+and then forges them vigorously. It is natural that here and there we
+should see the mark of the hammer, the imprint of his determination; but
+it is only by his determination that he welded the work into a solid
+whole.
+
+Perhaps it is determination that brings unity now and then into M.
+d'Indy's spirit. With reference to this, I will dwell upon one point
+only, since it is curious, and seems to me to be of general artistic
+interest. M. d'Indy writes his own poems for his "_actions
+musicales_"--Wagner's example, it seems, has been catching. We have seen
+how the harmony of a work may suffer through the dual gifts of its
+author; though he may have thought to perfect his composition by writing
+both words and music. But an artist's poetical and musical gifts are not
+necessarily of the same order. A man has not always the same kind of
+talent in other arts that he has in the art which he has made his own--I
+am speaking not only of his technical skill, but of his temperament as
+well. Delacroix was of the Romantic school in painting, but in
+literature his style was Classic. We have all known artists who were
+revolutionaries in their own sphere, but conservative and behind the
+times in their opinions about other branches of art. The double gift of
+poetry and music is in M. d'Indy up to a certain point. But is his
+reason always in agreement with his heart?[163]
+
+[Footnote 163: In his criticisms his heart is not always in agreement
+with his mind. His mind denounces the Renaissance, but his instinct
+obliges him to appreciate the great Florentine painters of the
+Renaissance and the musicians of the sixteenth century. He only gets out
+of the difficulty by the most extraordinary compromises, by saying that
+Ghirlandajo and Filippo Lippi were Gothic, or by stating that the
+Renaissance in music did not begin till the seventeenth century! (_Cours
+de Composition_, pp. 214 and 216.)]
+
+Of course his nature is too dignified to let the quarrel be shown
+openly. His heart obeys the commands of his reason, or compromises with
+it, and by seeming respectful of authority saves appearances. His
+reason, represented here by the poet, likes simple, realistic, and
+relevant action, together with moral or even religious teaching. His
+heart, represented by the musician, is romantic; and if he followed it
+altogether he would wander off to any subject that enabled him to
+indulge in his love of the picturesque, such as the descriptive
+symphony, or even the old form of opera.
+
+For myself, I am in sympathy with his heart; and I find his heart is in
+the right, and his reason in the wrong. There is nothing that M. d'Indy
+has made more his own than the art of painting landscapes in music.
+There is one page in _Fervaal_ at the beginning of Act II which calls up
+misty mountain tops covered with pine forests; there is another page in
+_L'Étranger_ where one sees strange lights glimmering on the sea while a
+storm is brooding.[164] I should like to see M. d'Indy give himself up
+freely, in spite of all theories, to this descriptive lyricism, in which
+he so excels; or I wish at least he would seek inspiration in a subject
+where both his religious beliefs and his imagination could find
+satisfaction: a subject such as one of the beautiful episodes of the
+Golden Legend, or the one which _L'Étranger_ itself recalls--the
+romantic voyage of the Magdalen in Provence. But it is foolish to wish
+an artist to do anything but the thing he likes; he is the best judge
+of what pleases him.
+
+[Footnote 164: Act III, scene 3. The power of that evocation is so
+strong that it carries the poet along with it. It would seem that part
+of the action had only been conceived with a view to the final effect of
+the sudden colouring of the waves.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In this sketchy portrait I must not forget one of the finest of this
+composer's gifts--his talent as a teacher of music. Everything has
+fitted M. d'Indy for this part. By his knowledge and his precise,
+orderly mind he must be a perfect teacher of composition. If I submit
+some question of harmony or melodic phrasing to his analysis, the result
+is the essence of clear, logical reasoning; and if the reasoning is a
+little dry and simplifies the thing almost too much, it is still very
+illuminating and from the hand of a master of French prose. And in this
+I find him exercising the same consistent instinct of good sense and
+sincerity, the same art of development, the same seventeenth and
+eighteenth century principles of classic rhetoric that he applies to his
+music. In truth, M. d'Indy could write a musical _Discourse on Style_,
+if he wished.
+
+But, above all, he is gifted with the moral qualities of a teacher--the
+vocation for teaching, first of all. He has a firm belief in the
+absolute duty of giving instruction in art, and, what is rarer still, in
+the efficacious virtue of that teaching. He readily shares Tolstoy's
+scorn, which he sometimes quotes, of the foolishness of art for art's
+sake.
+
+ "At the bottom of art is this essential condition--teaching. The
+ aim of art is neither gain nor glory; the true aim of art is to
+ teach, to elevate gradually the spirit of humanity; in a word, to
+ serve in the highest sense--'_dienen_' as Wagner says by the mouth
+ of the repentant Kundry, in the third act of Parsifal."[165]
+
+There is in this a mixture of Christian humility and aristocratic pride.
+M. d'Indy has a sincere desire for the welfare of humanity, and he loves
+the people; but he treats them with an affectionate kindness, at once
+protective and tolerant; he regards them as children that must be
+led.[166]
+
+[Footnote 165: _Cours de Composition_, and _Tribune de Saint-Gervais_.]
+
+[Footnote 166: _Cours de Composition_.]
+
+The popular art that he extols is not an art belonging to the people,
+but that of an aristocracy interested in the people. He wishes to
+enlighten them, to mould them, to direct them, by means of art. Art is
+the source of life; it is the spirit of progress; it gives the most
+precious of possessions to the soul--liberty. And no one enjoys this
+liberty more than the artist. In a lecture to the _Schola_ he said:
+
+ "What makes the name of 'artist' so splendid is that the artist is
+ free--absolutely free. Look about you, and tell me if from this
+ point of view there is any career finer than that of an artist who
+ is conscious of his mission? The Army? The Law? The University?
+ Politics?"
+
+And then follows a rather cold appreciation of these different careers.
+
+ "There is no need to mention the excessive bureaucracy and
+ officialism which is the crying evil of this country. We find
+ everywhere submission to rules and servitude to the State. But what
+ government, pope, emperor, or president could oblige an artist to
+ think and write against his will? Liberty--that is the true wealth
+ and the most precious inheritance of the artist, the liberty to
+ think, and the liberty that no one has the power to take away from
+ us--that of doing our work according to the dictates of our
+ conscience."
+
+Who does not feel the infectious warmth and beauty of these spirited
+words? How this force of enthusiasm and sincerity must grip all young
+and eager hearts. "There are two qualities," says M. d'Indy, on the last
+page of _Cours de Composition_, "which a master should try to encourage
+and develop in the spirit of the pupil, for without them science is
+useless; these qualities are an unselfish love of art and enthusiasm for
+good work." And these two virtues radiate from M. d'Indy's personality
+as they do from his writings; that is his power.
+
+But the best of his teaching lies in his life. One can never speak too
+highly of his disinterested devotion for the good of art. As if it were
+not enough to put all his might into his own creations, M. d'Indy gives
+his time and the results of his study unsparingly to others. Franck gave
+lessons in order to be able to live; M. d'Indy gives them for the
+pleasure of instructing, and to serve his art and aid artists. He
+directs schools, and accepts and almost seeks out the most thankless,
+though the most necessary, kinds of teaching. Or he will apply himself
+devoutly to the study of the past and the resuscitation of some old
+master. And he seems to take so much pleasure in training young minds to
+appreciate music, or in repairing the injustices of history to some fine
+but forgotten musician, that he almost forgets about himself. To what
+work or to what worker, worthy of interest, or seeming to be so, has he
+ever refused his advice and help? I have known his kindness personally,
+and I shall always be sincerely grateful for it.
+
+His devotion and his faith have not been in vain. The name of M. d'Indy
+will be associated in history, not only with fine works, but with great
+works: with the _Société Nationale de Musique_, of which he is
+president; with the _Schola Cantorum_, which he founded with Charles
+Bordes, and which he directs; with the young French school of music, a
+group of skilful artists and innovators, to whom he is a kind of elder
+brother, giving them encouragement by his example and helping them
+through the first hard years of struggle; and, lastly, with an awakening
+of music in Europe, with a movement which, after the death of Wagner and
+Franck, attracted the interest of the world by its revival of the art of
+the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. M. d'Indy has been the chief
+representative of all this artistic evolution in France. By his deeds,
+by his example, and by his spirit, he was among the first to stir up
+interest in the musical education of France to-day. He has done more
+for the advancement of our music than the entire official teaching of
+the Conservatoires A day will come when, by the force of things and in
+spite of all resistance, such a man will take the place that belongs to
+him at the head of the organisation of music in France.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I have tried to unearth M. d'Indy's strongest characteristics, and I
+think I have found them in his faith and in his activity, I am only too
+aware of the pitfalls that have beset me in this attempt; it is always
+difficult to criticise a man's personality, and it is most difficult
+when he is alive and still in the midst of his development. Every man is
+a mystery, not only to others, but to himself. There is something very
+presumptuous about pretending to know anyone who does not quite know
+himself. And yet one cannot live without forming opinions; it is a
+necessity of life. The people we see and know (or say we know), our
+friends, and those we love, are never what we think them. Often they are
+not at all like the portrait we conjure up; for we walk among the
+phantoms of our hearts. But still one must go on having opinions, and go
+on constructing and creating things, if we do not want to become
+impotent through inertia. Error is better than doubt, provided we err in
+good faith; and the main thing is to speak out the thing that one really
+feels and believes. I hope M. d'Indy will forgive me if I have gone far
+wrong, and that he will see in these pages a sincere effort to
+understand him and a keen sympathy with himself, and even with his
+ideas, though I do not always share them. But I have always thought that
+in life a man's opinions go for very little, and that the only thing
+that matters is the man himself. Freedom of spirit is the greatest
+happiness one can know; one must be sorry for those who have not got it.
+And there is a secret pleasure in rendering homage to another's splendid
+creed, even though it is one that we do not ourselves profess.
+
+
+
+
+RICHARD STRAUSS
+
+
+The composer of _Heldenleben_ is no longer unknown to Parisians. Every
+year at Colonne's or Chevillard's we see his tall, thin silhouette
+reappear in the conductor's desk. There he is with his abrupt and
+imperious gestures, his wan and anxious face, his wonderfully clear
+eyes, restless and penetrating at the same time, his mouth shaped like a
+child's, a moustache so fair that it is nearly white, and curly hair
+growing like a crown above his high round forehead.
+
+I should like to try to sketch here the strange and arresting
+personality of the man who in Germany is considered the inheritor of
+Wagner's genius--the man who has had the audacity to write, after
+Beethoven, an Heroic Symphony, and to imagine himself the hero.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Richard Strauss is thirty-four years old.[167] He was born in Munich on
+11 June, 1864. His father, a well-known virtuoso, was first horn in the
+Royal orchestra, and his mother was a daughter of the brewer Pschorr. He
+was brought up among musical surroundings. At four years old he played
+the piano, and at six he composed little dances, _Lieder_, sonatas, and
+even overtures for the orchestra. Perhaps this extreme artistic
+precocity has had something to do with the feverish character of his
+talents, by keeping his nerves in a state of tension and unduly exciting
+his mind. At school he composed choruses for some of Sophocles'
+tragedies. In 1881, Hermann Levi had one of the young collegian's
+symphonies performed by his orchestra. At the University he spent his
+time in writing instrumental music. Then Bülow and Radecke made him play
+in Berlin; and Bülow, who became very fond of him, had him brought to
+Meiningen as _Musikdirector_. From 1886 to 1889 he held the same post at
+the _Hoftheater_ in Munich. From 1889 to 1894 he was _Kapellmeister_ at
+the _Hoftheater_ in Weimar. He returned to Munich in 1894 as
+_Hofkapellmeister_, and in 1897 succeeded Hermann Levi. Finally, he left
+Munich for Berlin, where at present he conducts the orchestra of the
+Royal Opera.
+
+[Footnote 167: This essay was written in 1899.]
+
+Two things should be particularly noted in his life: the influence of
+Alexander Ritter--to whom he has shown much gratitude--and his travels
+in the south of Europe. He made Ritter's acquaintance in 1885. This
+musician was a nephew of Wagner's, and died some years ago. His music is
+practically unknown in France, though he wrote two well-known operas,
+_Fauler Hans_ and _Wem die Krone_? and was the first composer, according
+to Strauss, to introduce Wagnerian methods into the _Lied_. He is often
+discussed in Bülow's and Liszt's letters. "Before I met him," says
+Strauss, "I had been brought up on strictly classical lines; I had lived
+entirely on Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven, and had just been studying
+Mendelssohn, Chopin, Schumann, and Brahms. It is to Ritter alone I am
+indebted for my knowledge of Liszt and Wagner; it was he who showed me
+the importance of the writings and works of these two masters in the
+history of art. It was he who by years of lessons and kindly counsel
+made me a musician of the future (_Zukunftsmusiker_), and set my feet on
+a road where now I can walk unaided and alone. It was he also who
+initiated me in Schopenhauer's philosophy."
+
+The second influence, that of the South, dates from April, 1886, and
+seems to have left an indelible impression upon Strauss. He visited Rome
+and Naples for the first time, and came back with a symphonic fantasia
+called _Aus Italien_. In the spring of 1892, after a sharp attack of
+pneumonia, he travelled for a year and a half in Greece, Egypt, and
+Sicily. The tranquillity of these favoured countries filled him with
+never-ending regret. The North has depressed him since then, "the
+eternal grey of the North and its phantom shadows without a sun."[168]
+When I saw him at Charlottenburg, one chilly April day, he told me with
+a sigh that he could compose nothing in winter, and that he longed for
+the warmth and light of Italy. His music is infected by that longing;
+and it makes one feel how his spirit suffers in the gloom of Germany,
+and ever yearns for the colours, the laughter, and the joy of the South.
+
+[Footnote 168: Nietzsche.]
+
+Like the musician that Nietzsche dreamed of,[169] he seems "to hear
+ringing in his ears the prelude of a deeper, stronger music, perhaps a
+more wayward and mysterious music; a music that is super-German, which,
+unlike other music, would not die away, nor pale, nor grow dull beside
+the blue and wanton sea and the clear Mediterranean sky; a music
+super-European, which would hold its own even by the dark sunsets of the
+desert; a music whose soul is akin to the palm trees; a music that knows
+how to live and move among great beasts of prey, beautiful and solitary;
+a music whose supreme charm is its ignorance of good and evil. Only from
+time to time perhaps there would flit over it the longing of the sailor
+for home, golden shadows, and gentle weaknesses; and towards it would
+come flying from afar the thousand tints of the setting of a moral world
+that men no longer understood; and to these belated fugitives it would
+extend its hospitality and sympathy." But it is always the North, the
+melancholy of the North, and "all the sadness of mankind," mental
+anguish, the thought of death, and the tyranny of life, that come and
+weigh down afresh his spirit hungering for light, and force it into
+feverish speculation and bitter argument. Perhaps it is better so.
+
+[Footnote 169: _Beyond Good and Evil_, 1886. I hope I may be excused for
+introducing Nietzsche here, but his thoughts seem constantly to be
+reflected in Strauss, and to throw much light on the soul of modern
+Germany.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Richard Strauss is both a poet and a musician. These two natures live
+together in him, and each strives to get the better of the other. The
+balance is not always well maintained; but when he does succeed in
+keeping it by sheer force of will the union of these two talents,
+directed to the same end, produces an effect more powerful than any
+known since Wagner's time. Both natures have their source in a mind
+filled with heroic thoughts--a rarer possession, I consider, than a
+talent for either music or poetry. There are other great musicians in
+Europe; but Strauss is something more than a great musician, for he is
+able to create a hero.
+
+When one talks of heroes one is thinking of drama. Dramatic art is
+everywhere in Strauss's music, even in works that seem least adapted to
+it, such as his _Lieder_ and compositions of pure music. It is most
+evident in his symphonic poems, which are the most important part of his
+work. These poems are: _Wanderers Sturmlied_ (1885), _Aus Italien_
+(1886), _Macbeth_ (1887), _Don Juan_ (1888), _Tod und Verklärung_
+(1889), _Guntram_ (1892-93), _Till Eulenspiegel_ (1894), _Also sprach
+Zarathustra_ (1895), _Don Quixote_ (1897), and _Heldenleben_
+(1898).[170]
+
+[Footnote 170: This article was written in 1899. Since then the
+_Sinfonia Domestica_, has been produced, and will be noticed in the
+essay _French and German Music_.]
+
+I shall not say much about the four first works, where the mind and
+manner of the artist is taking shape. The _Wanderers Sturmlied_ (the
+song of a traveller during a storm, op. 14) is a vocal sextette with an
+orchestral accompaniment, whose subject is taken from a poem of
+Goethe's. It was written before Strauss met Ritter, and its construction
+is after the manner of Brahms, and shows a rather affected thought and
+style. _Aus Italien_ (op. 16) is an exuberant picture of impressions of
+his tour in Italy, of the ruins at Rome, the seashore at Sorrento, and
+the life of the Italian people. _Macbeth_ (op. 23) gives us a rather
+undistinguished series of musical interpretations of poetical subjects.
+_Don Juan_ (op. 20) is much finer, and translates Lenau's poem into
+music with bombastic vigour, showing us the hero who dreams of grasping
+all the joy of the world, and how he fails, and dies after he has lost
+faith in everything.
+
+_Tod und Verklärung_ ("Death and Transfiguration," op. 24[171]) marks
+considerable progress in Strauss's thought and style. It is still one of
+the most stirring of Strauss's works, and the one that is conceived with
+the most perfect unity. It was inspired by a poem of Alexander Ritter's,
+and I will give you an idea of its subject.
+
+[Footnote 171: Composed in 1889, and performed for the first time at
+Eisenach in 1890.]
+
+In a wretched room, lit only by a nightlight, a sick man lies in bed.
+Death draws near him in the midst of awe-inspiring silence. The unhappy
+man seems to wander in his mind at times, and to find comfort in past
+memories. His life passes before his eyes: his innocent childhood, his
+happy youth, the struggles of middle age, and his efforts to attain the
+splendid goal of his desires, which always eludes him. He had been
+striving all his life for this goal, and at last thought it was within
+reach, when Death, in a voice of thunder, cries, suddenly, "Stop!" And
+even now in his agony he struggles desperately, being set upon
+realising his dream; but the hand of Death is crushing life out of his
+body, and night is creeping on. Then resounds in the heavens the promise
+of that happiness which he had vainly sought for on earth--Redemption
+and Transfiguration.
+
+Richard Strauss's friends protested vigorously against this orthodox
+ending; and Seidl,[1] Jorisenne,[2] and Wilhelm Mauke[3] pretended that
+the subject was something loftier, that it was the eternal struggle of
+the soul against its lower self and its deliverance by means of art. I
+shall not enter into that discussion, though I think that such a cold
+and commonplace symbolism is much less interesting than the struggle
+with death, which one feels in every note of the composition. It is a
+classical work, comparatively speaking; broad and majestic and almost
+like Beethoven in style. The realism of the subject in the
+hallucinations of the dying man, the shiverings of fever, the throbbing
+of the veins, and the despairing agony, is transfigured by the purity of
+the form in which it is cast. It is realism after the manner of the
+symphony in C minor, where Beethoven argues with Destiny. If all
+suggestion of a programme is taken away, the symphony still remains
+intelligible and impressive by its harmonious expression of feeling.
+
+[1] _Richard Strauss, eine Charakterskizze_, 1896, Prague.]
+
+[2] _R. Strauss, Essai critique et biologique_, 1898, Brussels.]
+
+[3] _Der Musikführer: Tod und Verklärung_, Frankfort.]
+
+Many German musicians think that Strauss has reached the highest point
+of his work in _Tod und Verklärung_. But I am far from agreeing with
+them, and believe myself that his art has developed enormously as the
+result of it. It is true it is the summit of one period of his life,
+containing the essence of all that is best in it; but _Heldenleben_
+marks the second period, and is its corner-stone. How the force and
+fulness of his feeling has grown since that first period! But he has
+never re-found the delicate and melodious purity of soul and youthful
+grace of his earlier work, which still shines out in _Guntram_, and is
+then effaced.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Strauss has directed Wagner's dramas at Weimar since 1889. While
+breathing their atmosphere he turned his attention to the theatre, and
+wrote the libretto of his opera _Guntram_. Illness interrupted his work,
+and he was in Egypt when he took it up again. The music of the first act
+was written between December, 1892, and February, 1893, while travelling
+between Cairo and Luxor; the second act was finished in June, 1893, in
+Sicily; and the third act early in September, 1893, in Bavaria. There
+is, however, no trace of an oriental atmosphere in this music. We find
+rather the melodies of Italy, the reflection of a mellow light, and a
+resigned calm. I feel in it the languid mind of the convalescent, almost
+the heart of a young girl whose tears are ready to flow, though she is
+smiling a little at her own sad dreams. It seems to me that Strauss must
+have a secret affection for this work, which owes its inspiration to
+the undefinable impressions of convalescence. His fever fell asleep in
+it, and certain passages are full of the caressing touch of nature, and
+recall Berlioz's _Les Troyens_. But too often the music is superficial
+and conventional, and the tyranny of Wagner makes itself felt--a rare
+enough occurrence in Strauss's other works. The poem is interesting;
+Strauss has put much of himself into it, and one is conscious of the
+crisis that unsettled his broad-minded but often self-satisfied and
+inconsistent ideas.
+
+Strauss had been reading an historical study of an order of
+_Minnesänger_ and mystics, which was founded in Austria in the Middle
+Ages to fight against the corruption of art, and to save souls by the
+beauty of song. They called themselves _Streiter der Liebe_ ("Warriors
+of Love"). Strauss, who was imbued at that time with neo-Christian ideas
+and the influence of Wagner and Tolstoy, was carried away by the
+subject, and took Guntram from the _Streiter der Liebe_, and made him
+his hero.
+
+The action takes place in the thirteenth century, in Germany. The first
+act gives us a glade near a little lake. The country people are in
+revolt against the nobles, and have just been repulsed. Guntram and his
+master Friedhold distribute alms among them, and the band of defeated
+men then take flight into the woods. Left alone, Guntram begins to muse
+on the delights of springtime and the innocent awakening of Nature. But
+the thought of the misery that its beauty hides weighs upon him. He
+thinks of men's evil doing, of human suffering, and of civil war. He
+gives thanks to Christ for having led him to this unhappy country,
+kisses the cross, and decides to go to the court of the tyrant who is
+the cause of all the trouble, and make known to him the Divine
+revelation. At that moment Freihild appears. She is the wife of Duke
+Robert, who is the cruellest of all the nobles, and she is horrified by
+all that is happening around her; life seems hateful to her, and she
+wishes to drown herself. But Guntram prevents her; and the pity that her
+beauty and trouble had at first aroused changes unconsciously into love
+when he recognises her as the beloved princess and sole benefactress of
+the unhappy people. He tells her that God has sent him to her for her
+salvation. Then he goes to the castle, where he believes himself to be
+sent on the double mission of saving the people--and Freihild.
+
+In the second act, the princes celebrate their victory in the Duke's
+castle. After some pompous talk on the part of the official
+_Minnesänger_, Guntram is invited to sing. Discouraged beforehand by the
+wickedness of his audience, and feeling that he can sing to no purpose,
+he hesitates and is on the point of leaving them. But Freihild's sadness
+holds him back, and for her sake he sings. His song is at first calm and
+measured, and expresses the melancholy that fills him in the midst of a
+feast which celebrates triumphant power. He then loses himself in
+dreams, and sees the gentle figure of Peace moving among the company. He
+describes her lovingly and with youthful tenderness, which approaches
+ecstasy as he draws a picture of the ideal life of humanity made free.
+Then he paints War and Death, and the disorder and darkness that they
+spread over the world. He addresses himself directly to the Prince; he
+shows him his duty, and how the love of his people would be his
+recompense; he threatens him with the hate of the unhappy who are driven
+to despair; and, finally, he urges the nobles to rebuild the towns, to
+liberate their prisoners, and to come to the aid of their subjects. His
+song is ended amid the profound emotion of his audience. Duke Robert,
+feeling the danger of these outspoken words, orders his men to seize the
+singer; but the vassals side with Guntram. At this juncture news is
+brought that the peasants have renewed the attack. Robert calls his men
+to arms, but Guntram, who feels that he will be supported by those
+around him, orders Robert's arrest. The Duke draws his sword, but
+Guntram kills him. Then a sudden change comes over Guntram's spirit,
+which is explained in the third act. In the scene that follows he speaks
+no word, his sword falls from his hand, and he lets his enemies again
+assume their authority over the crowd; he allows himself to be bound and
+taken to prison, while the band of nobles noisily disperses to fight
+against the rebels. But Freihild is full of an unaffected and almost
+savage joy at her deliverance by Guntram's sword. Love for Guntram fills
+her heart, and her one desire is to save him.
+
+The third act takes place in the prison of the château; and it is a
+surprising, uncertain, and very curious act. It is not a logical result
+of the action that has preceded it. One feels a sudden commotion in the
+poet's ideas, a crisis of feeling which disturbed him even as he wrote,
+and a difficulty which he did not succeed in solving. The new light
+towards which he was beginning to move appears very clearly. Strauss was
+too advanced in the composition of his work to escape the neo-Christian
+renouncement which had to finish the drama; he could only have avoided
+that by completely remodelling his characters. So Guntram rejects
+Freihild's love. He sees he has fallen, even as the others, under the
+curse of sin. He had preached charity to others when he himself was full
+of egoism; he had killed Robert rather to satisfy his instinctive and
+animal jealousy than to deliver the people from a tyrant. So he
+renounces his desires, and expiates the sin of being alive by retirement
+from the world. But the interest of the act does not lie in this
+anticipated _dénouement_, which since _Parsifal_ has become rather
+common; it lies in another scene, which has evidently been inserted at
+the last moment, and which is uncomfortably out of tune with the action,
+though in a singularly grand way. This scene gives us a dialogue between
+Guntram and his former companion, Friedhold.[172]
+
+[Footnote 172: Some people have tried to see Alexander Ritter's thoughts
+in Friedhold, as they have seen Strauss's thoughts in Guntram.]
+
+Friedhold had initiated him in former days, and he now comes to
+reproach him for his crime, and to bring him before the Order, who will
+judge him. In the original version of the poem Guntram complies, and
+sacrifices his passion to his vow. But while Strauss had been travelling
+in the East he had conceived a sudden horror for this Christian
+annihilation of will, and Guntram revolts along with him, and refuses to
+submit to the rules of his Order. He breaks his lute--a symbol of false
+hope in the redemption of humanity through faith--and rouses himself
+from the glorious dreams in which he used to believe, for he sees they
+are shadows that are scattered by the light of real life. He does not
+abjure his former vows; but he is not the same man he was when he made
+them. While his experience was immature he was able to believe that a
+man ought to submit himself to rules, and that life should be governed
+by laws. A single hour has enlightened him. Now he is free and
+alone--alone with his spirit. "I alone can lessen my suffering; I alone
+can expiate my crime. Through myself alone God speaks to me; to me alone
+God speaks. _Ewig einsam_." It is the proud awakening of individualism,
+the powerful pessimism of the Super-man. Such an expression of feeling
+gives the character of action to renouncement and even to negation
+itself, for it is a strong affirmation of the will.
+
+I have dwelt rather at length on this drama on account of the real value
+of its thought and, above all, on account of what one may call its
+autobiographical interest. It was at this time that Strauss's mind began
+to take more definite form. His further experience will develop that
+form still more, but without making any important change in it.
+
+_Guntram_ was the cause of bitter disappointment to its author. He did
+not succeed in getting it produced at Munich, for the orchestra and
+singers declared that the music could not be performed. It is even said
+that they got an eminent critic to draw up a formal document, which they
+sent to Strauss, certifying that _Guntram_ was not meant to be sung. The
+chief difficulty was the length of the principal part, which took up by
+itself, in its musings and discourses, the equivalent of an act and a
+half. Some of its monologues, like the song in the second act, last half
+an hour on end. Nevertheless, _Guntram_ was performed at Weimar on 16
+May, 1894. A little while afterwards Strauss married the singer who
+played Freihild, Pauline de Ahna, who had also created Elizabeth in
+_Tannhäuser_ at Bayreuth, and who has since devoted herself to the
+interpretation of her husband's _Lieder_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But the rancour of his failure at the theatre still remained with
+Strauss, and he turned his attention again to the symphonic poem, in
+which he showed more and more marked dramatic tendencies, and a soul
+which grew daily prouder and more scornful. You should hear him speak in
+cold disdain of the theatre-going public--"that collection of bankers
+and tradespeople and miserable seekers after pleasure"--to know the sore
+that this triumphant artist hides. For not only was the theatre long
+closed to him, but, by an additional irony, he was obliged to conduct
+musical rubbish at the opera in Berlin, on account of the poor taste in
+music--really of Royal origin--that prevailed there.
+
+The first great symphony of this new period was _Till Eulenspiegel's
+lustige Streiche, nach alter Schelmenweise, in Rondeauform_ ("Till
+Eulenspiegel's Merry Pranks, according to an old legend, in rondeau
+form"), op. 28.[173] Here his disdain is as yet only expressed by witty
+bantering, which scoffs at the world's conventions. This figure of Till,
+this devil of a joker, the legendary hero of Germany and Flanders, is
+little known with us in France. And so Strauss's music loses much of its
+point, for it claims to recall a series of adventures which we know
+nothing about--Till crossing the market place and smacking his whip at
+the good women there; Till in priestly attire delivering a homely
+sermon; Till making love to a young woman who rebuffs him; Till making a
+fool of the pedants; Till tried and hung. Strauss's liking to present,
+by musical pictures, sometimes a character, sometimes a dialogue, or a
+situation, or a landscape, or an idea--that is to say, the most volatile
+and varied impressions of his capricious spirit--is very marked here. It
+is true that he falls back on several popular subjects, whose meaning
+would be very easily grasped in Germany; and that he develops them, not
+quite in the strict form of a rondeau, as he pretends, but still with a
+certain method, so that apart from a few frolics, which are
+unintelligible without a programme, the whole has real musical unity.
+This symphony, which is a great favourite in Germany, seems to me less
+original than some of his other compositions. It sounds rather like a
+refined piece of Mendelssohn's, with curious harmonies and very
+complicated instrumentation.
+
+[Footnote 173: Composed in 1894-95, and played for the first time at
+Cologne in 1895.]
+
+There is much more grandeur and originality in his _Also sprach
+Zarathustra, Tondichtung frei, nach Nietzsche_ ("Thus spake Zarathustra,
+a free Tone-poem, after Nietzsche"), op. 30.[174] Its sentiments are
+more broadly human, and the programme that Strauss has followed never
+loses itself in picturesque or anecdotic details, but is planned on
+expressive and noble lines. Strauss protests his own liberty in the face
+of Nietzsche's. He wishes to represent the different stages of
+development that a free spirit passes through in order to arrive at that
+of Super-man. These ideas are purely personal, and are not part of some
+system of philosophy. The sub-titles of the work are: _Von den
+Hinterweltern_ ("Of Religious Ideas"), _Von der grossen Sehnsucht_ ("Of
+Supreme Aspiration"), _Von den Freuden und Leidenschaften_ ("Of Joys and
+Passions"), _Das Grablied_ ("The Grave Song"), _Von der Wissenschaft_
+("Of Knowledge"), _Der Genesende_ ("The Convalescent"--the soul
+delivered of its desires), _Das Tanzlied_ ("Dancing Song"), _Nachtlied_
+("Night Song"). We are shown a man who, worn out by trying to solve the
+riddle of the universe, seeks refuge in religion. Then he revolts
+against ascetic ideas, and gives way madly to his passions. But he is
+quickly sated and disgusted and, weary to death, he tries science, but
+rejects it again, and succeeds in ridding himself of the uneasiness its
+knowledge brings by laughter--the master of the universe--and the merry
+dance, that dance of the universe where all the human sentiments enter
+hand-in-hand--religious beliefs, unsatisfied desires, passions,
+disgust, and joy. "Lift up your hearts on high, my brothers! Higher
+still! And mind you don't forget your legs! I have canonised laughter.
+You super-men, learn to laugh!"[175] And the dance dies away and is lost
+in ethereal regions, and Zarathustra is lost to sight while dancing in
+distant worlds. But if he has solved the riddle of the universe for
+himself, he has not solved it for other men; and so, in contrast to the
+confident knowledge which fills the music, we get the sad note of
+interrogation at the end.
+
+[Footnote 174: Composed in 1895-96, and performed for the first time at
+Frankfort-On-Main in November, 1896.]
+
+[Footnote 175: Nietzsche.]
+
+There are few subjects that offer richer material for musical
+expression. Strauss has treated it with power and dexterity; he has
+preserved unity in this chaos of passions, by contrasting the
+_Sehnsucht_ of man with the impassive strength of Nature. As for the
+boldness of his conceptions, I need hardly remind those who heard the
+poem at the Cirque d'été of the intricate "Fugue of Knowledge," the
+trills of the wood wind and the trumpets that voice Zarathustra's laugh,
+the dance of the universe, and the audacity of the conclusion which, in
+the key of B major, finishes up with a note of interrogation, in C
+natural, repeated three times.
+
+I am far from thinking that the symphony is without a fault. The themes
+are of unequal value: some are quite commonplace; and, in a general way,
+the working up of the composition is superior to its underlying
+thought. I shall come back later on to certain faults in Strauss's
+music; here I only want to consider the overflowing life and feverish
+joy that set these worlds spinning.
+
+_Zarathustra_ shows the progress of scornful individualism in
+Strauss--"the spirit that hates the dogs of the populace and all that
+abortive and gloomy breed; the spirit of wild laughter that dances like
+a tempest as gaily on marshes and sadness as it does in fields."[176]
+That spirit laughs at itself and at its idealism in the _Don Quixote_ of
+1897, _fantastische Variationen uber ein Thema ritterlichen Charakters_
+("Don Quixote, fantastic variations on a theme of knightly character"),
+op. 35; and that symphony marks, I think, the extreme point to which
+programme music may be carried. In no other work does Strauss give
+better proof of his prodigious cleverness, intelligence, and wit; and I
+say sincerely that there is not a work where so much force is expended
+with so great a loss for the sake of a game and a musical joke which
+lasts forty-five minutes, and has given the author, the executants, and
+the public a good deal of tiring work. These symphonic poems are most
+difficult to play on account of the complexity, the independence, and
+the fantastic caprices of the different parts. Judge for yourself what
+the author expects to get out of the music by these few extracts from
+the programme:--
+
+[Footnote 176: Nietzsche, _Zarathustra_.]
+
+The introduction represents Don Quixote buried in books of chivalrous
+romance; and we have to see in the music, as we do in little Flemish and
+Dutch pictures, not only Don Quixote's features, but the words of the
+books he reads. Sometimes it is the story of a knight who is righting a
+giant, sometimes the adventures of a knight-errant who has dedicated
+himself to the services of a lady, sometimes it is a nobleman who has
+given his life in fulfilment of a vow to atone for his sins. Don
+Quixote's mind becomes confused (and our own with it) over all these
+stories; he is quite distracted. He leaves home in company with his
+squire. The two figures are drawn with great spirit; the one is an old
+Spaniard, stiff, languishing, distrustful, a bit of a poet, rather
+undecided in his opinions but obstinate when his mind is once made up;
+the other is a fat, jovial peasant, a cunning fellow, given to repeating
+himself in a waggish way and quoting droll proverbs--translated in the
+music by short-winded phrases that always return to the point they
+started from. The adventures begin. Here are the windmills (trills from
+the violins and wood wind), and the bleating army of the grand emperor,
+Alifanfaron (tremolos from the wood wind); and here, in the third
+variation, is a dialogue between the knight and his squire, from which
+we are to guess that Sancho questions his master on the advantages of a
+chivalrous life, for they seem to him doubtful. Don Quixote talks to him
+of glory and honour; but Sancho has no thought for it. In reply to these
+grand words he urges the superiority of sure profits, fat meals, and
+sounding money. Then the adventures begin again. The two companions fly
+through the air on wooden horses; and the illusion of this giddy voyage
+is given by chromatic passages on the flutes, harps, kettledrums, and a
+"windmachine," while "the tremolo of the double basses on the key-note
+shows that the horses have never left the earth."[177]
+
+But I must stop. I have said enough to show the fun the author is
+indulging in. When one hears the work one cannot help admiring the
+composer's technical knowledge, skill in orchestration, and sense of
+humour. And one is all the more surprised that he confines himself to
+the illustration of texts[178] when he is so capable of creating comic
+and dramatic matter without it. Although _Don Quixote_ is a marvel of
+skill and a very wonderful work, in which Strauss has developed a
+suppler and richer style, it marks, to my mind, a progress in his
+technique and a backward step in his mind, for he seems to have adopted
+the decadent conceptions of an art suited to playthings and trinkets to
+please a frivolous and affected society.
+
+[Footnote 177: Arthur Hahn, _Der Musikführer: Don Quixote_, Frankfort.]
+
+[Footnote 178: At the head of each variation Strauss has marked on the
+score the chapter of "Don Quixote" that he is interpreting.]
+
+In _Heldenleben_ ("The Life of a Hero"), op. 40,[179] he recovers
+himself, and with a stroke of his wings reaches the summits. Here there
+is no foreign text for the music to study or illustrate or transcribe.
+Instead, there is lofty passion and an heroic will gradually developing
+itself and breaking down all obstacles. Without doubt Strauss had a
+programme in his mind, but he said to me himself: "You have no need to
+read it. It is enough to know that the hero is there fighting against
+his enemies." I do not know how far that is true, or if parts of the
+symphony would not be rather obscure to anyone who followed it without
+the text; but this speech seems to prove that he has understood the
+dangers of the literary symphony, and that he is striving for pure
+music.
+
+[Footnote 179: Finished in December, 1898. Performed for the first time
+at Frankfort-On-Main on 3 March, 1899. Published by Leuckart, Leipzig.]
+
+_Heldenleben_ is divided into six chapters: The Hero, The Hero's
+Adversaries, The Hero's Companion, The Field of Battle, The Peaceful
+Labours of the Hero, The Hero's Retirement from the World, and the
+Achievement of His Ideal. It is an extraordinary work, drunken with
+heroism, colossal, half barbaric, trivial, and sublime. An Homeric hero
+struggles among the sneers of a stupid crowd, a herd of brawling and
+hobbling ninnies. A violin solo, in a sort of concerto, describes the
+seductions, the coquetry, and the degraded wickedness of woman. Then
+strident trumpet-blasts sound the attack; and it is beyond me to give an
+idea of the terrible charge of cavalry that follows, which makes the
+earth tremble and our hearts leap; nor can I describe how an iron
+determination leads to the storming of towns, and all the tumultuous din
+and uproar of battle--the most splendid battle that has ever been
+painted in music. At its first performance in Germany I saw people
+tremble as they listened to it, and some rose up suddenly and made
+violent gestures quite unconsciously. I myself had a strange feeling of
+giddiness, as if an ocean had been upheaved, and I thought that for the
+first time for thirty years Germany had found a poet of Victory.
+
+_Heldenleben_ would be in every way one of the masterpieces of musical
+composition if a literary error had not suddenly cut short the soaring
+flight of its most impassioned pages, at the supreme point of interest
+in the movement, in order to follow the programme; though, besides this,
+a certain coldness, perhaps weariness, creeps in towards the end. The
+victorious hero perceives that he has conquered in vain: the baseness
+and stupidity of men have remained unaltered. He stifles his anger, and
+scornfully accepts the situation. Then he seeks refuge in the peace of
+Nature. The creative force within him flows out in imaginative works;
+and here Richard Strauss, with a daring warranted only by his genius,
+represents these works by reminiscences of his own compositions, and
+_Don Juan, Macbeth, Tod und Verklärung, Till, Zarathustra, Don Quixote,
+Guntram_, and even his _Lieder_, associate themselves with the hero
+whose story he is telling. At times a storm will remind this hero of his
+combats; but he also remembers his moments of love and happiness, and
+his soul is quieted. Then the music unfolds itself serenely, and rises
+with calm strength to the closing chord of triumph, which is placed like
+a crown of glory on the hero's head.
+
+There is no doubt that Beethoven's ideas have often inspired,
+stimulated, and guided Strauss's own ideas. One feels an indescribable
+reflection of the first _Heroic_ and of the _Ode to Joy_ in the key of
+the first part (E flat); and the last part recalls, even more forcibly,
+certain of Beethoven's _Lieder_. But the heroes of the two composers are
+very different: Beethoven's hero is more classical and more rebellious;
+and Strauss's hero is more concerned with the exterior world and his
+enemies, his conquests are achieved with greater difficulty, and his
+triumph is wilder in consequence. If that good Oulibicheff pretends to
+see the burning of Moscow in a discord in the first _Heroic_, what would
+he find here? What scenes of burning towns, what battlefields! Besides
+that there is cutting scorn and a mischievous laughter in _Heldenleben_
+that is never heard in Beethoven. There is, in fact, little kindness in
+Strauss's work; it is the work of a disdainful hero.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In considering Strauss's music as a whole, one is at first struck by the
+diversity of his style. The North and the South mingle; and in his
+melodies one feels the attraction of the sun. Something Italian had
+crept into _Tristan_; but how much more of Italy there is in the work of
+this disciple of Nietzsche. The phrases are often Italian and their
+harmonies ultra-Germanic. Perhaps one of the greatest charms of
+Strauss's art is that we are able to watch the rent in the dark clouds
+of German polyphony, and see shining through it the smiling line of an
+Italian coast and the gay dancers on its shore. This is not merely a
+vague analogy. It would be easy, if idle, to notice unmistakable
+reminiscences of France and Italy even in Strauss's most advanced works,
+such as _Zarathustra_ and _Heldenleben_. Mendelssohn, Gounod, Wagner,
+Rossini, and Mascagni elbow one another strangely. But these disparate
+elements have a softer outline when the work is taken as a whole, for
+they have been absorbed and controlled by the composer's imagination.
+
+His orchestra is not less composite. It is not a compact and serried
+mass like Wagner's Macedonian phalanxes; it is parcelled out and as
+divided as possible. Each part aims at independence and works as it
+thinks best, without apparently troubling about the other parts.
+Sometimes it seems, as it did when reading Berlioz, that the execution
+must result in incoherence, and weaken the effect. But somehow the
+result is very satisfying. "Now doesn't that sound well?" said Strauss
+to me with a smile, just after he had finished conducting
+_Heldenleben_.[180]
+
+[Footnote 180: The composition of the orchestra in Strauss's later works
+is as follows: In _Zarathustra_: one piccolo, three flutes, three oboes,
+one English horn, one clarinet in E flat, two clarinets in B, one
+bass-clarinet in B, three bassoons, one double-bassoon, six horns in F,
+four trumpets in C, three trombones, three bass-tuba, kettledrums, big
+drum, cymbals, triangle, chime of bells, bell in E, organ, two harps,
+and strings. In _Heldenleben_: eight horns instead of six, five trumpets
+instead of four (two in E flat, three in B); and, in addition, military
+drums.]
+
+But it is especially in Strauss's subjects that caprice and a disordered
+imagination, the enemy of all reason, seem to reign. We have seen that
+these poems try to express in turn, or even simultaneously, literary
+texts, pictures, anecdotes, philosophical ideas, and the personal
+sentiments of the composer. What unity is there in the adventures of Don
+Quixote or Till Eulenspiegel? And yet unity is there, not in the
+subjects, but in the mind that deals with them. And these descriptive
+symphonies with their very diffuse literary life are vindicated by their
+musical life, which is much more logical and concentrated. The caprices
+of the poet are held in rein by the musician. The whimsical Till
+disports himself "after the old form of rondeau," and the folly of Don
+Quixote is told in "ten variations on a chivalrous theme, with an
+introduction and finale." In this way, Strauss's art, one of the most
+literary and descriptive in existence, is strongly distinguished from
+others of the same kind by the solidarity of its musical fabric, in
+which one feels the true musician--a musician brought up on the great
+masters, and a classic in spite of everything.
+
+And so throughout that music a strong unity is felt among the unruly and
+often incongruous elements. It is the reflection, so it seems to me, of
+the soul of the composer. Its unity is not a matter of what he feels,
+but a matter of what he wishes. His emotion is much less interesting to
+him than his will, and it is less intense, and often quite devoid of any
+personal character. His restlessness seems to come from Schumann, his
+religious feeling from Mendelssohn, his voluptuousness from Gounod or
+the Italian masters, his passion from Wagner.[181] But his will is
+heroic, dominating, eager, and powerful to a sublime degree. And that is
+why Richard Strauss is noble and, at present, quite unique. One feels in
+him a force that has dominion over men.
+
+[Footnote 181: In _Guntram_ one could even believe that he had made up
+his mind to use a phrase in _Tristan_, as if he could not find anything
+better to express passionate desire.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is through this heroic side that he may be considered as an inheritor
+of some of Beethoven's and Wagner's thought. It is this heroic side
+which makes him a poet--one of the greatest perhaps in modern Germany,
+who sees herself reflected in him and in his hero. Let us consider this
+hero.
+
+He is an idealist with unbounded faith in the power of the mind and the
+liberating virtue of art. This idealism is at first religious, as in
+_Tod und Verklärung_, and tender and compassionate as a woman, and full
+of youthful illusions, as in _Guntram_. Then it becomes vexed and
+indignant with the baseness of the world and the difficulties it
+encounters. Its scorn increases, and becomes sarcastic _(Till
+Eulenspiegel)_; it is exasperated with years of conflict, and, in
+increasing bitterness, develops into a contemptuous heroism. How
+Strauss's laugh whips and stings us in _Zarathustra_! How his will
+bruises and cuts us in _Heldenleben_! Now that he has proved his power
+by victory, his pride knows no limit; he is elated and is unable to see
+that his lofty visions have become realities. But the people whose
+spirit he reflects see it. There are germs of morbidity in Germany
+to-day, a frenzy of pride, a belief in self, and a scorn for others that
+recalls France in the seventeenth century. "_Dem Deutschen gehört die
+Welt_" ("Germany possesses the world") calmly say the prints displayed
+in the shop windows in Berlin. But when one arrives at this point the
+mind becomes delirious. All genius is raving mad if it comes to that;
+but Beethoven's madness concentrated itself in himself, and imagined
+things for his own enjoyment. The genius of many contemporary German
+artists is an aggressive thing, and is characterised by its destructive
+antagonism. The idealist who "possesses the world" is liable to
+dizziness. He was made to rule over an interior world. The splendour of
+the exterior images that he is called upon to govern dazzles him; and,
+like Caesar, he goes astray. Germany had hardly attained the position of
+empire of the world when she found Nietzsche's voice and that of the
+deluded artists of the _Deutsches Theater_ and the _Secession_. Now
+there is the grandiose music of Richard Strauss.
+
+What is all this fury leading to? What does this heroism aspire to? This
+force of will, bitter and strained, grows faint when it has reached its
+goal, or even before that. It does not know what to do with its victory.
+It disdains it, does not believe in it, or grows tired of it.[182]
+
+[Footnote 182: "The German spirit, which but a little while back had the
+will to dominate Europe, the force to govern Europe, has finally made up
+its mind to abandon it."--Nietzsche.]
+
+Like Michelangelo's _Victory_, it has set its knee on the captive's
+back, and seems ready to despatch him. But suddenly it stops, hesitates,
+and looks about with uncertain eyes, and its expression is one of
+languid disgust, as though weariness had seized it.
+
+And this is how the work of Richard Strauss appears to me up to the
+present. Guntram kills Duke Robert, and immediately lets fall his sword.
+The frenzied laugh of Zarathustra ends in an avowal of discouraged
+impotence. The delirious passion of Don Juan dies away in nothingness.
+Don Quixote when dying forswears his illusions. Even the Hero himself
+admits the futility of his work, and seeks oblivion in an indifferent
+Nature. Nietzsche, speaking of the artists of our time, laughs at "those
+Tantaluses of the will, rebels and enemies of laws, who come, broken in
+spirit, and fall at the foot of the cross of Christ." Whether it is for
+the sake of the Cross or Nothingness, these heroes renounce their
+victories in disgust and despair, or with a resignation that is sadder
+still. It was not thus that Beethoven overcame his sorrows. Sad adagios
+make their lament in the middle of his symphonies, but a note of joy and
+triumph is always sounded at the end. His work is the triumph of a
+conquered hero; that of Strauss is the defeat of a conquering hero. This
+irresoluteness of the will can be still more clearly seen in
+contemporary German literature, and in particular in the author of _Die
+versunkene Glocke_. But it is more striking in Strauss, because he is
+more heroic. And so we get all this display of superhuman will, and the
+end is only "My desire is gone!"
+
+In this lies the undying worm of German thought--I am speaking of the
+thought of the choice few who enlighten the present and anticipate the
+future. I see an heroic people, intoxicated by its triumphs, by its
+great riches, by its numbers, by its force, which clasps the world in
+its great arms and subjugates it, and then stops, fatigued by its
+conquest, and asks: "Why have I conquered?"
+
+
+
+
+HUGO WOLF
+
+
+The more one learns of the history of great artists, the more one is
+struck by the immense amount of sadness their lives enclose. Not only
+are they subjected to the trials and disappointments of ordinary
+life--which affect them more cruelly through their greater
+sensitiveness--but their surroundings are like a desert, because they
+are twenty, thirty, fifty, or even hundreds of years in advance of their
+contemporaries; and they are often condemned to despairing efforts, not
+to conquer the world, but to live.
+
+These highly-strung natures are rarely able to keep up this incessant
+struggle for very long; and the finest genius may have to reckon with
+illness and misery and even premature death. And yet there were people
+like Mozart and Schumann and Weber who were happy in spite of
+everything, because they had been able to keep their soul's health and
+the joy of creation until the end; and though their bodies were worn out
+with fatigue and privation, a light was kept burning which sent its rays
+far into the darkness of their night. There are worse destinies; and
+Beethoven, though he was poor, shut up within himself, and deceived in
+his affections, was far from being the most unhappy of men. In his case,
+he possessed nothing but himself; but he possessed himself truly, and
+reigned over the world that was within him; and no other empire could
+ever be compared with that of his vast imagination, which stretched like
+a great expanse of sky, where tempests raged. Until his last day the old
+Prometheus in him, though fettered by a miserable body, preserved his
+iron force unbroken. When dying during a storm, his last gesture was one
+of revolt; and in his agony he raised himself on his bed and shook his
+fist at the sky. And so he fell, struck down by a single blow in the
+thick of the fight.
+
+But what shall be said of those who die little by little, who outlive
+themselves, and watch the slow decay of their souls?
+
+Such was the fate of Hugo Wolf, whose tragic destiny has assured him a
+place apart in the hell of great musicians.[183]
+
+[Footnote 183: A large number of works on Hugo Wolf have been published
+in Germany since his death. The chief is the great biography of Herr
+Ernst Decsey--_Hugo Wolf_ (Berlin, 1903-4). I have found this book of
+great service; it is a work full of knowledge and sympathy. I have also
+consulted Herr Paul Müller's excellent little pamphlet, _Hugo Wolf
+(Moderne essays_, Berlin, 1904), and the collections of Wolf's letters,
+in particular his letters to Oskar Grohe, Emil Kaufmann, and Hugo
+Faisst.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He was born at Windischgratz in Styria, 13 March, 1860. He was the
+fourth son of a currier--a currier-musician, like old Veit Bach, the
+baker-musician, and Haydn's father, the wheelwright-musician. Philipp
+Wolf played the violin, the guitar, and the piano, and used to have
+little quintet parties at his house, in which he played the first
+violin, Hugo the second violin, Hugo's brother the violoncello, an uncle
+the horn, and a friend the tenor violin. The musical taste of the
+country was not properly German. Wolf was a Catholic; and his taste was
+not formed, like that of most German musicians, by books of chorales.
+Besides that, in Styria they were fond of playing the old Italian operas
+of Rossini, Bellini, and Donizetti. Later on, Wolf used to like to think
+that he had a few drops of Latin blood in his veins; and all his life he
+had a predilection for the great French musicians.
+
+His term of apprenticeship was not marked by anything brilliant. He went
+from one school to another without being kept long anywhere. And yet he
+was not a worthless lad; but he was always very reserved, little caring
+to be intimate with others, and passionately devoted to music. His
+father naturally did not want him to take up music as a profession; and
+he had the same struggles that Berlioz had. Finally he succeeded in
+getting permission from his family to go to Vienna, and he entered the
+Conservatoire there in 1875. But he was not any the happier for it, and
+at the end of two years he was sent away for being unruly.
+
+What was to be done? His family was ruined, for a fire had demolished
+their little possessions. He felt the silent reproaches of his father
+already weighing upon him--for he loved his father dearly, and
+remembered the sacrifices he had made for him. He did not wish to return
+to his own province; indeed he could not return--that would have been
+death. It was necessary that this boy of seventeen should find some
+means of earning a livelihood and be able to instruct himself at the
+same time. After his expulsion from the Conservatoire he attended no
+other school; he taught himself. And he taught himself wonderfully; but
+at what a cost! The suffering he went through from that time until he
+was thirty, the enormous amount of energy he had to expend in order to
+live and cultivate the fine spirit of poetry that was within him--all
+this effort and toil was, without doubt, the cause of his unhappy death.
+He had a burning thirst for knowledge and a fever for work which made
+him sometimes forget the necessity for eating and drinking.
+
+He had a great admiration for Goethe, and was infatuated by Heinrich von
+Kleist, whom he rather resembles both in his gifts and in his life; he
+was an enthusiast about Grillparzer and Hebbel at a time when they were
+but little appreciated; and he was one of the first Germans to discover
+the worth of Mörike, whom, later on, he made popular in Germany. Besides
+this, he read English and French writers. He liked Rabelais, and was
+very partial to Claude Tillier, the French novelist of the provinces,
+whose _Oncle Benjamin_ has given pleasure to so many German provincial
+families, by bringing before them, as Wolf said, the vision of their own
+little world, and helping them by his own jovial good humour to bear
+their troubles with a smiling face. And so little Wolf, with hardly
+enough to eat, found the means of learning both French and English, in
+order better to appreciate the thoughts of foreign artists.
+
+In music he learned a great deal from his friend Schalk,[184] a
+professor at the Vienna Conservatoire; but, like Berlioz, he got most of
+his education from the libraries, and spent months in reading the scores
+of the great masters. Not having a piano, he used to carry Beethoven's
+sonatas to the Prater Park in Vienna and study them on a bench in the
+open air. He soaked himself in the classics--in Bach and Beethoven, and
+the German masters of the _Lied_--Schubert and Schumann. He was one of
+the young Germans who was passionately fond of Berlioz; and it is due to
+Wolf that France was afterwards honoured in the possession of this great
+artist, whom French critics, whether of the school of Meyerbeer, Wagner,
+Franck, or Debussy, have never understood. He was also early a friend of
+old Anton Bruckner, whose music we do not know in France, neither his
+eight symphonies, nor his _Te Deum_, nor his masses, nor his cantatas,
+nor anything else of his fertile work. Bruckner had a sweet and modest
+character, and an endearing, if rather childish, personality. He was
+rather crushed all his life by the Brahms party; but, like Franck in
+France, he gathered round him new and original talent to fight the
+academic art of his time.
+
+[Footnote 184: Joseph Schalk was one of the founders of the
+_Wagner-Verein_ at Vienna, and devoted his life to propagating the cult
+of Bruckner (who called him his "_Herr Generalissimus_ "), and to
+fighting for Wolf.]
+
+But of all these influences, the strongest was that of Wagner. Wagner
+came to Vienna in 1875 to conduct _Tannhäuser_ and _Lohengrin_. There
+was then among the younger people a fever of enthusiasm similar to that
+which _Werther_ had caused a century before. Wolf saw Wagner. He tells
+us about it in his letters to his parents. I will quote his own words,
+and though they make one smile, one loves the impulsive devotion of his
+youth; and they make one feel, too, that a man who inspires such an
+affection, and who can do so much good by a little sympathy, is to blame
+when he does not befriend others--above all if he has suffered, like
+Wagner, from loneliness and the want of a helping hand. You must
+remember that this letter was written by a boy of fifteen.
+
+ "I have been to--guess whom?... to the master, Richard Wagner! Now
+ I will tell you all about it, just as it happened. I will copy the
+ words down exactly as I wrote them in my note-book.
+
+ "On Thursday, 9 December, at half-past ten, I saw Richard Wagner
+ for the second time at the Hotel Imperial, where I stayed for half
+ an hour on the staircase, awaiting his arrival (I knew that on that
+ day he would conduct the last rehearsal of his _Lohengrin_). At
+ last the master came down from the second floor, and I bowed to him
+ very respectfully while he was yet some distance from me. He
+ thanked me in a very friendly way. As he neared the door I sprang
+ forward and opened it for him, upon which he looked fixedly at me
+ for a few seconds, and then went on his way to the rehearsal at
+ the Opera. I ran as fast as I could, and arrived at the Opera
+ sooner than Richard Wagner did in his cab. I bowed to him again,
+ and I wanted to open the door of his cab for him; but as I could
+ not get it open, the coachman jumped down from his seat and did it
+ for me. Wagner said something to the coachman--I think it was about
+ me. I wanted to follow him into the theatre, but they would not let
+ me pass.
+
+ "I often used to wait for him at the Hotel Imperial; and on this
+ occasion I made the acquaintance of the manager of the hotel, who
+ promised that he would interest himself on my behalf. Who was more
+ delighted than I when he told me that on the following Saturday
+ afternoon, 11 December, I was to come and find him, so that he
+ could introduce me to Mme. Cosima's maid and Richard Wagner's
+ valet! I arrived at the appointed hour. The visit to the lady's
+ maid was very short. I was advised to come the following day,
+ Sunday, 12 December, at two o'clock. I arrived at the right hour,
+ but found the maid and the valet and the manager still at table....
+ Then I went with the maid to the master's rooms, where I waited for
+ about a quarter of an hour until he came. At last Wagner appeared
+ in company with Cosima and Goldmark. I bowed to Cosima very
+ respectfully, but she evidently did not think it worth while to
+ honour me with a single glance. Wagner was going into his room
+ without paying any attention to me, when the maid said to him in a
+ beseeching voice: 'Ah, Herr Wagner, it is a young musician who
+ wishes to speak to you; he has been waiting for you a long time.'
+
+ "He then came out of his room, looked at me, and said: 'I have seen
+ you before, I think. You are....'
+
+ "Probably he wanted to say, 'You are a fool.'
+
+ "He went in front of me and opened the door of the reception-room,
+ which was furnished in a truly royal style. In the middle of the
+ room was a couch covered in velvet and silk. Wagner himself was
+ wrapped in a long velvet mantle bordered with fur.
+
+ "When I was inside the room he asked me what I wanted."
+
+Here Hugo Wolf, to excite the curiosity of his parents, broke off his
+story and put "To be continued in my next." In his next letter he
+continues:
+
+ "I said to him: 'Highly honoured master, for a long time I have
+ wanted to hear an opinion on my compositions, and it would be....'
+
+ "Here the master interrupted me and said: 'My dear child, I cannot
+ give you an opinion of your compositions; I have far too little
+ time; I can't even get my own letters written. I understand nothing
+ at all about music _(Ich verstehe gar nichts von der Musik_).'
+
+ "I asked the master whether I should ever be able really to do
+ anything, and he said to me: 'When I was your age and composing
+ music, no one could tell me then whether I should ever do anything
+ great. You could at most play me your compositions on the piano;
+ but I have no time to hear them. When you are older, and when you
+ have composed bigger works, and if by chance I return to Vienna,
+ you shall show me what you have done. But that is no use now; I
+ cannot give you an opinion of them yet.'
+
+ "When I told the master that I took the classics as models, he
+ said: 'Good, good. One can't be original at first.' And he laughed,
+ and then said, 'I wish you, dear friend, much happiness in your
+ career. Go on working steadily, and if I come back to Vienna, show
+ me your compositions.'
+
+ "Upon that I left the master, profoundly moved and impressed."
+
+Wolf and Wagner did not see each other again. But Wolf fought
+unceasingly on Wagner's behalf. He went several times to Bayreuth,
+though he had no personal intercourse with the Wagner family; but he met
+Liszt, who, with his usual goodness, wrote him a kind letter about a
+composition that he had sent him, and showed him what alterations to
+make in it.
+
+Mottl and the composer, Adalbert de Goldschmidt, were the first friends
+to aid him in his years of misery, by finding him some music pupils. He
+taught music to little children of seven and eight years old; but he was
+a poor teacher, and found giving lessons was a martyrdom. The money he
+earned hardly served to feed him, and he only ate once a day--Heaven
+knows how. To comfort himself he read Hebbel's Life; and for a time he
+thought of going to America. In 1881 Goldschmidt got him the post of
+second _Kapellmeister_ at the Salzburg theatre. It was his business to
+rehearse the choruses for the operettas of Strauss and Millöcker. He did
+his work conscientiously, but in deadly weariness; and he lacked the
+necessary power of making his authority felt. He did not stay long in
+this post, and came back to Vienna.
+
+Since 1875 he had been writing music: _Lieder_, sonatas, symphonies,
+quartets, etc., and already his _Lieder_ held the most important place.
+He also composed in 1883 a symphonic poem on the _Penthesilea_ of his
+friend Kleist.
+
+In 1884 he succeeded in getting a post as musical critic. But on what a
+paper! It was the _Salonblatt_--a mundane journal filled with articles
+on sport and fashion news. One would have said that this little
+barbarian was put there for a wager. His articles from 1884 to 1887 are
+full of life and humour. He upholds the great classic masters in them:
+Gluck, Mozart, Beethoven, and--Wagner; he defends Berlioz; he scourges
+the modern Italians, whose success at Vienna was simply scandalous; he
+breaks lances for Bruckner, and begins a bold campaign against Brahms.
+It was not that he disliked or had any prejudice against Brahms; he took
+a delight in some of his works, especially his chamber music, but he
+found fault with his symphonies and was shocked by the carelessness of
+the declamation in his _Lieder_ and, in general, could not bear his want
+of originality and power, and found him lacking in joy and fulness of
+life. Above all, he struck at him as being the head of a party that was
+spitefully opposed to Wagner and Bruckner and all innovators. For all
+that was retrograde in music in Vienna, and all that was the enemy of
+liberty and progress in art and criticism, was giving Brahms its
+detestable support by gathering itself about him and spreading his fame
+abroad; and though Brahms was really far above his party as an artist
+and a man, he had not the courage to break away from it.
+
+Brahms read Wolf's articles, but his attacks did not seem to stir his
+apathy. The "Brahmines," however, never forgave Wolf. One of his
+bitterest enemies was Hans von Bülow, who found anti-Brahmism "the
+blasphemy against the Holy Ghost--which shall not be forgiven."[185]
+Some years later, when Wolf succeeded in getting his own compositions
+played, he had to submit to criticisms like that of Max Kalbeck, one of
+the leaders of "Brahmism" at Vienna:
+
+ "Herr Wolf has lately, as a reporter, raised an irresistible laugh
+ in musical circles. So someone suggested he had better devote
+ himself to composition. The last products of his muse show that
+ this well-meant advice was bad. He ought to go back to reporting."
+
+[Footnote 185: Letter of H. von Bülow to Detlev von Liliencron.]
+
+An orchestral society in Vienna gave Wolf's _Penthesilea_ a trial
+reading; and it was rehearsed, in disregard of all good taste, amid
+shouts of laughter. When it was finished, the conductor said:
+"Gentlemen, I ask your pardon for having allowed this piece to be played
+to the end; but I wanted to know what manner of man it is that dares to
+write such things about the master, Brahms."
+
+Wolf got a little respite from his miseries by going to stay a few weeks
+in his own country with his brother-in-law, Strasser, an inspector of
+taxes.[186] He took with him his books, his poets, and began to set them
+to music.
+
+[Footnote 186: Wolf's letters to Strasser are of great value in giving
+us an insight into his artist's eager and unhappy soul.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He was now twenty-seven years old, and had as yet published nothing. The
+years of 1887 and 1888 were the most critical ones of his life. In 1887
+he lost his father whom he loved so much, and that loss, like so many of
+his other misfortunes, gave fresh impulse to his energies. The same
+year, a generous friend called Eckstein published his first collection
+of _Lieder_. Wolf up to that time had been smothered, but this
+publication stirred the life in him, and was the means of unloosing his
+genius. Settled at Perchtoldsdorf, near Vienna, in February, 1888, in
+absolute peace, he wrote in three months fifty-three _Lieder_ to the
+words of Eduard Mörike, the pastor-poet of Swabia, who died in 1875, and
+who, misunderstood and laughed at during his lifetime, is now covered
+with honour, and universally popular in Germany. Wolf composed his
+songs in a state of exalted joy and almost fright at the sudden
+discovery of his creative power.
+
+In a letter to Dr. Heinrich Werner, he says:
+
+ "It is now seven o'clock in the evening, and I am so happy--oh,
+ happier than the happiest of kings. Another new _Lied_! If you
+ could hear what is going on in my heart!... the devil would carry
+ you away with pleasure!...
+
+ "Another two new _Lieder_! There is one that sounds so horribly
+ strange that it frightens me. There is nothing like it in
+ existence. Heaven help the unfortunate people who will one day hear
+ it!...
+
+ "If you could only hear the last _Lied_ I have just composed you
+ would only have one desire left--to die.... Your happy, happy
+ Wolf."
+
+He had hardly finished the _Mörike-Lieder_ when he began a series of
+_Lieder_ on poems of Goethe. In three months (December, 1888, to
+February, 1889) he had written all the _Goethe-Liederbuch_--fifty-one
+_Lieder_, some of which are, like _Prometheus_, big dramatic scenes.
+
+The same year, while still at Perchtoldsdorf, after having published a
+volume of Eichendorff _Lieder_, he became absorbed in a new cycle--the
+_Spanisches-Liederbuch_, on Spanish poems translated by Heyse. He wrote
+these forty-four songs in the same ecstasy of gladness:
+
+ "What I write now, I write for the future.... Since Schubert and
+ Schumann there has been nothing like it!"
+
+In 1890, two months after he had finished the _Spanisches-Liederbuch_,
+he composed another cycle of _Lieder_ on poems called _Alten Weisen_, by
+the great Swiss writer Gottfried Keller. And lastly, in the same year,
+he began his _Italienisches-Liederbuch_, on Italian poems, translated by
+Geibel and Heyse.
+
+And then--then there was silence.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The history of Wolf is one of the most extraordinary in the history of
+art, and gives one a better glimpse of the mysteries of genius than most
+histories do.
+
+Let us make a little _résumé_. Wolf at twenty-eight years old had
+written practically nothing. From 1888 to 1890 he wrote, one after
+another, in a kind of fever, fifty-three Mörike _Lieder_, fifty-one
+Goethe _Lieder_, forty-four Spanish _Lieder_, seventeen Eichendorff
+_Lieder_, a dozen Keller _Lieder_, and the first Italian _Lieder_--that
+is about two hundred _Lieder_, each one having its own admirable
+individuality.
+
+And then the music stops. The spring has dried up. Wolf in great anguish
+wrote despairing letters to his friends. To Oskar Grohe, on 2 May, 1891,
+he wrote:
+
+ "I have given up all idea of composing. Heaven knows how things
+ will finish. Pray for my poor soul."
+
+And to Wette, on 13 August, 1891, he says:
+
+ "For the last four months I have been suffering from a sort of
+ mental consumption, which makes me very seriously think of quitting
+ this world for ever.... Only those who truly live should live at
+ all. I have been for some time like one who is dead. I only wish it
+ were an apparent death; but I am really dead and buried; though the
+ power to control my body gives me a seeming life. It is my inmost,
+ my only desire, that the flesh may quickly follow the spirit that
+ has already passed. For the last fifteen days I have been living at
+ Traunkirchen, the pearl of Traunsee.... All the comforts that a man
+ could wish for are here to make my life happy--peace, solitude,
+ beautiful scenery, invigorating air, and everything that could suit
+ the tastes of a hermit like myself.[187] And yet--and yet, my
+ friend, I am the most miserable creature on earth. Everything
+ around me breathes peace and happiness, everything throbs with life
+ and fulfils its functions.... I alone, oh God!... I alone live like
+ a beast that is deaf and senseless. Even reading hardly serves to
+ distract me now, though I bury myself in books in my despair. As
+ for composition, that is finished; I can no longer bring to mind
+ the meaning of a harmony or a melody, and I almost begin to doubt
+ if the compositions that bear my name are really mine. Good God!
+ what is the use of all this fame? What is the good of these great
+ aims if misery is all that lies at the end of it?...
+
+ "_Heaven gives a man complete genius or no genius at all. Hell has
+ given me everything by halves_.
+
+ "O unhappy man, how true, how true it is! In the flower of your
+ life you went to hell; into the evil jaws of destiny you threw the
+ delusive present and yourself with it. O Kleist!"
+
+[Footnote 187: Wolf was living there with a friend. He had not a lodging
+of his own until 1896, and that was due to the generosity of his
+friends.]
+
+Suddenly, at Döbling, on 29 November, 1891, the stream of Wolf's genius
+flowed again, and he wrote fifteen Italian _Lieder_, sometimes several
+in one day. In December it stopped again; and this time for five years.
+These Italian melodies show, however, no trace of any effort, nor a
+greater tension of mind than is shown in his preceding works. On the
+contrary, they have the air of being the simplest and most natural work
+that Wolf ever did. But the matter is of no real consequence, for when
+Wolf's genius was not stirring within him he was useless. He wished to
+write thirty-three Italian _Lieder_, but he had to stop after the
+twenty-second, and in 1891 he published one volume only of the
+_Italienisches-Liederbuch_. The second volume was completed in a month,
+five years later, in 1896.
+
+One may imagine the tortures that this solitary man suffered. His only
+happiness was in creation, and he saw his life cease, without any
+apparent cause, for years together, and his genius come and go, and
+return for an instant, and then go again. Each time he must have
+anxiously wondered if it had gone for ever, or how long it would be
+before it came back again. In letters to Kaufmann on 6 August, 1891, and
+26 April, 1893, he says:
+
+ "You ask me for news of my opera.[188] Good Heavens! I should be
+ content if I could write the tiniest little _Liedchen_. And an
+ opera, now?... I firmly believe that it is all over with me.... I
+ could as well speak Chinese as compose anything. It is horrible....
+ What I suffer from this inaction I cannot tell you. I should like
+ to hang myself."
+
+To Hugo Faisst he wrote on 21 June, 1894:
+
+ "You ask me the cause of my great depression of spirit, and would
+ pour balm on my wounds. Ah yes, if you only could! But no herb
+ grows that could cure my sickness; only a god could help me. If you
+ can give me back my inspirations, and wake up the familiar spirit
+ that is asleep in me, and let him possess me anew, I will call you
+ a god and raise altars to your name. My cry is to gods and not to
+ men; the gods alone are fit to pronounce my fate. But however it
+ may end, even if the worst comes, I will bear it--yes, even if no
+ ray of sunshine lightens my life again.... And with that we will,
+ once for all, turn the page and have done with this dark chapter of
+ my life."
+
+[Footnote 188: The writing of an opera was Wolf's great dream and
+intention for many years.]
+
+This letter--and it is not the only one--recalls the melancholy stoicism
+of Beethoven's letters, and shows us sorrows that even the unhappy
+Beethoven did not know. And yet how can we tell? Perhaps Beethoven, too,
+suffered similar anguish in the sad days that followed 1815, before the
+last sonatas, the _Missa Solemnis_, and the Ninth Symphony had awaked to
+life in him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In March, 1895, Wolf lived once more, and in three months had written
+the piano score of _Corregidor_. For many years he had been attracted
+towards the stage, and especially towards light opera. Enthusiast though
+he was for Wagner's work, he had declared openly that it was time for
+musicians to free themselves from the Wagnerian _Musik-Drama_. He knew
+his own gifts, and did not aspire to take Wagner's place. When one of
+his friends offered him a subject for an opera, taken from a legend
+about Buddha, he declined it, saying that the world did not yet
+understand the meaning of Buddha's doctrines, and that he had no wish to
+give humanity a fresh headache. In a letter to Grohe, on 28 June, 1890,
+he says:
+
+ "Wagner has, by and through his art, accomplished such a mighty
+ work of liberation that we may rejoice to think that it is quite
+ useless for us to storm the skies, since he has conquered them for
+ us. It is much wiser to seek out a pleasant nook in this lovely
+ heaven. I want to find a little place there for myself, not in a
+ desert with water and locusts and wild honey, but in a merry
+ company of primitive beings, among the tinkling of guitars, the
+ sighs of love, the moonlight, and such-like--in short, in a quite
+ ordinary _opéra-comique_, without any rescuing spectre of
+ Schopenhauerian philosophy in the background."
+
+After having sought the libretto of an opera from the whole world, from
+poets ancient and modern,[189] and after having tried to write one
+himself, he finally took that of Madame Rosa Mayreder, an adaptation of
+a Spanish novelette of Don Pedro de Alarcón. This was _Corregidor_,
+which, after having been refused by other theatres, was played in June,
+1896, at Mannheim. The work was not a success in spite of its musical
+qualities, and the poorness of the libretto helped on its failure.
+
+[Footnote 189: Detlev von Liliencron offered him an American subject.
+"But in spite of my admiration for Buffalo Bill and his unwashed crew,"
+said Wolf sarcastically, "I prefer my native soil and people who
+appreciate the advantages of soap."]
+
+But the main thing was that Wolf's creative genius had returned. In
+April, 1896, he wrote straight away the twenty-two songs of the second
+volume of the _Italienisches-Liederbuch_. At Christmas his friend Müller
+sent him some of Michelangelo's poems, translated into German by Walter
+Robert-Tornow; and Wolf, deeply moved by their beauty, decided at once
+to devote a whole volume of _Lieder_ to them. In 1897 he composed the
+first three melodies. At the same time he was also working at a new
+opera, _Manuel Venegas_, a poem by Moritz Hoernes, written after the
+style of Alarcón. He seemed full of strength and happiness and
+confidence in his renewed health. Müller was speaking to him of the
+premature death of Schubert, and Wolf replied, "A man is not taken away
+before he has said all he has to say."
+
+He worked furiously, "like a steam-engine," as he said, and was so
+absorbed in the composition of _Manuel Venegas_ (September, 1897) that
+he went without rest, and had hardly time to take necessary food. In a
+fortnight he had written fifty pages of the pianoforte score, as well as
+the _motifs_ for the whole work, and the music of half the first act.
+
+Then madness came. On 20 September he was seized while he was working at
+the great recitative of Manuel Venegas in the first act.
+
+He was taken to Dr. Svetlin's private hospital in Vienna, and remained
+there until January, 1898. Happily he had devoted friends who took care
+of him and made up for the indifference of the public; for what he had
+earned himself would not have enabled him even to die in peace. When
+Schott, the publisher, sent him in October, 1895, his royalties for the
+editions of his _Lieder_ of Mörike, Goethe, Eichendorff, Keller, Spanish
+poetry, and the first volume of Italian poetry, their total for five
+years came to eighty-six marks and thirty-five pfennigs! And Schott
+calmly added that he had not expected so good a result. So it was Wolf's
+friends, and especially Hugo Faisst, who not only saved him from misery
+by their unobtrusive and often secret generosity, but spared him the
+horror of destitution in his last misfortunes.
+
+He recovered his reason, and was sent in February, 1898, for a voyage to
+Trieste and Venetia to complete his cure and prevent him from thinking
+of work. The precaution was unnecessary; for he says in a letter to Hugo
+Faisst, written in the same month:
+
+ "There is no need for you to trouble yourself or fear that I shall
+ overdo things. A real distaste for work has taken possession of me,
+ and I believe I shall never write another note. My unfinished opera
+ has no more interest for me, and music altogether is hateful. You
+ see what my kind friends have done for me! I cannot think how I
+ shall be able to exist in this state.... Ah, happy Swabians! one
+ may well envy you. Greet your beautiful country for me, and be
+ warmly greeted yourself by your unhappy and worn-out friend, Hugo
+ Wolf."
+
+When he returned to Vienna, however, he seemed to be a little better,
+and had apparently regained his health and cheerfulness. But to his own
+astonishment he had become, as he says in a letter to Faisst, a quiet,
+sedate, and silent man, who wished more and more to be alone. He did not
+compose anything fresh, but revised his Michelangelo _Lieder_, and had
+them published. He made plans for the winter, and rejoiced in the
+thought of passing it in the country near Gmunden, "in perfect quiet,
+undisturbed, and living only for art." In his last letter to Faisst, 17
+September, 1898, he says:
+
+ "I am quite well again now, and have no more need of any cures. You
+ would need them more than I."
+
+Then came a fresh seizure of madness, and this time all was finished.
+
+In the autumn of 1898 Wolf was taken to an asylum at Vienna. At first he
+was able to receive a few visits and to enjoy a little music by playing
+duets with the director of the establishment, who was himself a musician
+and a great admirer of Wolf's works. He was even able in the spring to
+take a few walks out of doors with his friends and an attendant. But he
+was beginning not to recognise things or people or even himself. "Yes,"
+he would say, sighing, "if only I were Hugo Wolf!" From the middle of
+1899 his malady grew rapidly worse, and general paralysis followed. At
+the beginning of 1900 his speech was affected, and, finally, in August,
+1901, all his body. At the beginning of 1902 all hope was given up by
+the doctors; but his heart was still sound, and the unhappy man dragged
+out his life for another year. He died on 16 February, 1903, of
+peripneumonia.
+
+He was given a magnificent funeral, which was attended by all the people
+who had done nothing for him while he was alive. The Austrian State, the
+town of Vienna, his native town Windischgratz, the Conservatoire that
+had expelled him, the _Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde_ who had been so
+long unfriendly to his works, the Opera that had been closed to him, the
+singers that had scorned him, the critics that had scoffed at him--they
+were all there. They sang one of his saddest melodies, _Resignation_, a
+setting of a poem of Eichendorff's, and a chorale by his old friend
+Bruckner, who had died several years before him. His faithful friends,
+Faisst at the head of them, took care to have a monument erected to his
+memory near those of Beethoven and Schubert.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Such was his life, cut short at thirty-seven years of age--for one
+cannot count the five years of complete madness. There are not many
+examples in the art world of so terrible a fate. Nietzsche's misfortune
+is nowhere beside this, for Nietzsche's madness was, to a certain
+extent, productive, and caused his genius to flash out in a way that it
+never would have done if his mind had been balanced and his health
+perfect. Wolf's madness meant prostration. But one may see how, even in
+the space of thirty-seven years, his life was strangely parcelled out.
+For he did not really begin his creative work until he was twenty-seven
+years old; and as from 1890 to 1895 he was condemned to five years'
+silence, the sum total of his real life, his productive life, is only
+four or five years. But in those few years he got more out of life than
+the greater part of artists do in a long career, and in his work he left
+the imprint of a personality that no one could forget after once having
+known it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Wolf's work consists chiefly, as we have already seen, of _Lieder_, and
+these _Lieder_ are characterised by the application to lyrical music of
+principles established by Wagner in the domain of drama. That does not
+mean he imitated Wagner. One finds here and there in Wolf's music
+Wagnerian forms, just as elsewhere there are evident reminiscences of
+Berlioz. It is the inevitable mark of his time, and each great artist in
+his turn contributes his share to the enrichment of the language that
+belongs to us all. But the real Wagnerism of Wolf is not made up of
+these unconscious resemblances; it lies in his determination to make
+poetry the inspiration of music. "To show, above all," he wrote to
+Humperdinck in 1890, "that poetry is the true source of my music."
+
+When a man is both a poet and a musician, like Wagner, it is natural
+that his poetry and music should harmonise perfectly. But when it is a
+matter of translating the soul of other poets into music, special gifts
+of mental subtlety and an abounding sympathy are needed. These gifts
+were possessed by Wolf in a very high degree. No musician has more
+keenly savoured and appreciated the poets. "He was," said one of his
+critics, G. Kühl, "Germany's greatest psychologist in music since
+Mozart." There was nothing laboured about his psychology. Wolf was
+incapable of setting to music poetry that he did not really love. He
+used to have the poetry he wished to translate read over to him several
+times, or in the evening he would read it aloud to himself. If he felt
+very stirred by it he lived apart with it, and thought about it, and
+soaked himself in its atmosphere; then he went to sleep, and the next
+morning he was able to write the _Lied_ straight away. But some poems
+seemed to sleep in him for years, and then would suddenly awake in him
+in a musical form. On these occasions he would cry out with happiness.
+"Do you know?" he wrote to Müller, "I simply shouted with joy." Müller
+said he was like an old hen after it had laid an egg.
+
+Wolf never chose commonplace poems for his music--which is more than can
+be said of Schubert or Schumann. He did not use anything written by
+contemporary poets, although he was in sympathy with some of them, such
+as Liliencron, who hoped very much to be translated into music by him.
+But he could not do it; he could not use anything in the work of a great
+poet unless he became so intimate with it that it seemed to be a part of
+him.
+
+What strikes one also in the _Lieder_ is the importance of the
+pianoforte accompaniment and its independence of the voice. Sometimes
+the voice and the pianoforte express the contrast that so often exists
+between the words and the thought of the poem; at other times they
+express two personalities, as in his setting of Goethe's _Prometheus_,
+where the accompaniment represents Zeus sending out his thunderbolts,
+and the voice interprets Titan; or again, he may depict, as in the
+setting of Eichendorff's _Serenade_, a student in love in the
+accompaniment, while the song is the voice of an old man who is
+listening to it and thinking of his youth. But in whatever he is
+describing, the pianoforte and the voice have always their own
+individuality. You cannot take anything away from his _Lieder_ without
+spoiling the whole; and it is especially so with his instrumental
+passages, which give us the beginning and end of his emotion, and which
+circle round it and sum it up. The musical form, following closely the
+poetic form, is extremely varied. It may sometimes express a fugitive
+thought, a brief record of a poetic impression or some little action, or
+it may be a great epic or dramatic picture. Müller remarks that Wolf put
+more into a poem than the poet himself--as in the
+_Italienisches-Liederbuch_. It is the worst reproach they can make about
+him, and it is not an ordinary one. Wolf excelled especially in setting
+poems which accorded with his own tragic fate, as if he had some
+presentiment of it. No one has better expressed the anguish of a
+troubled and despairing soul, such as we find in the old harp-player in
+_Wilhelm Meister_, or the splendid nihility of certain poems of
+Michelangelo.
+
+Of all his collections of _Lieder_, the 53 _Gedichte von Eduard Mörike,
+komponiert für eine Singstimme und Klavier_ (1888), the first published,
+is the most popular. It gained many friends for Wolf, not so much among
+artists (who are always in the minority) as among those critics who are
+the best and most disinterested of all--the homely, honest people who
+do not make a profession of art, but enjoy it as their spiritual daily
+bread. There are a number of these people in Germany, whose hard lives
+are beautified by their love of music. Wolf found these friends in all
+parts, but he found most of them in Swabia. At Stuttgart, at Mannheim,
+at Darmstadt, and in the country round about these towns he became very
+popular--the only popular musician since Schubert and Schumann. All
+classes of society unite in loving him. "His _Lieder_," says Herr
+Decsey, "are on the pianos of even the poorest houses, by the side of
+Schubert's _Lieder_." Stuttgart became for Wolf, as he said himself, a
+second home. He owes this popularity, which is without parallel in
+Swabia, to the people's passionate love of _Lieder_ and, above all, of
+the poetry of Mörike, the Swabian pastor, who lives again in Wolf's
+songs. Wolf has set to music a quarter of Mörike's poems, he has brought
+Mörike into his own, and given him one of the first places among German
+poets. Such was really his intention, and he said so when he had a
+portrait of Mörike put on the title-page of the songs. Whether the
+reading of his poetry acted as a balm to Wolf's unquiet spirit, or
+whether he became conscious of his genius for the first time when he
+expressed this poetry in music, I do not know; but he felt deep
+gratitude towards it, and wished to show it by beginning the first
+volume with that fine and rather Beethoven-like song, _Der Genesende an
+die Hoffnung_ ("The Convalescent's Ode to Hope").
+
+The fifty-one _Lieder_ of the _Goethe-Liederbuch_ (1888-89) were
+composed in groups of _Lieder_: the _Wilhelm Meister Lieder_, the
+_Divan (Suleika) Lieder_, etc. Wolf even tried to identify himself with
+the poet's line of thought; and in this we often find him in rivalry
+with Schubert. He avoided using the poems in which he thought Schubert
+had exactly conveyed the poet's meaning, as in _Geheimes_ and _An
+Schwager Kronos_; but he told Müller that there were times when Schubert
+did not understand Goethe at all, because he concerned himself with
+translating their general lyrical thought rather than with showing the
+real nature of Goethe's characters. The peculiar interest of Wolf's
+_Lieder_ is that he gives each poetic figure its individual character.
+The Harpist and Mignon are traced with marvellous insight and restraint;
+and in some passages Wolf shows that he has re-discovered Goethe's art
+of presenting a whole world of sadness in a single word. The serenity of
+a great soul soars over the chaos of passions.
+
+The _Spanisches-Liederbuch nach Heyse und Geibel_ (1889-90) had already
+inspired Schumann, Brahms, Cornelius, and others. But none had tried to
+give it its rough and sensual character. Müller shows how Schumann,
+especially, robbed the poems of their true nature. Not only did he
+invest them with his own sentimentalism, but he calmly arranged poems of
+the most marked individual character to be sung by four voices, which
+makes them quite absurd; and, worse than this, he changed the words and
+their sense when they stood in his way. Wolf, on the contrary, steeped
+himself in this melancholy and voluptuous world, and would not let
+anything draw him from it; and out of it he produced, as he himself
+said proudly, some masterpieces. The ten religious songs that come at
+the beginning of the collection suggest the delusions of mysticism, and
+weep tears of blood; they are distressing to the ear and mind alike, for
+they are the passionate expression of a faith that puts itself on the
+rack. By the side of them one finds smiling visions of the Holy Family,
+which recall Murillo. The thirty-four folk-songs are brilliant,
+restless, whimsical, and wonderfully varied in form. Each represents a
+different subject, a personality drawn with incisive strokes, and the
+whole collection overflows with life. It is said that the
+_Spanisches-Liederbuch_ is to Wolf's work what _Tristan_ is to Wagner's
+work.
+
+The _Italienisches-Liederbuch_ (1890-96) is quite different. The
+character of the songs is very restrained, and Wolf's genius here
+approached a classic clearness of form. He was always seeking to
+simplify his musical language, and said that if he wrote anything more,
+he wished it to be like Mozart's writings. These _Lieder_ contain
+nothing that is not absolutely essential to their subject; so the
+melodies are very short, and are dramatic rather than lyrical. Wolf gave
+them an important place in his work: "I consider them," he wrote to
+Kaufmann, "the most original and perfect of my compositions."
+
+As for the _Michelangelo Gedichten_ (1897), they were interrupted by the
+outbreak of his malady, and he had only time to write four, of which he
+suppressed one. Their associations are pathetic when one remembers the
+tragic time at which they were composed; and, by a sort of prophetic
+instinct, they exhale heaviness of spirit and mournful pride. The second
+melody is perhaps more beautiful than anything else Wolf wrote; it is
+truly his death-song:
+
+ _Alles endet, was entstehet.
+ Alles, alles rings vergehet_.[190]
+
+And it is a dead man that sings:
+
+ _Menschen waren wir ja auch,
+ Froh und traurig, so wie Ihr.
+ Und nun sind wir leblos hier,
+ Sind nur Erde, wie Ihr sehet_.[191]
+
+At the moment he was writing this song, in the short respite he had from
+his illness, he himself was nearly a dead man.
+
+[Footnote 190:
+
+ All that is begun must end,
+ All around will sometime perish.
+
+[Footnote 191:
+
+ Once we were also men
+ Happy or sad like you;
+ Now life is taken from us,
+ We are only of earth, as you see.
+
+ _Chiunque nasce a morte arriva
+ Nel fuggir del tempo, e'l sole
+ Niuna cosa lascia viva....
+ Come voi, uomini fummo,
+ Lieti e tristi, come siete;
+ E or siam, come vedete,
+ Terra al sol, di vita priva_.
+
+ (Poems of Michelangelo, CXXXVI.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As soon as Wolf was really dead his genius was recognised all over
+Germany. His sufferings provoked an almost excessive reaction in his
+favour. _Hugo-Wolf-Vereine_ were founded everywhere; and to-day we have
+publications, collections of letters, souvenirs, and biographies in
+abundance. It is a case of who can cry loudest that he always understood
+the genius of the unhappy artist, and work himself into the greatest
+fury against his traducers. A little later, and monuments and statues
+will spring up all over.
+
+I doubt if Wolf with his rough, sincere nature would have found much
+consolation in this tardy homage if he could have foreseen it. He would
+have said to his posthumous admirers: "You are hypocrites. It is not for
+me that you raise those statues; it is for yourselves. It is that you
+may make speeches, form committees, and delude yourselves and others
+that you were my friends. Where were you when I had need of you? You let
+me die. Do not play a comedy round my grave. Look rather around you, and
+see if there are not other Wolfs who are struggling against your
+hostility or your indifference. As for me, I have come safe to port."
+
+
+
+
+DON LORENZO PEROSI
+
+
+The winter that held Italian thought in its cold clasp is over, and
+great trees that seemed to be asleep are putting out new life in the
+sun. Yesterday it was poetry that awaked, and to-day it is music--the
+sweet music of Italy, calm in its passion and sadness, and artless in
+its knowledge. Are we really witnessing the return of its spring? Is it
+the incoming of some great tide of melody, which will wash away the
+gloom and doubt of our life to-day? As I was reading the oratorios of
+this young priest of Piedmont, I thought I heard, far away, the song of
+the children of old Greece: "The swallow has come, has come, bringing
+the gay seasons and glad years. Ear êdê." I welcome the coming of Don
+Lorenzo Perosi with great hope.
+
+[Illustration: greek207]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The abbé Perosi, the precentor of St. Mark's chapel at Venice and the
+director of the Sistine chapel, is twenty-six years old.[192] He is
+short in stature and of youthful appearance, with a head a little too
+big for his body, and open and regular features lighted up by
+intelligent black eyes, his only peculiarity being a projecting
+underlip.
+
+[Footnote 192: This article was written in 1899, on the occasion of
+Lorenzo Perosi's coming to Paris to direct his oratorio _La
+Résurrection_.] He is simple-hearted and modest, and has a friendly
+warmth of affection. When he is conducting the orchestra his striking
+silhouette, his slow and awkward gestures in expressive passages, and
+his naïve movements of passion at dramatic moments, bring to mind one of
+Fra Angelico's monks.
+
+For the last eighteen months Don Perosi has been working at a cycle of
+twelve oratorios descriptive of the life of Christ. In this short time
+he has finished four: _The Passion_, _The Transfiguration_, _The
+Resurrection of Lazarus_, _The Resurrection of Christ_. Now he is at
+work on the fifth--_The Nativity_.
+
+These compositions alone place him in the front rank of contemporary
+musicians. They abound in faults; but their qualities are so rare, and
+his soul shines so clearly through them, and such fine sincerity
+breathes in them, that I have not the courage to dwell on their
+weaknesses. So I shall content myself with remarking, in passing, that
+the orchestration is inadequate and awkward, and that the young musician
+should strive to make it fuller and more delicate; and though he shows
+great ease in composition, he is often too impetuous, and should resist
+this tendency; and that, lastly, there are sometimes traces of bad taste
+in the music and reminiscences of the classics--all of which are the
+sins of youth, which age will certainly cure.
+
+Each of the oratorios is really a descriptive mass, which from beginning
+to end traces out one dominating thought. Don Perosi said to me: "The
+mistake of artists to-day is that they attach themselves too much to
+details and neglect the whole. They begin by carving ornaments, and
+forget that the most important thing is the unity of their work, its
+plan and general outline. The outline must first of all be beautiful."
+
+In his own musical architecture one finds well-marked airs, numerous
+recitatives, Gregorian or Palestrinian choruses, chorales with
+developments and variations in the old style, and intervening symphonies
+of some importance.
+
+The whole work is to be preceded by a grand prelude, very carefully
+worked out, to which Don Perosi attaches particular worth. He wishes, he
+says, that his building shall have a beautiful door elaborately carved
+after the fashion of the artists of the Renaissance and Gothic times.
+And so he means to compose the prelude after the rest of the oratorio is
+finished, when he is able to think about it in undisturbed peace. He
+wishes to concentrate a moral atmosphere in it, the very essence of the
+soul and passions of his sacred drama. He also confided to me that of
+all he has yet composed there is nothing he likes better than the
+introductions to _The Transfiguration_ and _The Resurrection of Christ_.
+
+The dramatic tendency of these oratorios is very marked, and it is
+chiefly on that account that they have conquered Italy. In spite of some
+passages which have strayed a little in the direction of opera, or even
+melodrama, the music shows great depth of feeling. The figures of the
+women especially are drawn with delicacy; and in the second part of
+_Lazarus_, Mary's air, "Lord, if Thou hadst been here, my brother had
+not died," recalls something of Gluck's _Orfeo_ in its heart-broken
+sadness. And again, in the same oratorio, when Jesus gives the order to
+raise the stone from the tomb, Martha's speech, "Domine, jam foetet," is
+very expressive of her sadness, fear, and shame, and human horror. I
+should like to quote one more passage, the most moving of all, which is
+found in the _Resurrection of Christ_, when Mary Magdalene is beside the
+tomb of Christ; here, in her speech with the angels, in her touching
+lamentation, and in the words of the Evangelist, "And when she had thus
+said, she turned herself back, and saw Jesus standing, and knew not that
+it was Jesus," we hear a melody filled with tenderness, and seem to see
+Christ's eyes shining as they rest on Mary before she has recognised
+Him.
+
+It is not, however, Perosi's dramatic genius that strikes me in his
+work; it is rather his peculiar mournfulness, which is indescribable,
+his gift of pure poetry, and the richness of his flowing melody. However
+deep the religious feeling in the music may be, the music itself is
+often stronger still, and breaks in upon the drama that it may express
+itself freely. Take, for instance, the fine symphonic passage that
+follows the arrival of Jesus and His friends at Martha and Mary's house,
+after the death of their brother (p. 12 _et seq._ of _Lazarus_). It is
+true the orchestra expresses regrets and sighs, the excesses of sorrow
+mingled with words of consolation and faith, in a sort of languishing
+funeral march that is feminine and Christian in character. This,
+according to the composer, is a picture he has painted of the persons in
+the drama before he makes them speak. But, in spite of himself, the
+result is a flood of pure music, and his soul sings its own song of joy
+and sadness. Sometimes his spirit, in its naïve and delicate charm,
+recalls that of Mozart; but his musical visions are always dominated and
+directed by a religious strength like that of Bach. Even the portions
+where the dramatic feeling is strongest are really little symphonies,
+such as the music that describes the miracle in _The Transfiguration_,
+and the illness of Lazarus. In the latter great depth of suffering is
+expressed; indeed, sadness could not have been carried farther even by
+Bach, and the same serenity of mind runs through its despair.
+
+But what joy there is when these deeds of faith have been
+performed--when Jesus has cured the possessed man, or when Lazarus has
+opened his eyes to the light. The heart of the multitude overflows
+perhaps in rather childish thanksgiving; and at first it seemed to me
+expressed in a commonplace way. But did not the joy of all great artists
+so express itself?--the joy of Beethoven, Mozart, and Bach, who, when
+once they had thrown their cares aside, knew how to amuse themselves
+like the rest of the populace. And the simple phrase at the beginning
+soon assumes fuller proportions, the harmonies gain in richness, a
+glowing ardour fills the music, and a chorale blends with the dances in
+triumphant majesty.
+
+All these works are radiant with a happy ease of expression. _The
+Passion_ was finished in September, 1897, _The Transfiguration_ in
+February, 1898. _Lazarus_ in June, 1898, and _The Resurrection of
+Christ_ in November, 1898. Such an output of work takes us back to
+eighteenth-century musicians.
+
+But this is not the only resemblance between the young musician and his
+predecessors. Much of their soul has passed into his. His style is made
+up of all styles, and ranges from the Gregorian chant to the most modern
+modulations. All available materials are used in this work. This is an
+Italian characteristic. Gabriel d'Annunzio threw into his melting-pot
+the Renaissance, the Italian painters, music, the writers of the North,
+Tolstoy, Dostoïevsky, Maeterlinck, and our French writers, and out of it
+he drew his wonderful poems. So Don Perosi, in his compositions, welds
+together the Gregorian chant, the musical style of the contrapuntists of
+the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, Palestrina, Roland, Gabrieli,
+Carissimi, Schütz, Bach, Händel, Gounod, Wagner--I was going to say
+César Franck, but Don Perosi told me that he hardly knew this composer
+at all, though his style bears some resemblance to Franck's.
+
+Time does not exist for Don Perosi. When he courteously wished to praise
+French musicians, the first name he chose--as if it were that of a
+contemporary--was that of Josquin, and then that of Roland de Lassus,
+who seems to him so great and profound a musician that he admires him
+most of all. And Don Perosi's universality of style is a trait that is
+Catholic as well as Italian. He expresses his mind quite clearly on the
+subject. "Great artists formerly," he says, "were more eclectic than
+ourselves, and less fettered by their nationalities. Josquin's school
+has peopled all Europe. Roland has lived in Flanders, in Italy, and in
+Germany. With them the same style expressed the same thought everywhere.
+We must do as they did. We must try to recreate a universal art in which
+the resources of all countries and all times are blended."
+
+As a matter of fact, I do not think this is quite correct. I rather
+doubt if Josquin and Roland were eclectic at all; for they did not
+really combine the styles of different countries, but thrust upon other
+countries the style that the Franco-Flemish school had just created, a
+style which they themselves were enriching daily. But Don Perosi's idea
+deserves our appreciation, and one must praise his endeavour to create a
+universal style. It would be a good thing for music if eclecticism, thus
+understood, could bring back some of the equilibrium that has been lost
+since Wagner's death; it would be a benefit to the human spirit, which
+might then find in the unity of art a powerful means of bringing about
+the unity of mind. Our aim should be to efface the differences of race
+in art, so that it may become a tongue common to all peoples, where the
+most opposite ideas may be reconciled. We should all join in working to
+build the cathedral of European art. And the place of the director of
+the Sistine chapel among the first builders is very plain.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Don Perosi sat down to the piano and played me the _Te Deum_ of _The
+Nativity_, which he had written the day before. He played very sweetly,
+with youthful gaiety, and sang the choral parts in an undertone. Every
+now and then he would look at me, not for praise, but to see if we were
+sharing the same thoughts. He would look me well in the face with his
+quiet eyes, then turn back to his score, and then look at me again. And
+I felt a comforting calm radiating from him and his music, from its
+happy harmony and the full and rhythmic serenity of its spirit. And how
+pleasant it was after the tempests and convulsions of art in these later
+days. Can we not tear ourselves away from that romantic suffering in
+music which was begun by Beethoven? After a century of battles, of
+revolutions, and of political and social strife, whose pain has found
+its reflection in art, let us begin to build a new city of art, where
+men may gather together in brotherly love for the same ideal. However
+Utopian that hope may sound now, let us think of it as a symptom of new
+directions of thought, and let us hope that Don Perosi may be one of
+those who will bring into music that divine peace, that peace which
+Beethoven craved for in despair at the end of his _Missa Solemnis_, that
+joy that he sang about but never knew.
+
+
+
+
+FRENCH AND GERMAN MUSIC
+
+
+In May, 1905, the first musical festival of Alsace-Lorraine took place
+at Strasburg. It was an important artistic event, and meant the bringing
+together of two civilisations that for centuries had been at variance on
+the soil of Alsace, more anxious for dispute than for mutual
+understanding.
+
+The official programme of the _fêtes musicales_ laid stress on the
+reconciliatory purpose of its organisers, and I quote these words from
+the programme book, drawn up by Dr. Max Bendiner, of Strasburg:
+
+ "Music may achieve the highest of all missions: she may be a bond
+ between nations, races, and states, who are strangers to one
+ another in many ways; she may unite what is disunited, and bring
+ peace to what is hostile.... No country is more suited for her
+ friendly aid than Alsace-Lorraine, that old meeting-place of
+ people, where from time immemorial the North and South have
+ exchanged their material and their spiritual wealth; and no place
+ is readier to welcome her than Strasburg, an old town built by the
+ Romans, which has remained to this day a centre of spiritual life.
+ All great intellectual currents have left their mark on the people
+ of Alsace-Lorraine; and so they have been destined to play the part
+ of mediator between different times and different peoples; and the
+ East and the West, the past and the present, meet here and join
+ hands. In such festivals as this, it is not a matter of gaining
+ aesthetic victories; it is a matter of bringing together all that
+ is great and noble and eternal in the art of different times and
+ different nations."
+
+It was a splendid ambition for Alsace--the eternal field of battle--to
+wish to inaugurate these European Olympian games. But in spite of good
+intentions, this meeting of nations resulted in a fight, on musical
+ground, between two civilisations and two arts--French art and German
+art. For these two arts represent to-day all that is truly alive in
+European music.
+
+Such jousts are very stirring, and may be of great service to all
+combatants. But, unhappily, France was very indifferent in the matter.
+It was the duty of our musicians and critics to attend an international
+encounter like this, and to see that the conditions of the combat were
+fair. By that I mean our art should be represented as it ought to be, so
+that we may learn something from the result. But the French public does
+nothing at such a time; it remains absorbed in its concerts at Paris,
+where everyone knows everyone else so well that they are not able and do
+not dare to criticise freely. And so our art is withering away in an
+atmosphere of coteries, instead of seeking the open air and enjoying a
+vigorous fight with foreign art. For the majority of our critics would
+rather deny the existence of foreign art than try to understand it.
+Never have I regretted their indifference more than I did at the
+Strasburg festival, where, in spite of the unfavourable conditions in
+which French art was represented through our own carelessness, I
+realised what its force might have been if we had been interested
+spectators in the fight.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Perfect eclecticism had been exercised in the making up of the
+programme. One found mixed together the names of Mozart, Wagner, and
+Brahms; César Franck and Gustave Charpentier; Richard Strauss and
+Mahler. There were French singers like Cazeneuve and Daraux, and French
+and Italian virtuosi like Henri Marteau and Ferruccio Busoni, together
+with German, Austrian, and Scandinavian artists. The orchestra (the
+_Strassbürger Städtische Orchester_) and the choir, which was formed of
+different _Chorvereine_ of Strasburg, were conducted by Richard Strauss,
+Gustav Mahler, and Camille Chevillard. But the names of these famous
+_Kapellmeister_ must not let us forget the man who was really the soul
+of the concerts--Professor Ernst Münch, of Strasburg, an Alsatian, who
+conducted all the rehearsals, and who effaced himself at the last
+moment, and left all the honours to the conductors of foreign
+orchestras. Professor Münch, who is also organist at Saint-Guillaume,
+has done more than anyone else for music in Strasburg, and has trained
+excellent choirs (the "_Choeurs de Saint-Guillaume_") there, and
+organised splendid concerts of Bach's music with the aid of another
+Alsatian, Albert Schweitzer, whose name is well known to musical
+historians. The latter is director of the clerical college of St. Thomas
+(_Thomasstift_), a pastor, an organist, a professor at the University of
+Strasburg, and the author of interesting works on theology and
+philosophy. Besides this he has written a now famous book,
+_Jean-Sebastien Bach_, which is doubly remarkable: first, because it is
+written in French (though it was published in Leipzig by a professor of
+the University of Strasburg), and secondly, because it shows an
+harmonious blend of the French and German spirit, and gives fresh life
+to the study of Bach and the old classic art. It was very interesting to
+me to make the acquaintance of these people, born on Alsatian soil, and
+representing the best Alsatian culture and all that was finest in the
+two civilisations.
+
+The programme for the three days' festival was as follows:
+
+Saturday, May 20th.
+
+ _Oberon Overture_: Weber (conducted by Richard Strauss).
+
+ _Les Béatitudes_: César Franck (conducted by Camille Chevillard).
+
+ _Impressions d'ltalie_: Gustav Charpentier (conducted by Camille
+ Chevillard).
+
+ Three songs by Jean Sibelius, Hugo Wolf, Armas Järnefelt (sung by
+ Mme. Järnefelt).
+
+ The last scene from _Die Meistersinger_: Wagner (conducted by
+ Richard Strauss).
+
+Sunday, May 21st.
+
+ _Cinquième Symphonie_: Gustav Mahler (conducted by Gustav Mahler).
+
+ _Rhapsodie_, for contralto, choir, and orchestra: Johannes Brahms
+ (conducted by Ernst Münch).
+
+ _Strasburg Concerto in G major_, for violin (played by Henri
+ Marteau; conducted by Richard Strauss).
+
+ _Sinfonia domestica_: Richard Strauss (conducted by Richard
+ Strauss).
+
+Monday, May 22nd.
+
+ _Coriolan Overture_: Beethoven (conducted by Gustav Mahler).
+
+ _Concerto in G major_, for piano: Beethoven (played by Ferruccio
+ Busoni).
+
+ _Lieder: An die enfernie Geliebte_: Beethoven (sung by Ludwig
+ Hess).
+
+ _Choral Symphony_: Beethoven (conducted by Gustav Mahler).
+
+ * * * * *
+
+M. Chevillard alone represented our French musicians at the festival;
+and they could have made no better choice of a conductor. But Germany
+had delegated her two greatest composers, Strauss and Mahler, to come to
+conduct their newest compositions. And I think it would not have been
+too much to set up one of our own foremost composers to combat the glory
+which these two enjoy in their own country.
+
+M. Chevillard had been asked to conduct, not one of the works of our
+recent masters, like Debussy or Dukas, whose style he renders to
+perfection, but Franck's _Les Béatitudes_, a work whose spirit he does
+not, to my mind, quite understand. The mystic tenderness of Franck
+escapes him, and he brings out only what is dramatic. And so that
+performance of _Les Béatitudes_, though in many respects fine, left an
+imperfect idea of Franck's genius.
+
+But what seemed inconceivable, and what justly annoyed M. Chevillard,
+was that the whole of _Les Béatitudes_ was not given, but only a section
+of them. And on this subject I shall take the liberty of recommending
+that French artists who are guests at similar festivals should not in
+future agree to a programme with their eyes shut, but have their own
+wishes considered, or refuse their help. If French musicians are to be
+given a place in German _Musikfeste_, French people must be allowed to
+choose the works that are to represent them. And, above all, a French
+conductor must not be brought from Paris, and find on his arrival a
+mutilated score and an arbitrary choice of a few fragments that are not
+even whole in themselves. For they played five out of the eight
+_Béatitudes_, and cuts had been made in the third and eighth
+_Béatitudes_. That showed a want of respect for art, for works should be
+given as they are, or not at all.
+
+And it would have been more seemly if in this three-day festival the
+organisers had had the courteousness to devote the first day to French
+music, and had set aside one whole concert for it. But, without doubt,
+they had carefully sandwiched the French works in between German works
+to weaken their effect, and lessen the probable (and actual) enthusiasm
+with which French music would be received in the presence of the
+Statthalter of Alsace-Lorraine by a section of the Alsatian public. In
+addition to this, and by a choice that neither myself nor anyone else in
+Strasburg could believe was dictated by musical reasons, the German work
+chosen to end the evening was the final scene from _Die Meistersinger_,
+with its ringing couplet from Hans Sachs, in which he denounces foreign
+insincerity and foreign frivolity (_Wälschen Dunst mit wälschen Tand_).
+This lack of courtesy--though the words were really nonsense when this
+very concert was given to show that foreign art could not be
+ignored--would not be worth while raking up if it did not further serve
+to show how regrettable is the indifference of French artists who take
+part in these festivals. And this mistake would never have occurred if
+they had taken care to acquaint themselves with the programme beforehand
+and put their veto upon it.
+
+I have mentioned this little incident partly because my views were
+shared by many Alsatians in the audience, who expressed their annoyance
+to me afterwards. But, putting it aside, our French artists ought not to
+have consented to let our music be represented by a mutilated score of
+_Les Béatitudes_ and by Charpentier's _Impressions d'Italie_, for the
+latter, though a brilliantly clever work, is not of the first rank, and
+was too easily crushed by one of Wagner's most stupendous compositions.
+If people wish to institute a joust between French and German art, let
+it be a fair one, I repeat; let Wagner be matched with Berlioz, and
+Strauss with Debussy, and Mahler with Dukas or Magnard.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Such were the conditions of the combat; and they were, whether
+intentionally or not, unfavourable to France. And yet to the eyes of an
+impartial observer the result was full of hope and encouragement for us.
+
+I have never bothered myself in art with questions of nationality. I
+have not even concealed my preference for German music; and I consider,
+even to-day, that Richard Strauss is the foremost musical composer in
+Europe. Having said this, I am freer to speak of the strange impression
+that I had at the Strasburg festival--an impression of the change that
+is coming over music, and the way that French art is silently setting
+about taking the place of German art.
+
+"_Wälschen Dunst und wälschen Tand_...." How that reproachful speech
+seems to be misplaced when one is listening to the honest thought
+expressed in César Franck's music. In _Les Béatitudes_, nothing, or next
+to nothing, was done for art's sake. It is the soul speaking to the
+soul. As Beethoven wrote, at the end of his mass in D, "_Vom Herzen ...
+zu Herzen_!" ("It comes from the heart to go to the heart"). I know no
+one but Franck in the last century, unless it is Beethoven, who has
+possessed in so high a degree the virtue of being himself and speaking
+only the truth without thought of his public. Never before has
+religious faith been expressed with such sincerity. Franck is the only
+musician besides Bach who has really _seen_ the Christ, and who can make
+other people see him too. I would even venture to say that his Christ is
+simpler than Bach's; for Bach's thoughts are often led away by the
+interest of developing his subject, by certain habits of composition,
+and by repetitions and clever devices, which weaken his strength. In
+Franck's music we get Christ's speech itself, unadorned and in all its
+living force. And in the wonderful harmony between the music and the
+sacred words we hear the voice of the world's conscience. I once heard
+someone say to Mme. Cosima Wagner that certain passages in _Parsifal_,
+particularly the chorus "_Durch Mitleid wissend_," had a quality that
+was truly religious and the force of a revelation. But I find a greater
+force and a more truly Christian spirit in _Les Béatitudes_.
+
+And here is an astonishing thing. At this German musical festival it was
+a Frenchman who represented not only serious music moulded in a
+classical form, but a religious spirit and the spirit of the Gospels.
+The characters of two nations have been reversed. The Germans have so
+changed that they are only able to appreciate this seriousness and
+religious faith with difficulty. I watched the audience on this
+occasion; they listened politely, a little astonished and bored, as if
+to say, "What business has this Frenchman with depth and piety of
+soul?"
+
+"There is no doubt," said Henri Lichtenberger, who sat by me at the
+concert, "our music is beginning to bore the Germans."
+
+It was only the other day that German music enjoyed the privilege of
+boring us in France.
+
+And so, to make up for the austere grandeur of _Les Béatitudes_ they had
+it immediately followed by Gustave Charpentier's _Impressions d'Italie_.
+You should have seen the relief of the audience. At last they were to
+have some French music--as Germans understand it. Charpentier is, of all
+living French musicians, the most liked in Germany; he is indeed the
+only one who is popular with artists and the general public alike. Shall
+I say that the sincere pleasure they take in his orchestration and the
+gay life of his subjects is enhanced a little by a slight disdain for
+French frivolity--_wälschen Tand_?
+
+"Now listen to that," said Richard Strauss to me during the third
+movement of _Impressions d'Italie_; "that is the true music of
+Montmartre, the utterance of fine words ... Liberty!... Love!... which
+no one believes."
+
+And on the whole he found the music quite charming, and, without doubt,
+in the depths of his heart approved of this Frenchman according to
+conventional notions that are current in Germany alone. Strauss is
+really very fond of Charpentier, and was his patron in Berlin; and I
+remember how he showed childish delight in _Louise_ when it was first
+performed in Paris.
+
+But Strauss, and most other Germans, are quite on the wrong track when
+they try to persuade themselves that this amusing French frivolity is
+still the exclusive property of France. They really love it because it
+has become German; and they are quite unconscious of the fact. The
+German artists of other times did not find much pleasure in frivolity;
+but I could have easily shown Strauss his liking for it by taking
+examples from his own works. The Germans of to-day have but little in
+common with the Germans of yesterday.
+
+I am not speaking of the general public only, The German public of
+to-day are devotees of Brahms and Wagner, and everything of theirs seems
+good to them; they have no discrimination, and, while they applaud
+Wagner and encore Brahms, they are, in their hearts, not only frivolous,
+but sentimental and gross. The most striking thing about this public is
+their cult of power since Wagner's death. When listening to the end of
+_Die Meistersinger_ I felt how the haughty music of the great march
+reflected the spirit of this military nation of shop-keepers, bursting
+with rude health and complacent pride.
+
+The most remarkable thing of all is that German artists are gradually
+losing the power of understanding their own splendid classics and, in
+particular, Beethoven. Strauss, who is very shrewd and knows exactly his
+own limitations, does not willingly enter Beethoven's domain, though he
+feels his spirit in a much more living way than any of the other German
+_Kapellmeister_. At the Strasburg festival he contented himself with
+conducting, besides his own symphony, the _Oberon Overture_ and a Mozart
+concerto. These performances were interesting; a personality like his
+is so curious that it is quite amusing to find it coming out in the
+works he conducts. But how Mozart's features took on an offhand and
+impatient air; and how the rhythms were accentuated at the expense of
+the melodic grace. In this case, however, Strauss was dealing with a
+concerto, where a certain liberty of interpretation is allowed. But
+Mahler, who was less discreet, ventured upon conducting the whole of the
+Beethoven concert. And what can be said of that evening? I will not
+speak of the _Concerto for pianoforte, in G major_, which Busoni played
+with a brilliant and superficial execution that took away all breadth
+from the work; it is enough to note that his interpretation was
+enthusiastically received by the public. German artists were not
+responsible for that performance; but they were responsible for that
+fine cycle of _Lieder, An die entfernte Geliebte_, which was bellowed by
+a Berlin tenor at the top of his voice, and for the _Choral Symphony_,
+which was, for me, an unspeakable performance. I could never have
+believed that a German orchestra conducted by the chief _Kapellmeister_
+of Austria could have committed such misdeeds. The time was incredible:
+the scherzo had no life in it; the adagio was taken in hot haste without
+leaving a moment for dreams; and there were pauses in the finale which
+destroyed the development of the theme and broke the thread of its
+thought. The different parts of the orchestra fell over one another, and
+the whole was uncertain and lacking in balance. I once severely
+criticised the neo-classic stiffness of Weingartner; but I should have
+appreciated his healthy equilibrium and his effort to be exact after
+hearing this neurasthenic rendering of Beethoven. No; we can no longer
+hear Beethoven and Mozart in Germany to-day, we can only hear Mahler and
+Strauss. Well, let it be so. We will resign ourselves. The past is past.
+Let us leave Beethoven and Mozart, and speak of Mahler and Strauss.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Gustav Mahler is forty-six years old.[193] He is a kind of legendary
+type of German musician, rather like Schubert, and half-way between a
+school-master and a clergyman. He has a long, clean-shaven face, a
+pointed skull covered with untidy hair, a bald forehead, a prominent
+nose, eyes that blink behind his glasses, a large mouth and thin lips,
+hollow cheeks, a rather tired and sarcastic expression, and a general
+air of asceticism. He is excessively nervous, and silhouette caricatures
+of him, representing him as a cat in convulsions in the conductor's
+desk, are very popular in Germany.
+
+[Footnote 193: This essay was written in 1905.]
+
+
+He was born at Kalischt in Bohemia, and became a pupil of Anton
+Bruckner at Vienna, and afterwards _Hofoperndirecktor_ ("Director of the
+Opera") there. I hope one day to study this artist's work in greater
+detail, for he is second only to Strauss as a composer in Germany, and
+the principal musician of South Germany.
+
+His most important work is a suite of symphonies; and it was the fifth
+symphony of this suite that he conducted at the Strasburg festival. The
+first symphony, called _Titan_, was composed in 1894. The construction
+of the whole is on a massive and gigantic scale; and the melodies on
+which these works are built up are like rough-hewn blocks of not very
+good quality, but imposing by reason of their size, and by the obstinate
+repetition of their rhythmic design, which is maintained as if it were
+an obsession. This heaping-up of music both crude and learned in style,
+with harmonies that are sometimes clumsy and sometimes delicate, is
+worth considering on account of its bulk. The orchestration is heavy and
+noisy; and the brass dominates and roughly gilds the rather sombre
+colouring of the great edifice. The underlying idea of the composition
+is neo-classic, and rather spongy and diffuse. Its harmonic structure is
+composite: we get the style of Bach, Schubert, and Mendelssohn fighting
+that of Wagner and Bruckner; and, by a decided liking for canon form, it
+even recalls some of Franck's work. The whole is like a showy and
+expensive collection of bric-à-brac.
+
+The chief characteristic of these symphonies is, generally speaking, the
+use of choral singing with the orchestra. "When I conceive a great
+musical painting (_ein grosses musikalisches Gemälde_)," says Mahler,
+"there always comes a moment when I feel forced to employ speech (_das
+Wort_) as an aid to the realisation of my musical conception."
+
+Mahler has got some striking effects from this combination of voices and
+instruments, and he did well to seek inspiration in this direction from
+Beethoven and Liszt. It is incredible that the nineteenth century should
+have put this combination to so little use; for I think the gain may be
+poetical as well as musical.
+
+In the _Second Symphony in C minor_, the first three parts are purely
+instrumental; but in the fourth part the voice of a contralto is heard
+singing these sad and simple words:
+
+ "_Der Mensch liegt in grösster Noth!
+ Der Mensch liegt in grösster Pein!
+ Je lieber möcht ich im Himmel sein_!"[194]
+
+The soul strives to reach God with the passionate cry:
+
+ "_Ich bin von Gott und will wieder zu Gott_."[195]
+
+Then there is a symphonic episode (_Der Rufer in der Wüste_), and we
+hear "the voice of one crying in the wilderness" in fierce and anguished
+tones. There is an apocalyptic finale where the choir sing Klopstock's
+beautiful ode on the promise of the Resurrection:
+
+ "_Aufersteh'n, ja, aufersteh'n wirst du, mein Staub, nach
+ kurzer Ruh_!"[196]
+
+The law is proclaimed with:
+
+ "_Was entstanden ist, dass mus vergehen,
+ Was vergangen, auferstehen_!"[197]
+
+[Footnote 194: Man lies in greatest misery; Man lies in greatest pain; I
+would I were in Heaven!]
+
+[Footnote 195: I come from God, and shall to God return.]
+
+[Footnote 196: Thou wilt rise again, thou wilt rise again, O my dust,
+after a little rest.]
+
+[Footnote 197: What is born must pass away; What has passed away must
+rise again.]
+
+And all the orchestra, the choirs, and the organ, join in the hymn of
+Eternal Life.
+
+In the _Third Symphony_, known as _Ein Sommermorgentraum_ ("A Summer
+Morning's Dream"), the first and the last parts are for the orchestra
+alone; the fourth part contains some of the best of Mahler's music, and
+is an admirable setting of Nietzsche's words:
+
+ "_O Mensch! O Mensch! Gib Acht! gib Acht!
+ Was spricht die tiefe Mitternacht_?"[198]
+
+[Footnote 198:
+
+ O Man! O Man! Have care! Have care!
+ What says dark midnight?
+
+The fifth part is a gay and stirring chorus founded on a popular legend.
+
+In the _Fourth Symphony in G major_, the last part alone is sung, and is
+of an almost humorous character, being a sort of childish description of
+the joys of Paradise.
+
+In spite of appearances, Mahler refuses to connect these choral
+symphonies with programme-music. Without doubt he is right, if he means
+that his music has its own value outside any sort of programme; but
+there is no doubt that it is always the expression of a definite
+_Stimmung_, of a conscious mood; and the fact is, whether he likes it or
+not, that _Stimmung_ gives an interest to his music far beyond that of
+the music itself. His personality seems to me far more interesting than
+his art.
+
+
+
+This is often the case with artists in Germany; Hugo Wolf is another
+example of it. Mahler's case is really rather curious. When one studies
+his works one feels convinced that he is one of those rare types in
+modern Germany--an egoist who feels with sincerity. Perhaps his emotions
+and his ideas do not succeed in expressing themselves in a really
+sincere and personal way; for they reach us through a cloud of
+reminiscences and an atmosphere of classicism. I cannot help thinking
+that Mahler's position as director of the Opera, and his consequent
+saturation in the music that his calling condemns him to study, is the
+cause of this. There is nothing more fatal to a creative spirit than too
+much reading, above all when it does not read of its own free will, but
+is forced to absorb an excessive amount of nourishment, the larger part
+of which is indigestible. In vain may Mahler try to defend the sanctuary
+of his mind; it is violated by foreign ideas coming from all parts, and
+instead of being able to drive them away, his conscience, as conductor
+of the orchestra, obliges him to receive them and almost embrace them.
+With his feverish activity, and burdened as he is with heavy tasks, he
+works unceasingly and has no time to dream. Mahler will only be Mahler
+when he is able to leave his administrative work, shut up his scores,
+retire within himself, and wait patiently until he has become himself
+again--if it is not too late.
+
+His _Fifth Symphony_, which he conducted at Strasburg, convinced me,
+more than all his other works, of the urgent necessity of adopting this
+course. In this composition he has not allowed himself the use of the
+choruses, which were one of the chief attractions of his preceding
+symphonies. He wished to prove that he could write pure music, and to
+make his claim surer he refused to have any explanation of his
+composition published in the concert programme, as the other composers
+in the festival had done; he wished it, therefore, to be judged from a
+strictly musical point of view. It was a dangerous ordeal for him.
+
+Though I wished very much to admire the work of a composer whom I held
+in such esteem, I felt it did not come out very well from the test. To
+begin with, this symphony is excessively long--it lasts an hour and a
+half--though there is no apparent justification for its proportions. It
+aims at being colossal, and mainly achieves emptiness. The _motifs_ are
+more than familiar. After a funeral march of commonplace character and
+boisterous movement, where Beethoven seems to be taking lessons from
+Mendelssohn, there comes a scherzo, or rather a Viennese waltz, where
+Chabrier gives old Bach a helping hand. The adagietto has a rather sweet
+sentimentality. The rondo at the end is presented rather like an idea of
+Franck's, and is the best part of the composition; it is carried out in
+a spirit of mad intoxication and a chorale rises up from it with
+crashing joy; but the effect of the whole is lost in repetitions that
+choke it and make it heavy. Through all the work runs a mixture of
+pedantic stiffness and incoherence; it moves along in a desultory way,
+and suffers from abrupt checks in the course of its development and from
+superfluous ideas that break in for no reason at all, with the result
+that the whole hangs fire.
+
+Above all, I fear Mahler has been sadly hypnotised by ideas about
+power--ideas that are getting to the head of all German artists to-day.
+He seems to have an undecided mind, and to combine sadness and irony
+with weakness and impatience, to be a Viennese musician striving after
+Wagnerian grandeur. No one expresses the grace of _Ländler_ and dainty
+waltzes and mournful reveries better than he; and perhaps no one is
+nearer the secret of Schubert's moving and voluptuous melancholy; and it
+is Schubert he recalls at times, both in his good qualities and certain
+of his faults. But he wants to be Beethoven or Wagner. And he is wrong;
+for he lacks their balance and gigantic force. One saw that only too
+well when he was conducting the _Choral Symphony_.
+
+But whatever he may be, or whatever disappointment he may have brought
+me at Strasburg, I will never allow myself to speak lightly or
+scoffingly of him. I am confident that a musician with so lofty an aim
+will one day create a work worthy of himself.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Richard Strauss is a complete contrast to Mahler. He has always the air
+of a heedless and discontented child. Tall and slim, rather elegant and
+supercilious, he seems to be of a more refined race than most other
+German artists of to-day. Scornful, _blasé_ with success, and very
+exacting, his bearing towards other musicians has nothing of Mahler's
+winning modesty. He is not less nervous than Mahler, and while he is
+conducting the orchestra he seems to indulge in a frenzied dance which
+follows the smallest details of his music--music that is as agitated as
+limpid water into which a stone has been flung. But he has a great
+advantage over Mahler; he knows how to rest after his labours. Both
+excitable and sleepy by nature, his highly-strung nerves are
+counterbalanced by his indolence, and there is in the depths of him a
+Bavarian love of luxury. I am quite sure that when his hours of intense
+living are over, after he has spent an excessive amount of energy, he
+has hours when he is only partially alive. One then sees his eyes with a
+vague and sleepy look in them; and he is like old Rameau, who used to
+walk about for hours as if he were an automaton, seeing nothing and
+thinking of nothing.
+
+At Strasburg Strauss conducted his _Sinfonia Domestica_, whose programme
+seems boldly to defy reason, and even good taste. In the symphony he
+pictures himself with his wife and his boy (_"Meiner lieben Frau und
+unserm Jungen gewidmet"_). "I do not see," said Strauss, "why I should
+not compose a symphony about myself; I find myself quite as interesting
+as Napoleon or Alexander." Some people have replied that everybody else
+might not share his interest. But I shall not use that argument; it is
+quite possible for an artist of Strauss's worth to keep us entertained.
+What grates upon me more is the way in which he speaks of himself. The
+disproportion between his subject and the means he has of expressing it
+is too strong. Above all, I do not like this display of the inner and
+secret self. There is a want of reticence in this _Sinfonia Domestica_.
+The fireside, the sitting-room, and the bedchamber, are open to
+all-comers. Is this the family feeling of Germany to-day? I admit that
+the first time I heard the work it jarred upon me for purely moral
+reasons, in spite of the liking I have for its composer. But afterwards
+I altered my first opinion, and found the music admirable. Do you know
+the programme?
+
+The first part shows you three people: a man, a woman, and a child. The
+man is represented by three themes: a _motif_ full of spirit and humour,
+a thoughtful _motif_, and a _motif_ expressing eager and enthusiastic
+action. The woman has only two themes: one expressing caprice, and the
+other love and tenderness. The child has a single _motif_, which is
+quiet, innocent, and not very defined in character; its real value is
+not shown until it is developed.... Which of the two parents is he like?
+The family sit round him and discuss him. "He is just like his father"
+(_Ganz der Papa_), say the aunts. "He is the image of his mother" (_Ganz
+die Mama_), say the uncles.
+
+The second part of the symphony is a scherzo which represents the child
+at play; there are terribly noisy games, games of Herculean gaiety, and
+you can hear the parents talking all over the house. How far we seem
+from Schumann's good little children and their simple-hearted families!
+At last the child is put to bed; they rock him to sleep, and the clock
+strikes seven. Night comes. There are dreams and some uneasy sleep. Then
+a love scene.... The clock strikes seven in the morning. Everybody wakes
+up, and there is a merry discussion. We hear a double fugue in which the
+theme of the man and the theme of the woman contradict each other with
+exasperating and ludicrous obstinacy; and the man has the last word.
+Finally there is the apotheosis of the child and family life.
+
+Such a programme serves rather to lead the listener astray than to guide
+him. It spoils the idea of the work by emphasising its anecdotal and
+rather comic side. For without doubt the comic side is there, and
+Strauss has warned us in vain that he did not wish to make an amusing
+picture of married life, but to praise the sacredness of marriage and
+parenthood; but he possesses such a strong vein of humour that it cannot
+help getting the better of him. There is nothing really grave or
+religious about the music, except when he is speaking of the child; and
+then the rough merriment of the man grows gentle, and the irritating
+coquetry of the woman becomes exquisitely tender. Otherwise Strauss's
+satire and love of jesting get the upper hand, and reach an almost epic
+gaiety and strength.
+
+But one must forget this unwise programme, which borders on bad taste
+and at times on something even worse. When one has succeeded in
+forgetting it one discovers a well-proportioned symphony in four
+parts--Allegro, Scherzo, Adagio, and Finale in fugue form--and one of
+the finest works in contemporary music. It has the passionate
+exuberance of Strauss's preceding symphony, _Heldenleben_, but it is
+superior in artistic construction; one may even say that it is Strauss's
+most perfect work since _Tod und Verklärung_ ("Death and
+Transfiguration"), with a richness of colouring and technical skill that
+_Tod und Verklärung_ did not possess. One is dazzled by the beauty of an
+orchestration which is light and pliant, and capable of expressing
+delicate shades of feeling; and this struck me the more after the solid
+massiveness of Mahler's orchestration, which is like heavy unleavened
+bread. With Strauss everything is full of life and sinew, and there is
+nothing wasted. Possibly the first setting-out of his themes has rather
+too schematic a character; and perhaps the melodic utterance is rather
+restricted and not very lofty; but it is very personal, and one finds it
+impossible to disassociate his personality from these vigorous themes
+that burn with youthful ardour, and cut the air like arrows, and twist
+themselves in freakish arabesques. In the adagio depicting night, there
+is, though in very bad taste, much seriousness and reverie and stirring
+emotion. The fugue at the end is of astonishing sprightliness; and is a
+mixture of colossal jesting and heroic pastoral poetry worthy of
+Beethoven, whose style it recalls in the breadth of its development. The
+final apotheosis is filled with life; its joy makes the heart beat. The
+most extravagant harmonic effects and the most abominable discords are
+softened and almost disappear in the wonderful combination of _timbres_.
+It is the work of a strong and sensual artist, the true heir of the
+Wagner of the _Meistersinger_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Upon the whole, these works make one see that, in spite of their
+apparent audacity, Strauss and Mahler are beginning to make a
+surreptitious retreat from their early standpoint, and are abandoning
+the symphony with a programme. Strauss's last work will lose nothing by
+calling itself quite simply _Sinfonia Domestica_, without adding any
+further information. It is a true symphony; and the same may be said of
+Mahler's composition. But Strauss and Mahler are already reforming
+themselves, and are coming back to the model of the classic symphony.
+
+But there are more important conclusions to be drawn from a hearing of
+this kind. The first is that Strauss's talent is becoming more and more
+exceptional in the music of his country. With all his faults, which are
+considerable, Strauss stands alone in his warmth of imagination, in his
+unquenchable spontaneity and perpetual youth. And his knowledge and his
+art are growing every day in the midst of other German art which is
+growing old. German music in general is showing some grave symptoms. I
+will not dwell on its neurasthenia, for it is passing through a crisis
+which will teach it wisdom; but I fear, nevertheless, that this
+excessive nervous excitement will be followed by torpor. What is really
+disquieting is that, in spite of all the talent that still abounds,
+Germany is fast losing her chief musical endowments. Her melodic charm
+has nearly disappeared. One could search the music of Strauss, Mahler,
+or Hugo Wolf, without finding a melody of any real value, or of any true
+originality, outside its application to a text, or a literary idea, and
+its harmonic development. And besides that, German music is daily losing
+its intimate spirit; there are still traces of this spirit in Wolf,
+thanks to his exceptionally unhappy life; but there is very little of it
+in Mahler, in spite of all his efforts to concentrate his mind on
+himself; and there is hardly any at all in Strauss, although he is the
+most interesting of the three composers. German musicians have no longer
+any depth.
+
+I have said that I attribute this fact to the detestable influence of
+the theatre, to which nearly all these artists are attached as
+_Kapellmeister_, or directors of opera. To this they owe the
+melodramatic character of their music, even though it is on the surface
+only--music written for show, and aiming chiefly at effect.
+
+More baneful even than the influence of the theatre is the influence of
+success. These musicians have nowadays too many facilities for having
+their music played. A work is played almost before it is finished, and
+the musician has no time to live with his work in solitude and silence.
+Besides this, the works of the chief German musicians are supported by
+tremendous booming of some kind or another: by their _Musikfeste_, by
+their critics, their press, and their "Musical Guides" (_Musikführer_),
+which are apologetic explanations of their works, scattered abroad in
+millions to set the fashion for the sheep-like public. And with all this
+a musician grows soon contented with himself, and comes to believe any
+favourable opinion about his work. What a difference from Beethoven,
+who, all his life, was hammering out the same subjects, and putting his
+melodies on the anvil twenty times before they reached their final form.
+That is where Mahler is so lacking. His subjects are a rather vulgarised
+edition of some of Beethoven's ideas in their unfinished state. But
+Mahler gets no further than the rough sketch.
+
+And, lastly, I want to speak of the greatest danger of all that menaces
+music in Germany; _there is too much music in Germany_. This is not a
+paradox. There is no worse misfortune for art than a super-abundance of
+it. The music is drowning the musicians. Festival succeeds festival: the
+day after the Strasburg festival there was to be a Bach festival at
+Eisenach; and then, at the end of the week, a Beethoven festival at
+Bonn. Such a plethora of concerts, theatres, choral societies, and
+chamber-music societies, absorbs the whole life of the musician. When
+has he time to be alone to listen to the music that sings within him?
+This senseless flood of music invades the sanctuaries of his soul,
+weakens its power, and destroys its sacred solitude and the treasures of
+its thought.
+
+You must not think that this excess of music existed in the old days in
+Germany. In the time of the great classic masters, Germany had hardly
+any institutions for the giving of regular concerts, and choral
+performances were hardly known. In the Vienna of Mozart and Beethoven
+there was only a single association that gave concerts, and no
+_Chorvereine_ at all, and it was the same with other towns in Germany.
+Does the wonderful spread of musical culture in Germany during the last
+century correspond with its artistic creation? I do not think so; and
+one feels the inequality between the two more every day.
+
+Do you remember Goethe's ballad of _Der Zauberlehrling_ (_L'Apprenti
+Sorcier_) which Dukas so cleverly made into music? There, in the absence
+of his master, an apprentice set working some magic spells, and so
+opened sluice-gates that no one could shut; and the house was flooded.
+
+This is what Germany has done. She has let loose a flood of music, and
+is about to be drowned in it.
+
+
+
+
+CLAUDE DEBUSSY
+
+PELLÉAS ET MÉLISANDE
+
+
+The first performance of _Pelléas et Mélisande_ in Paris, on April 30th,
+1902, was a very notable event in the history of French music; its
+importance can only be compared with that of the first performance of
+Lully's _Cadmus et Hermione_, Rameau's _Hippolyte et Aricie_, and
+Quick's _Iphigénie en Aulide_; and it may be looked upon as one of the
+three or four red-letter days in the calendar of our lyric stage.[199]
+
+[Footnote 199: May I be allowed to say that I am trying to write this
+study from a purely historical point of view, by eliminating all
+personal feeling--which would be of no value here. As a matter of fact,
+I am not a Debussyite; my sympathies are with quite another kind of art.
+But I feel impelled to give homage to a great artist, whose work I am
+able to judge with some impartiality.]
+
+The success of _Pelléas et Mélisande_ is due to many things. Some of
+them are trivial, such as fashion, which has certainly played its part
+here as it has in all other successes, though it is a relatively weak
+part; some of them are more important, and arise from something innate
+in the spirit of French genius; and there are also moral and aesthetic
+reasons for its success, and, in the widest sense, purely musical
+reasons.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In speaking of the moral reasons of the success of _Pelléas et
+Mélisande_, I would like to draw your attention to a form of thought
+which is not confined to France, but which is common nowadays in a
+section of the more distinguished members of European society, and which
+has found expression in _Pelléas et Mélisande_. The atmosphere in which
+Maeterlinck's drama moves makes one feel the melancholy resignation of
+the will to Fate. We are shown that nothing can change the order of
+events; that, despite our proud illusions, we are not master of
+ourselves, but the servant of unknown and irresistible forces, which
+direct the whole tragicomedy of our lives. We are told that no man is
+responsible for what he likes and what he loves--that is if he knows
+what he likes and loves--and that he lives and dies without knowing why.
+
+These fatalistic ideas, reflecting the lassitude of the intellectual
+aristocracy of Europe, have been wonderfully translated into music by
+Debussy; and when you feel the poetic and sensual charm of the music,
+the ideas become fascinating and intoxicating, and their spirit is very
+infectious. For there is in all music an hypnotic power which is able to
+reduce the mind to a state of voluptuous submission.
+
+The cause of the artistic success of _Pelléas et Mélisande_ is of a more
+specially French character, and marks a reaction that is at once
+legitimate, natural, and inevitable; I would even say it is vital--a
+reaction of French genius against foreign art, and especially against
+Wagnerian art and its awkward representatives in France.
+
+Is the Wagnerian drama perfectly adapted to German genius? I do not
+think so; but that is a question which I will leave German musicians to
+decide. For ourselves, we have the right to assert that the form of
+Wagnerian drama is antipathetic to the spirit of French people--to their
+artistic taste, to their ideas about the theatre, and to their musical
+feeling. This form may have forced itself upon us, and, by the right of
+victorious genius, may have strongly influenced the French mind, and may
+do so again; but nothing will ever make it anything but a stranger in
+our land.
+
+It is not necessary to dwell upon the differences of taste. The
+Wagnerian ideal is, before everything else, an ideal of power. Wagner's
+passional and intellectual exaltation and his mystic sensualism are
+poured out like a fiery torrent, which sweeps away and burns all before
+it, taking no heed of barriers. Such an art cannot be bound by ordinary
+rules; it has no need to fear bad taste--and I commend it. But it is
+easy to understand that other ideals exist, and that another art might
+be as expressive by its proprieties and niceties as by its richness and
+force. And this former art--our own--is not so much a reaction against
+Wagnerian art as a reaction against its caricatures in France and the
+consequent abuse of an ill-regulated power.
+
+Genius has a right to be what it will--to trample underfoot, if it
+wishes, taste and morals and the whole of society. But when those who
+are not geniuses wish to do the same thing they only make themselves
+ridiculous and odious. There have been too many monkey Wagners in
+France. During the last ten or twenty years scarcely one French musician
+has escaped Wagner's influence. One understands only too well the revolt
+of the French mind, in the name of naturalness and good taste, against
+exaggerations and extremes of passion, whether sincere or not. _Pelléas
+et Mélisande_ came as a manifestation of this revolt. It is an
+uncompromising reaction against over-emphasis and excess, and against
+anything that oversteps the limits of the imagination. This distaste of
+exaggerated words and sentiments results in what is like a fear of
+showing the feelings at all, even when they are most deeply stirred.
+With Debussy the passions almost whisper; and it is by the imperceptible
+vibrations of the melodic line that the love in the hearts of the
+unhappy couple is shown, by the timid "Oh, why are you going?" at the
+end of the first act, and the quiet "I love you, too," in the last scene
+but one. Think of the wild lamentations of the dying Ysolde, and then of
+the death of Mélisande, without cries and without words.
+
+From a scenic point of view, _Pelléas et Mélisande_ is also quite
+opposed to the Bayreuth ideal. The vast proportions--almost immoderate
+proportions--of the Wagnerian drama, its compact structure and the
+intense concentration of mind which from beginning to end holds these
+enormous works and their ideology together, and which is often displayed
+at the expense of the action and even the emotions, are as far removed
+as they can be from the French love of clear, logical, and temperate
+action. The little pictures of _Pelléas et Mélisande_, small and
+sharply cut, each marking without stress a new stage in the evolution of
+the drama, are built up in quite a different way from those of the
+Wagnerian theatre.
+
+And, as if he wished to accentuate this antagonism, the author of
+_Pelléas et Mélisande_ is now writing a _Tristan_, whose plot is taken
+from an old French poem, the text of which has been recently brought to
+light by M. Bédier. In its calm and lofty strain it is a wonderful
+contrast to Wagner's savage and pedantic, though sublime poem.
+
+But it is especially by the manner in which they conceive the respective
+relationships of poetry and music to opera that the two composers
+differ. With Wagner, music is the kernel of the opera, the glowing
+focus, the centre of attraction; it absorbs everything, and it stands
+absolutely first. But that is not the French conception. The musical
+stage, as we conceive it in France (if not what we actually possess),
+should present such a combination of the arts as go to make an
+harmonious whole. We demand that an equal balance shall be kept between
+poetry and music; and if their equilibrium must be a little upset, we
+should prefer that poetry was not the loser, as its utterance is more
+conscious and rational. That was Gluck's aim; and because he realised it
+so well he gained a reputation among the French public which nothing
+will destroy. Debussy's strength lies in the methods by which he has
+approached this ideal of musical temperateness and disinterestedness,
+and in the way he has placed his genius as a composer at the service of
+the drama. He has never sought to dominate Maeterlinck's poem, or to
+swallow it up in a torrent of music; he has made it so much a part of
+himself that at the present time no Frenchman is able to think of a
+passage in the play without Debussy's music singing at the same time
+within him.
+
+But apart from all these reasons that make the work important in the
+history of opera, there are purely musical reasons for its success,
+which are of deeper significance still.[200] _Pelléas et Mélisande_ has
+brought about a reform in the dramatic music of France. This reform is
+concerned with several things, and, first of all, with recitative.
+
+[Footnote 200: That is for musicians. But I am convinced that with the
+mass of the public the other reasons have more weight--as is always the
+case.]
+
+In France we have never had--apart from a few attempts in
+_opéra-comique_--a recitative that exactly expressed our natural speech.
+Lully and Rameau took for their model the high-flown declamation of the
+tragedy stage of their time. And French opera for the past twenty years
+has chosen a more dangerous model still--the declamation of Wagner, with
+its vocal leaps and its resounding and heavy accentuation. Nothing could
+be more displeasing in French. All people of taste suffered from it,
+though they did not admit it. At this time, Antoine, Gémier, and Guitry
+were making theatrical declamation more natural, and this made the
+exaggerated declamation of the French opera appear more ridiculous and
+more archaic still. And so a reform in recitative was inevitable.
+Jean-Jacques Rousseau had foreseen it in the very direction in which
+Debussy[201] has accomplished it. He showed in his _Lettre sur la
+musique française_ that there was no connection between the inflections
+of French speech, "whose accents are so harmonious and simple," and "the
+shrill and noisy intonations" of the recitative of French opera. And he
+concluded by saying that the kind of recitative that would best suit us
+should "wander between little intervals, and neither raise nor lower the
+voice very much; and should have little sustained sound, no noise, and
+no cries of any description--nothing, indeed, that resembled singing,
+and little inequality in the duration or value of the notes, or in their
+intervals." This is the very definition of Debussy's recitative.
+
+[Footnote 201: We must also note that during the first half of the
+seventeenth century people of taste objected to the very theatrical
+declamation of French opera. "Our singers believe," wrote Mersenne, in
+1636, "that the exclamations and emphasis used by the Italians in
+singing savour too much of tragedies and comedies, and so they do not
+wish to employ them."]
+
+The symphonic fabric of _Pelléas et Mélisande_ differs just as widely
+from Wagner's dramas. With Wagner it is a living thing that springs from
+one great root, a system of interlaced phrases whose powerful growth
+puts out branches in every direction, like an oak. Or, to take another
+simile, it is like a painting, which though it has not been executed at
+a single sitting, yet gives us that impression; and, in spite of the
+retouching and altering to which it has been subjected, still has the
+effect of a compact whole, of an indestructible amalgam, from which
+nothing can be detached. Debussy's system, on the contrary, is, so to
+speak, a sort of classic impressionism--an impressionism that is
+refined, harmonious, and calm; that moves along in musical pictures,
+each of which corresponds to a subtle and fleeting moment of the soul's
+life; and the painting is done by clever little strokes put in with a
+soft and delicate touch. This art is more allied to that of Moussorgski
+(though without any of his roughness) than that of Wagner, in spite of
+one or two reminiscences of _Parsifal_, which are only extraneous traits
+in the work. In _Pelléas et Mélisande_ one finds no persistent
+_leitmotifs_ running through the work, or themes which pretend to
+translate into music the life of characters and types; but, instead, we
+have phrases that express changing feelings, that change with the
+feelings. More than that, Debussy's harmony is not, as it was with
+Wagner and all the German school, a fettered harmony, tightly bound to
+the despotic laws of counterpoint; it is, as Laloy[202] has said, a
+harmony that is first of all harmonious, and has its origin and end in
+itself.
+
+[Footnote 202: No other critic has, I think, discerned so shrewdly
+Debussy's art and genius. Some of his analyses are models of clever
+intuition. The thought of the critic seems to be one with that of the
+musician.]
+
+As Debussy's art only attempts to give the impression of the moment,
+without troubling itself with what may come after, it is free from care,
+and takes its fill in the enjoyment of the moment. In the garden of
+harmonies it selects the most beautiful flowers; for sincerity of
+expression takes a second place with it, and its first idea is to
+please. In this again it interprets the aesthetic sensualism of the
+French race, which seeks pleasure in art, and does not willingly admit
+ugliness, even when it seems to be justified by the needs of the drama
+and of truth. Mozart shared the same thought: "Music," he said, "even in
+the most terrible situations, ought never to offend the ear; it should
+charm it even there; and, in short, always remain music."
+
+As for Debussy's harmonic language, his originality does not consist, as
+some of his foolish admirers have said, in the invention of new chords,
+but in the new use he makes of them. A man is not a great artist because
+he makes use of unresolved sevenths and ninths, consecutive major thirds
+and ninths, and harmonic progressions based on a scale of whole tones;
+one is only an artist when one makes them say something. And it is not
+on account of the peculiarities of Debussy's style--of which one may
+find isolated examples in great composers before him, in Chopin, Liszt,
+Chabrier, and Richard Strauss--but because with Debussy these
+peculiarities are an expression of his personality, and because _Pelléas
+et Mélisande_, "the land of ninths," has a poetic atmosphere which is
+like no other musical drama ever written.
+
+Lastly, the orchestration is purposely restrained, light, and divided,
+for Debussy has a fine disdain for those orgies of sound to which
+Wagner's art has accustomed us; it is as sober and polished as a fine
+classic phrase of the latter part of the seventeenth century. _Ne quid
+nimis_ ("Nothing superfluous") is the artist's motto. Instead of
+amalgamating the _timbres_ to get a massive effect, he disengages their
+separate personalities, as it were, and delicately blends them without
+changing their individual nature. Like the impressionist painters of
+to-day, he paints with primary colours, but with a delicate moderation
+that rejects anything harsh as if it were something unseemly.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I have given more than enough reasons to account for the success of
+_Pelléas et Mélisande_ and the place that its admirers give it in the
+history of opera. There is every reason to believe that the composer has
+not been as acutely conscious of his musico-dramatic reform as his
+disciples have been. The reform with him has a more instinctive
+character; and that is what gives it its strength. It responds to an
+unconscious yet profound need of the French spirit. I would even venture
+to say that the historical importance of Debussy's work is greater than
+its artistic value. His personality is not without faults, and the
+gravest are perhaps negative faults--the absence of certain qualities,
+and even of the strong and extravagant faults which made the heroes of
+the art world, like Beethoven and Wagner. His voluptuous nature is at
+once changeable and precise; and his dreams are as clear and delicate as
+the art of a poet of the Pleiades in the sixteenth century, or of a
+Japanese painter. But among all his gifts he has a quality which I have
+not found so evident in any other musician--except perhaps Mozart; and
+this quality is a genius for good taste. Debussy has it in excess, so
+that he almost sacrifices the other elements of art to it, until the
+passionate force of his music, even its very life, seems to be
+impoverished. But one must not deceive oneself; that impoverishment is
+only apparent, and in all his work there are evidences that his passion
+is only veiled. It is only the trembling of the melodic line, or the
+orchestration which, like a shadow passing before the eyes, tells us of
+the drama that is being played in the hearts of his characters. This
+lofty shame of emotion is something as rare in opera as a Racine tragedy
+is in poetry--they are works of the same order, and both of them perfect
+flowers of the French spirit. Anyone who lives in foreign parts and is
+curious to know what France is like and understand her genius should
+study _Pelléas et Mélisande_ as they would study Racine's _Bérénice_.
+
+Not that Debussy's art entirely represents French genius any more than
+Racine's does; for there is quite another side to it which is not
+represented there; and that side is heroic action, the intoxication of
+reason and laughter, the passion for light, the France of Rabelais,
+Molière, Diderot, and in music, we will say--for want of better
+names--the France of Berlioz and Bizet. To tell the truth, that is the
+France I prefer. But Heaven preserve me from ignoring the other! It is
+the balance between these two Frances that makes French genius. In our
+contemporary music, _Pelléas et Mélisande_ is at one end of the pole of
+our art and _Carmen_ is at the other. The one is all on the surface, all
+life, with no shadows, and no underneath. The other is below the
+surface, bathed in twilight, and enveloped in silence. And this double
+ideal is the alternation between the gentle sunlight and the faint mist
+that veils the soft, luminous sky of the Isle of France.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+THE AWAKENING
+
+A SKETCH OF THE MUSICAL MOVEMENT IN PARIS SINCE 1870
+
+
+It is not possible in a few pages to give an account of forty years of
+active and fruitful life without many omissions, and also without a
+certain dryness entailed by lists of names. But I have purposely
+abstained from trying to arouse interest by any artifices of writing and
+treatment, as I wish to let deeds speak for themselves.
+
+I want to show, by this simple account, the splendid efforts made by
+musicians in France since 1870, and the growth of the faith and energy
+that has recreated French music. Such an awakening seems to me a fine
+thing to look upon, and very comforting. But few people in France
+realise it, outside a handful of musicians. It is to the public at large
+I dedicate these pages, so that they may know what a generation of
+artists with large hearts and strong determination have done for the
+honour of our race. The nation must not be allowed to forget what she
+owes to some of her sons.
+
+But you must not accuse me of contradicting myself if in another work,
+which will appear at the same time as this one,[203] I indulge in some
+sarcasm over the failings and absurdities of French music to-day. I
+think that for the last ten years French musicians have rather
+imprudently and prematurely proclaimed their victory, and that, in a
+general way, their works--apart from three or four--are not worth as
+much as their endeavours. But their endeavours are heroic; and I know
+nothing finer in the whole history of France. May they continue! But
+that is only possible by practising a virtue--modesty. The completion of
+a part is not the completion of the whole.
+
+[Footnote 203: _Jean-Christophe à Paris_, 1904.]
+
+
+PARIS AND MUSIC
+
+
+The nature of Paris is so complex and unstable that one feels it is
+presumptuous to try to define it. It is a city so highly-strung, so
+ingrained with fickleness, and so changeable in its tastes, that a book
+that truly describes it at the moment it is written is no longer
+accurate by the time it is published. And then, there is not only one
+Paris; there are two or three Parises--fashionable Paris, middle-class
+Paris, intellectual Paris, vulgar Paris--all living side by side, but
+intermingling very little. If you do not know the little towns within
+the great Town, you cannot know the strong and often inconsistent life
+of this great organism as a whole.
+
+If one wishes to get an idea of the musical life of Paris, one must take
+into account the variety of its centres and the perpetual flow of its
+thought--a thought which never stops, but is always over-shooting the
+goal for which it seemed bound. This incessant change of opinion is
+scornfully called "fashion" by the foreigner. And there is, without
+doubt, in the artistic aristocracy of Paris, as in all great towns, a
+herd of idle people on the watch for new fashions--in art, as well as in
+dress--who wish to single out certain of them for no serious reason at
+all. But, in spite of their pretensions, they have only an infinitesimal
+share in the changes of artistic taste. The origin of these changes is
+in the Parisian brain itself--a brain that is quick and feverish, always
+working, greedy of knowledge, easily tired, grasping to-day the
+splendours of a work, seeing to-morrow its defects, building up
+reputations as rapidly as it pulls them down, and yet, in spite of all
+its apparent caprices, always logical and sincere. It has its momentary
+infatuations and dislikes, but no lasting prejudices; and, by its
+curiosity, its absolute liberty, and its very French habit of
+criticising everything, it is a marvellous barometer, sensitive to all
+the hidden currents of thought in the soul of the West, and often
+indicating, months in advance, the variations and disturbances of the
+artistic and political world.
+
+And this barometer is registering what is happening just now in the
+world of music, where a movement has been making itself felt in France
+for several years, whose effect other nations--perhaps more musical
+nations--will not feel till later. For the nations that have the
+strongest artistic traditions are not necessarily those that are likely
+to develop a new art. To do that one must have a virgin soil and spirits
+untrammelled by a heritage from the past. In 1870 no one had a lighter
+heritage to bear than French musicians; for the past had been forgotten,
+and such a thing as real musical education did not exist.
+
+The musical weakness of that time was a very curious thing, and has
+given many people the impression that France has never been a musical
+nation. Historically speaking, nothing could be more wrong. Certainly
+there are races more gifted in music than others; but often the seeming
+differences of race are really the differences of time; and a nation
+appears great or little in its art according to what period of its
+history we consider. England was a musical nation until the Revolution
+of 1688; France was the greatest musical nation in the sixteenth
+century; and the recent publications of M. Henry Expert have given us a
+glimpse of the originality and perfection of the Franco-Belgian art
+during the Renaissance. But without going back as far as that, we find
+that Paris was a very musical town at the time of the Restoration, at
+the time of the first performance of Beethoven's symphonies at the
+Conservatoire, and the first great works of Berlioz, and the Italian
+Opera. In Berlioz's _Mémoires_ you can read about the enthusiasm, the
+tears, and the feeling, that the performances of Gluck's and Spontini's
+operas aroused; and in the same book one sees clearly that this musical
+warmth lasted until 1840, after which it died down little by little, and
+was succeeded by complete musical apathy in the second Empire--an apathy
+from which Berlioz suffered cruelly, so that one may even say he died
+crushed by the indifference of the public. At this time Meyerbeer was
+reigning at the Opera. This incredible weakening of musical feeling in
+France, from 1840 to 1870, is nowhere better shown than in its romantic
+and realistic writers, for whom music was an hermetically sealed door.
+All these artists were "_visuels_," for whom music was only a noise.
+Hugo is supposed to have said that Germany's inferiority was measured by
+its superiority in music.[204] "The elder Dumas detested," Berlioz says,
+"even bad music."[205] The journal of the Goncourts calmly reflects the
+almost universal scorn of literary men for music. In a conversation
+which took place in 1862 between Goncourt and Théophile Gautier,
+Goncourt said:
+
+"We confessed to him our complete infirmity, our musical deafness--we
+who, at the most, only liked military music."
+
+[Footnote 204: One must at least do Hugo the justice of saying that he
+always spoke of Beethoven with admiration, although he did not know him.
+But he rather exalts him in order to take away from the importance of a
+poet--the only one in the nineteenth century--whose fame was shading his
+own; and when he wrote in his _William Shakespeare_ that "the great man
+of Germany is Beethoven" it was understood by all to mean "the great man
+of Germany is not Goethe."]
+
+[Footnote 205: Written in a letter to his sister, Nanci, on 3 April,
+1850.]
+
+ "Well," said Gautier, "what you tell me pleases me very much. I am
+ like you; I prefer silence to music. I have only just succeeded,
+ after having lived part of my life with a singer, in being able to
+ tell good music from bad; but it is all the same to me."[206]
+
+And he added:
+
+ "But it is a very curious thing that all other writers of our time
+ are like this. Balzac hated music. Hugo could not stand it. Even
+ Lamartine, who himself is like a piano to be hired or sold, holds
+ it in horror!"
+
+It needed a complete upheaval of the nation--a political and moral
+upheaval--to change that frame of mind. Some indication of the change
+was making itself felt in the last years of the second Empire. Wagner,
+who suffered from the hostility or indifference of the public in 1860,
+at the time when _Tannhäuser_ was performed at the Opera, had already
+found, however, a few understanding people in Paris who discerned his
+genius and sincerely admired him. The most interesting of the writers
+who first began to understand musical emotion is Charles Baudelaire. In
+1861, Pasdeloup gave the first _Concerts populaires de musique
+classique_ at the Cirque d'Hiver. The Berlioz Festival, organised by M.
+Reyer, on March 23rd, 1870, a year after Berlioz's death, revealed to
+France the grandeur of its greatest musical genius, and was the
+beginning of a campaign of public reparation to his memory.
+
+[Footnote 206: We remark, nevertheless, that that did not prevent
+Gautier from being a musical critic.]
+
+The disasters of the war in 1870 regenerated the nation's artistic
+spirit. Music felt its effect immediately.[207] On February 24th, 1871,
+the _Société nationale de Musique_ was instituted to propagate the works
+of French composers; and in 1873 the _Concerts de l'Association
+artistique_ were started under M. Colonne's direction; and these
+concerts, besides making people acquainted with the classic composers of
+symphonies and the masters of the young French school, were especially
+devoted to the honouring of Berlioz, whose triumph reached its summit
+about 1880.[208]
+
+[Footnote 207: I wish to make known from the beginning that I am only
+noticing here the greater musical doings of the nation, and making no
+mention of works which have not had an important influence on this
+movement.]
+
+[Footnote 208: In the meanwhile France saw the brilliant rise and
+extinction of a great artist--the most spontaneous of all her
+musicians--Georges Bizet, who died in 1875, aged thirty-seven. "Bizet
+was the last genius to discover a new beauty," said Nietzsche; "Bizet
+discovered new lands--the Southern lands of music," _Carmen_ (1875) and
+_L'Arlésienne_ (1872) are masterpieces of the lyrical Latin drama. Their
+style is luminous, concise, and well-defined; the figures are outlined
+with incisive precision. The music is full of light and movement, and is
+a great contrast to Wagner's philosophical symphonies, and its popular
+subject only serves to strengthen its aristocratic distinction. By its
+nature and its clear perception of the spirit of the race it was well in
+advance of its time. What a place Bizet might have taken in our art if
+he had only lived twenty years longer!]
+
+At this time Wagner's success, in its turn, began to make itself felt.
+For this M. Lamoureux, whose concerts began in 1882, was chiefly
+responsible. Wagner's influence considerably helped forward the progress
+of French art, and aroused a love for music in people other than
+musicians; and, by his all-embracing personality and the vast domain of
+his work in art, not only engaged the interest of the musical world, but
+that of the theatrical world, and the world of poetry and the plastic
+arts. One may say that from 1885 Wagner's work acted directly or
+indirectly on the whole of artistic thought, even on the religious and
+intellectual thought of the most distinguished people in Paris. And a
+curious historical witness of its world-wide influence and momentary
+supremacy over all other arts was the founding of the _Revue
+Wagnérienne_, where, united by the same artistic devotion, were found
+writers and poets such as Verlaine, Mallarmé, Swinburne, Villiers de
+l'Isle Adam, Huysmans, Richepin, Catulle Mendès, Édouard Rod, Stuart
+Merrill, Ephraim Mikhaël, etc., and painters like Fantin-Latour, Jacques
+Blanche, Odilon Redon; and critics like Teodor de Wyzewa, H.S.
+Chamberlain, Hennequin, Camille Benoît, A. Ernst, de Fourcaud, Wilder,
+E. Schuré, Soubies, Malherbe, Gabriel Mourey, etc. These writers not
+only discussed musical subjects, but judged painting, literature, and
+philosophy, from a Wagnerian point of view. Hennequin compared the
+philosophic systems of Herbert Spencer and Wagner. Teodor de Wyzewa made
+a study of Wagnerian literature--not the literature that commentated and
+the paintings that illustrated Wagner's works, but the literature and
+the painting that were inspired by Wagner's principles--from Egyptian
+statuary to Degas's paintings, from Homer's writings to those of
+Villiers de l'Isle Adam! In a word, the whole universe was seen and
+judged by the thought of Bayreuth. And though this folly scarcely lasted
+more than three or four years--the length of the life of that little
+magazine--Wagner's genius dominated nearly the whole of French art for
+ten or twelve years.[209] An ardent musical propaganda by means of
+concerts was carried on among the public; and the young intellectuals of
+the day were won over. But the finest service that Wagnerism rendered to
+French art was that it interested the general public in music; although
+the tyranny its influence exercised became, in time, very stifling.
+
+[Footnote 209: Its influence is shown, in varying degrees, in works such
+as M. Reyer's _Sigurd_ (1884), Chabrier's _Gwendoline_ (1886), and M.
+Vincent d'Indy's _Le Chant de la Cloche_ (1886).]
+
+Then, in 1890, there were signs of a movement that was in revolt against
+its despotism. The great wind from the East began to drop, and veered to
+the North. Scandinavian and Russian influences were making themselves
+felt. An exaggerated infatuation for Grieg, though limited to a small
+number of people, was an indication of the change in public taste. In
+1890, César Franck died in Paris. Belgian by birth and temperament, and
+French in feeling and by musical education, he had remained outside the
+Wagnerian movement in his own serene and fecund solitude. To his
+intellectual greatness and the charm his personal genius held for the
+little band of friends who knew and revered him he added the authority
+of his knowledge. Unconsciously he brought back to us the soul of
+Sebastian Bach, with its infinite richness and depth; and through this
+he found himself the head of a school (without having wished it) and the
+greatest teacher of contemporary French music. After his death, his
+name was the means of rallying together the younger school of
+musicians. In 1892, the _Chanteurs de Saint-Gervais_, under the
+direction of M. Charles Bordes, reinstated to honour and popularised
+Gregorian and Palestrinian music; and, following the initiative of their
+director, the _Schola Cantorum_ was founded in 1894 for the revival of
+religious music. Ambition grew with success; and from the _Schola_
+sprang the _École Supérieure de Musique_, under the direction of
+Franck's most famous pupil, M. Vincent d'Indy. This school, founded on a
+solid knowledge, not only of the classics, but of the primitives in
+music, took from its very beginning in 1900 a frankly national
+character, and was in some ways opposed to German art. At the same time,
+performances of Bach and seventeenth-and eighteenth-century music became
+more and more frequent; and more intimate relationship with the artists
+of other countries, repeated visits of the great _Kapellmeister_,
+foreign virtuosi and composers (especially Richard Strauss), and,
+lastly, of Russian composers, completed the education of the Parisian
+musical public, who, after repeated rebukes from the critics, became
+conscious of the awakening of a national personality, and of an
+impatient desire to free itself from German tutelage. By turns it
+gratefully and warmly received M. Bruneau's _Le Rêve_ (1891), M.
+d'Indy's _Fervaal_ (1898), M. Gustave Charpentier's _Louise_ (1900)--all
+of which seemed like works of liberation. But, as a matter of fact,
+these lyric dramas were by no means free from foreign influences, and
+especially from Wagnerian influences. M. Debussy's _Pelléas et
+Mélisande_, in 1902, seemed to mark more truly the emancipation of
+French music. From this time on, French music felt that it had left
+school, and claimed to have founded a new art, which reflected the
+spirit of the race, and was freer and suppler than the Wagnerian art.
+These ideas, which were seized upon and enlarged by the press, brought
+about rather quickly a conviction in French artists of France's
+superiority in music. Is that conviction justified? The future alone can
+tell us. But one may see by this brief outline of events how real is the
+evolution of the musical spirit in France since 1870, in spite of the
+apparent contradictions of fashion which appear on the surface of art.
+It is the spirit of France that is, after long oppression and by a
+patient but eager initiation, realising its power and wishing to
+dominate in its turn.
+
+I wanted at first to trace the broad line of the movement which for the
+last thirty years has been affecting French music; and now I shall
+consider the musical institutions that have had their share in this
+movement. You will not be surprised if I ignore some of the most
+celebrated, which have lost their interest in it, in order that I may
+consider those that are the true authors of our regeneration.
+
+
+MUSICAL INSTITUTIONS BEFORE 1870
+
+
+It is not by any means the oldest and most celebrated musical
+institutions which have taken the largest share in this evolution of
+music in the last thirty years.
+
+The _Académie des Beaux-Arts_, where six chairs are reserved for the
+musical section, could have played a very important part in the musical
+organisation of France by the authority of its name, and by the many
+prizes that it gives for composition and criticism, especially by the
+_Prix de Rome_, which it awards every year. But it does not play its
+part well, partly because of the antiquated statutes that govern it, by
+which a handful of musicians are associated with a great number of
+painters, sculptors, and architects, who are ignorant of music and mock
+at the musicians, as they did in the time of Berlioz; and partly because
+it is the custom of the Academy that the little group of musicians shall
+be trained in a very conservative way. One of the names of these
+musicians is justly celebrated--that of M. Saint-Saëns; but there are
+others whose fame is of poorer quality, and others still who have no
+fame at all. And the whole forms a little group, which though it does
+not put any actual obstacles in the way of the progress of art, yet does
+not look upon it favourably, but remains rather apart in an indifferent
+or even hostile spirit.
+
+The _Conservatoire national de Musique et de Déclamation_, which dates
+from the last years of the _Ancien Régime_ and the Revolution, was
+designed by its patriotic and-democratic origin to serve the cause of
+national art and free progress.[210]
+
+[Footnote 210: One knows that the Conservatoire originated in _L'École
+gratuite de musique de la garde nationale parisienne_, founded in 1792
+by Sarrette, and directed by Gossec. It was then a civic and military
+school, but, according to Chénier, was changed into the _Institut
+national de musique_ on 8 November, 1793, and into the _Conservatoire_
+on 3 August, 1795. This Republican Conservatoire made it its business to
+keep in contact with the spirit of the country, and was directly opposed
+to the Opera, which was of monarchical origin. See M. Constant Pierre's
+work _Le Conservatoire national de musique_ (1900), and M. Julien
+Tiersot's very interesting book _Les Fêtes et les Chants de la
+Révolution française_ (1908).]
+
+It was for a long time the corner-stone of the edifice of music in
+Paris. But although it has always numbered in its ranks many illustrious
+and devoted professors--among whom it recognised, a little late, the
+founder of the young French school, César Franck--and though the
+majority of artists who have made a name in French music have received
+its teaching, and the list of laureates of Rome who have come from its
+composition classes includes all the heads of the artistic movement
+to-day in all its diversity, and ranges from M. Massenet to M. Bruneau,
+and from M. Charpentier to M. Debussy--in spite of all this, it is no
+secret that, since 1870, the official action with regard to the movement
+amounts to almost nothing; though we must at least do it justice, and
+say that it has not hindered it.[211]
+
+[Footnote 211: You must remember that I am speaking here of _official_
+action only; for there have always been masters among the Conservatoire
+teaching staff who have united a fine musical culture with a
+broad-minded and liberal spirit. But the influence of these independent
+minds is, generally speaking, small; for they have not the disposing of
+academic successes; and when, by exception, they have a wide influence,
+like that of César Franck, it is the result of personal work outside the
+Conservatoire--work that is, as often as not, opposed to Conservatoire
+principles.]
+
+But if the spirit of this academy has often destroyed the effect of the
+excellent teaching there, by making success in academic competitions the
+chief aim of the professors and their pupils, yet a certain freedom has
+always reigned in the institution. And though this freedom is mainly the
+result of indifference, it has, however, permitted the more independent
+temperaments to develop in peace--from Berlioz to M. Ravel. One should
+be grateful for this. But such virtues are too negative to give the
+Conservatoire a high place in the musical history of the Third Republic;
+and it is only lately, under the direction of M. Gabriel Fauré, that it
+has endeavoured, not without difficulty, to get back its place at the
+head of French art, which it had lost, and which others had taken.
+
+The _Société des Concerts du Conservatoire_, founded in 1828 under the
+direction of Habeneck, has had its hour of glory in the musical history
+of Paris. It was through this society that Beethoven's greatness was
+revealed to France.[212] It was at the Conservatoire that the early
+important works of Berlioz were first given: _La Fantastique_, _Harold_,
+and _Roméo et Juliette_. It was there, nearer our own time, that
+Saint-Saëns's _Symphonie avec Orgue_ and César Franck's _Symphonie_ were
+played for the first time. But for a long time the Conservatoire seemed
+to take its name too literally, and to restrict its sphere to that of a
+museum for classical music.
+
+[Footnote 212: It is to be noted that since 1807 the Conservatoire
+pupils have made Beethoven's symphonies familiar to Parisians. The
+_Symphony in C minor_ was performed by them in 1808; the _Heroic_ in
+1811. It was in connection with one of these performances that the
+_Tablettes de Polymnie_ gave a curious appreciation of Beethoven, which
+is quoted by M. Constant Pierre: "This composer is often grotesque and
+uncouth, and sometimes flies majestically like an eagle and sometimes
+crawls along stony paths. It is as though one had shut up doves and
+crocodiles together."]
+
+In later years, however, the _Société des Concerts_, with M. Marty,
+began to consider new works. Its orchestra, composed of eminent
+instrumentalists, enjoys a classical fame; though it is now no longer
+alone in the excellence of its performances, and has perhaps lost a
+little the secret that it claimed to possess for the interpretation of
+great classical works. It excels in works of a neo-classic character,
+like those of M. Saint-Saëns, which are stronger in style and taste than
+in life and passion. The Conservatoire concerts have also a relative
+superiority over other concerts in Paris in the performance of choral
+works, which up to the present have been very second-rate. But these
+concerts are not easy of access for the general public, as the number of
+seats for sale is very limited. And so the society is representative of
+a little public whose taste is, broadly speaking, conservative and
+official; and the noise of the strife outside its doors only reaches its
+ears slowly, and with a deadened sound.
+
+The influence of the Conservatoire is, in music especially, an influence
+of the past and of the Government. One may say much the same of the
+Opera. This ancient association, which bears the imposing name of
+_Académie nationale de Musique_ and dates from 1669, is a sort of
+national institution which is more concerned with the history of
+official art than with living art. The satire with which Jean-Jacques
+describes, in his _Nouvelle Héloïse_, the stiff solemnity and mournful
+pomp of its performances has not lost much of its truth. What is lacking
+in the Opera to-day is the enthusiasm that accompanied its former
+musical struggles in the times of the "_Encyclopédistes_" and the
+"_guerre des coins_." The great battles of art are now fought outside
+its doors; and it has become by degrees a showy _salon_, a little faded
+perhaps, where the public is more interested in itself than in the
+performance. In spite of the enormous sums that it swallows up every
+year (nearly four million francs),[213] only one or two new pieces are
+produced in a year, and they are rarely works that are representative of
+the modern school. And though it has at last admitted Wagner's dramas
+into its repertory, one can no longer consider these works, half a
+century old, to be in the vanguard of music. The most esteemed masters
+of the French school, such as Massenet, Reyer, Chausson, and Vincent
+d'Indy, had to seek refuge in the Théâtre de la Monnaie at Brussels
+before they could get their works received at the Opera in Paris. And
+the classical composers fare no better. Neither _Fidelio_ nor Gluck's
+tragedies--with the exception of _Armide_, which was put on under
+pressure of fashion--are represented; and when by chance they give
+_Freischütz_ or _Don Juan_, one wonders if it would not have been better
+to let them rest in oblivion, rather than treat them sacrilegiously by
+adding, cutting, introducing ballets and new recitatives, and deforming
+their style so as to bring them "up to date."[214]
+
+[Footnote 213: This is according to M. Rivet's report on the
+_Beaux-Arts_ in 1906. The Opera employs 1370 people, and its expenses
+are about 3,988,000 francs. The annual grant of the State comes to about
+800,000 francs.]
+
+[Footnote 214: On the occasion of the revival of _Don Juan_ in 1902, the
+_Revue Musicale_ counted up the pages that had been added to the
+original score. They came to two hundred and twenty-eight.]
+
+In spite of the changes of taste and the campaign of the press, the
+Opera has remained to this day as it was in the time of Meyerbeer and
+Gounod and their disciples. But it would be foolish to pretend that it
+has not its public. The receipts show well enough that _Faust_ is in
+greater favour than _Siegfried_ or _Tristan_, not to speak of the more
+recent works of the new French school, which cannot be acclimatised
+there.
+
+Without doubt, the enormous stage at the Opera does not lend itself well
+to modern musical dramas, which are intimate and concentrated, and would
+be lost in its immense space, which is more adapted for formal
+processions like the marches in the _Prophète_ and _Aïda_. Besides this,
+there is the conventional acting of the majority of the singers, the
+dull lifelessness of the choruses, the defective acoustics, and the
+exaggerated utterance and gestures of the actors, demanded by the great
+dimensions of the place--all of which is a serious obstacle to the
+conception of a living and simple art. But the chief obstacle will
+always lie in the very nature of such a theatre--a theatre of luxury and
+vanity, created for a set of snobs, whose least interest is the music,
+who have not enough intellect to create a fashion, but who servilely
+follow every fashion after it is thirty years old. Such a theatre no
+longer counts in the history of French music; and its next directors
+will need a vast amount of ingenuity and energy to get a semblance of
+life into such a dead colossus.
+
+But it is quite another affair with the Opéra-Comique. This theatre has
+taken a very active part in the development of modern music. Without
+renouncing its classic traditions, or its delightful repertory of the
+old _opéra-comiques_, it has had understanding enough, under the
+judicious management of M. Albert Carré, to hold itself open for any
+interesting productions in dramatic music. It takes no side among the
+different schools; and the representatives of the old-fashioned light
+opera with their songs elbow the leaders of the advanced school. No
+association has done more important work, among musical dramas as well
+as musical comedies, during the last twenty years. In this theatre,
+which produced _Carmen_ in 1875, _Manon_ in 1884, and the _Roi d'Ys_ in
+1888, were played the principal dramas of M. Bruneau, as well as M.
+Charpentier's _Louise_, M. Debussy's _Pelléas et Mélisande_, and M.
+Dukas's _Ariane et Barbebleue_. It may seem astonishing that such works
+should have found a place at the Opéra-Comique and not at the Opera. But
+if two musical theatres of different kinds exist, one of which pretends
+to have the monopoly of great art, while the other with a simpler and
+more intimate character seeks only to please, it is always the latter
+that has a better chance of development and of making new discoveries;
+for the first is oppressed by traditions that become ever stiffer and
+more pedantic, while the other with its simplicity and lack of
+pretension is able to accommodate itself to any manner of life. How many
+artists have revolutionised their times while they were merely looked
+upon as people who amused! Frescobaldi and Philipp Emanuel Bach brought
+fresh life to art, but were scorned by the so-called representatives of
+fine art; Mozart's _opere buffe_ have more of truth and life in them
+than his _opere serie_; and there is as much dramatic power in an
+_opéra-comique_ like _Carmen_ as in all the repertory of grand Opera
+to-day. And so the Opéra-Comique theatre has become the home of the
+boldest experiments in musical drama. The most daring or the most
+violent ventures into musical realism, after the manner of Charpentier
+or Bruneau, and the subtle fantasies of a delicate art of dreams, like
+that of Debussy, have found a welcome there. It has also been open to
+various kinds of foreign art: Humperdinck's _Hänsel und Gretel_, Verdi's
+_Falstaff_, the works of Puccini, Mascagni, and the young Italian
+school, Richard Strauss's _Feuersnot_, Rimsky-Korsakow's
+_Snégourotchka_, have all been played. And they have even given the
+classic masterpieces of opera there: _Fidelio_, _Orfeo_, _Alceste_, the
+two _Iphigénies_; and taken more pains with them and mounted them with
+more pious zeal than they do at the Opera. The operas themselves are
+more at home there, too, for the size of the theatre is more like that
+of the eighteenth-century theatres. It is true that the stage rather
+lacks depth; but the ingenuity of the director and the admirable scenic
+artists he employs has succeeded in making one forget this defect, and
+accomplished marvels. No theatre in Paris has more artistic staging, and
+some of the scenery that has been designed lately is a masterpiece of
+its kind. The Opéra-Comique has also the advantage of excellent
+conductors, and one of them, M. Messager, who is now Director, has, by
+his clever interpretations, greatly contributed to the success of the
+works of the new school.
+
+
+NEW MUSICAL INSTITUTIONS
+
+
+1. _The Société Nationale_
+
+Before 1870, French music had already in the Opera and the Opéra-Comique
+(without counting the various endeavours of the Théâtre Lyrique) an
+outlet which was nearly enough for the needs of her dramatic
+productions. Even when musical taste was most decadent, the works of
+Gounod, Ambroise Thomas, and Massé, had always upheld the name of French
+_opéra-comique_. But what was almost entirely lacking was an outlet for
+symphonic music and chamber-music. "Before 1870," wrote M. Saint-Saëns
+in _Harmonie et Mélodie_, "a French composer who was foolish enough to
+venture on to the ground of instrumental music had no other means of
+getting his works performed than by himself arranging a concert for
+them." Such was Berlioz's case; for he had to gather together an
+orchestra and hire a room each time he wished to get a hearing for his
+great symphonies. The financial result was often disastrous: the
+performance of the _Damnation de Faust_ in 1846 was, for example, a
+complete failure, and he had to give it up. The Conservatoire, which was
+formerly more hospitable, rather reluctantly performed a portion of
+_L'Enfance du Christ_; but it gave young composers no encouragement.
+
+The first man who attempted to make the symphony popular, M. Saint-Saëns
+tells us in his _Portraits et Souvenirs_, was Seghers, a dissentient
+member of the _Société des Concerts du Conservatoire_, who during
+several years (1848-1854) was conductor of the _Société de
+Sainte-Cécile_, which had its quarters in a room in the rue de la
+Chaussée d'Antin. There he had performed Mendelssohn's _Symphonie
+Italienne_, the overtures to _Tannhäuser_ and _Manfred_, Berlioz's
+_Fuite en Égypte_, and Gounod's and Bizet's early, works. But lack of
+money cut short his efforts.
+
+Pasdeloup took up the work. After having been conductor for the _Société
+des jeunes artistes du Conservatoire_ since 1851, in the Salle Herz, he
+founded, in 1861, at the Cirque d'Hiver, with the financial support of a
+rich moneylender, the first _Concerts populaires de musique classique_.
+Unhappily, says M. Saint-Saëns, Pasdeloup, even up to 1870, made an
+almost exclusive selection of German classical works. He raised an
+impenetrable barrier before the young French school, and the only French
+works he played were symphonies by Gounod and Gouvy, and the overtures
+of _Les Francs-Juges_ and _La Muette_. It was impossible to set up a
+rival society against him; and an exclusive monopoly in music was,
+therefore, held by him. According to M. Saint-Saëns he was a mediocre
+musician, and had, in spite of his passion for music, "immense
+incapacity." In _Harmonie et Mélodie_ M. Saint-Saëns says: "The few
+chamber-music societies that existed were also closed to all new-comers;
+their programmes only contained the names of undisputed celebrities, the
+writers of classic symphonies. In those times one had really to be
+devoid of all common sense to write music."
+
+A new generation was growing up, however,--a generation that was serious
+and thoughtful, that was more attracted by pure music than by the
+theatre, that was filled with a burning desire to found a national art.
+To this generation M. Saint-Saëns and M. Vincent d'Indy belong. The war
+of 1870 strengthened these ideas about music, and, while the war was
+still raging, there sprang from them the _Société Nationale de Musique_.
+
+One must speak of this society with respect, for it was the cradle and
+sanctuary of French art.[215] All that was great in French music from
+1870 to 1900 found a home there. Without it, the greater part of the
+works that are the honour of our music would never have been played;
+perhaps they would not ever have been written. The Society possessed the
+rare merit of being able to anticipate public opinion by ten or eleven
+years, and in some ways it has formed the public mind and obliged it to
+honour those whom the Society had already recognised as great musicians.
+
+[Footnote 215: The facts which follow are taken from the archives of the
+_Société Nationale de Musique_, and have been given me by M. Pierre de
+Bréville, the Society's secretary.]
+
+The two founders of the Society were Romaine Bussine, professor of
+Singing at the Conservatoire, and M. Camille Saint-Saëns. And, following
+their initiative, César Franck, Ernest Guiraud, Massenet, Garcin,
+Gabriel Fauré, Henri Duparc, Théodore Dubois, and Taffanel, joined
+forces with them, and at a meeting on 25 February, 1871, agreed to found
+a musical society that should give hearings to the works of living
+French composers exclusively. The first meetings were interrupted by the
+doings of the Commune; but they began again in October, 1871. The
+Society's early statutes were drawn up by Alexis de Castillon, a
+military officer and a talented composer, who, after having served in
+the war of 1870 at the head of the _mobiles_ of Eure-et-Loire, was one
+of the founders of French chamber-music, and died prematurely in 1873,
+aged thirty-five. It was these statutes, signed by Saint-Saëns,
+Castillon, and Garcin, that gave the Society its title of _Société
+Nationale de Musique_, and its device, "_Ars gallica_." This is what the
+statutes say about the aims of the Society:
+
+ "The aim of the Society is to aid the production and the
+ popularisation of all serious musical works, whether published or
+ unpublished, of French composers; to encourage and bring to light,
+ so far as is in its power, all musical endeavour, whatever form it
+ may take, on condition that there is evidence of high, artistic
+ aspiration on the part of the author.... It is in brotherly love,
+ with complete forgetfulness of self, and with the firm intention of
+ aiding one another as far as they can, that the members of the
+ Society will co-operate, each in his own sphere of action, for the
+ study and performance of the works which they shall be called upon
+ to select and to interpret."
+
+The first Committee was made up as follows: President, Bussine;
+Vice-President, Saint-Saëns; Secretary, Alexis de Castillon;
+Under-Secretary, Jules Garcin; Treasurer, Lenepveu. The members of the
+Committee were: César Franck, Théodore Dubois, E. Guiraud, Fissot,
+Bourgault-Ducoudray, Fauré, and Lalo.
+
+The first concert was given on 25 November, 1871, in the Salle Pleyel;
+and it is worthy of note that the first work played was a trio of César
+Franck's. Since then the Society has given three hundred and fifty
+performances of chamber-music or orchestral works. The best known French
+composers and virtuosi have taken part as executants, among others:
+César Franck, Saint-Saëns, Massenet, Bizet, Vincent d'Indy, Fauré,
+Chabrier, Guiraud, Debussy, Lekeu, Lamoureux, Chevillard, Taffanel,
+Widor, Messager, Diémer, Sarasate, Risler, Cortot, Ysaye, etc. And among
+the compositions that have been played for the first time it is enough
+to mention the following:
+
+César Franck: Nearly the whole of his works, including his Sonata, Trio,
+Quartette, Quintette, Symphonic Variations, Preludes and Fugues, Mass,
+_Rédemption_, _Psyche_, and a part of _Les Béatitudes_.
+
+Saint-Saëns: _Phaéton_, _Second Symphony_, Sonatas, Persian Melodies,
+the _Rapsodie d'Auvergne_, and a quartette.
+
+Vincent d'Indy: The trilogy of _Wallenstein_, the _Poême des Montagues_,
+the _Symphonie sur un thème montagnard_, and quartettes.
+
+Chabrier: Part of _Gwendoline_.
+
+Lalo: Fragments of the _Roi d'Ys_, Rhapsodies and Symphonies.
+
+Bruneau: _Penthésilée_, _La Belle au Bois Dormant_.
+
+Chausson: _Viviane_, _Hélène_, _La Tempête_, a quartette and a symphony.
+
+Debussy: _La Damoiselle élue_, the _Prélude à l'après-midi d'un faune_,
+a quartette, pieces for the pianoforte, and melodies.
+
+Dukas: _L'Apprenti Sorcier_, and a sonata for the pianoforte.
+
+Lekeu: _Andromède_.
+
+Alberic Magnard: Symphonies and a quartette.
+
+Ravel: _Schéhérazade_, _Histoires Naturelles_, etc.
+
+Saint-Saëns was director with Bussine until 1886. But from 1881 the
+influence of Franck and his disciples became more and more felt; and
+Saint-Saëns began to lose interest in the efforts of the new school. In
+1886 there was a division of opinion about a proposition of Vincent
+d'Indy's to introduce the works of classical masters and foreign
+composers into the programmes. This proposition was adopted; but
+Saint-Saëns and Bussine sent in their resignations. Franck then became
+the true president, although he refused the title; and after his death,
+in 1890, Vincent d'Indy took his place. Under these two directors a
+quite important place was given to old and classical music by composers
+such as Palestrina, Vittoria, Josquin, Bach, Händel, Rameau, Gluck,
+Beethoven, Schumann, Liszt, and Brahms. Foreign contemporary music only
+occupied a very limited place. Wagner's name only appears once, in a
+transcription of the _Venusberg_ for the pianoforte; and Richard
+Strauss's name figures only against his Quartette. Grieg had his hour of
+popularity there about 1887, as well as the Russians--Moussorgski,
+Borodine, Rimsky-Korsakow, Liadow, and Glazounow--whom M. Debussy has
+perhaps helped to make known to us. At the present moment the Society
+seems more exclusively French than ever; and the influence of M. Vincent
+d'Indy and the school of Franck is predominant. That is only natural;
+the _Société Nationale_ most truly earned its title to glory by
+discerning César Franck's genius; for the Society was a little sanctuary
+where the great artist was honoured at a time when he was ignored or
+laughed at by the rest of the world. This character of a sanctuary was
+kept even after victory. In its general programme of 1903-1904, the
+Society reminded us with pride that it had remained faithful to the
+promises made in 1871; and it added that if, in order to permit its
+members to keep abreast of the general progress of art, it had little by
+little allowed classical masterpieces and modern foreign works of
+interest on its programmes, it had, however, always kept its
+guest-chamber open, and shaped many a future reputation there.
+
+Nothing is truer. The _Société Nationale_ is indeed a guest-chamber,
+where for the past thirty years a guest-chamber art and guest-chamber
+opinions have been formed; and from it some of the profoundest and most
+poetic French music has been derived, such as Franck's and Debussy's
+chamber-music. But its atmosphere is becoming daily more rarefied. That
+is a danger. It is to be feared that this art and thought may be
+absorbed by the decadent subtleties or pedantic scholasticism which is
+apt to accompany all coteries--in short, that its music will be
+salon-music rather than chamber-music. Even the Society itself seems to
+have felt this at times; and at different periods has sought contact
+with the general public, and put itself into direct communication with
+it. "It becomes more and more necessary," wrote M. Saint-Saëns, "that
+French composers should find something intermediate between an intimate
+hearing of their music and a performance of it before the general
+public--something which would not be a speculative thing like a big
+concert, but which would be analogous to the artistic attraction of an
+exhibition of painting, and which would dare everything. It is a new aim
+for the _Société Nationale_." But it does not seem that it has yet
+attained this goal, nor that it is near attaining it, despite some not
+quite happy attempts.
+
+But at least the _Société Nationale_ has gloriously achieved the task it
+set itself. In thirty years it has created in Paris a little centre of
+earnest composers of symphonies and chamber-music, and a cultured public
+that seems able to understand them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+2. _The Grand Symphony Concerts_
+
+Although it was an urgent matter that young French composers should
+unite to withstand the general indifference of the public, it was more
+urgent still that that indifference should be attacked, and that music
+should be brought within reach of ordinary people. It was a matter of
+taking up and completing Pasdeloup's work in a more artistic and more
+modern spirit.
+
+A publisher of music, Georges Hartmann, feeling the forces that were
+drawing together in French art, gathered about him the greater part of
+the talented men of the young school--Franck, Bizet, Saint-Saëns,
+Massenet, Delibes, Lalo, A. de Castillon, Th. Dubois, Guiraud, Godard,
+Paladilhe, and Joncières--and undertook to produce their works in
+public. He rented the Odéon theatre, and got together an orchestra, the
+conductorship of which he entrusted to M. Édouard Colonne. And on 2
+March, 1873, the _Concert National_ was inaugurated in a musical
+matinée, where M. Saint-Saëns played his _Concerto in G minor_ and Mme.
+Viardot sang Schubert's _Roi des Aulnes_. In the first year six ordinary
+concerts were given, and, besides that, two sacred concerts with choirs,
+at which César Franck's _Rédemption_ and Massenet's _Marie-Magdeleine_
+were performed. In 1874 the Odéon was abandoned for the Châtelet. This
+venture attracted some attention, and the concerts were patronised by
+the public; but the financial results were not great.[216] Hartmann was
+discouraged and wished to give the whole thing up. But M. Édouard
+Colonne conceived the idea of turning his orchestra into a society, and
+of continuing the work under the name of _Association Artistique_. Among
+the artist-founders were MM. Bruneau, Benjamin Godard, and Paul
+Hillemacher. Its early days were full of struggle; but owing to the
+perseverance of the Association all obstacles were finally overcome. In
+1903 a festival was held to celebrate its thirtieth anniversary. During
+these thirty years it had given more than eight hundred concerts, and
+had performed the works of about three hundred composers, of which half
+were French. The four composers most frequently heard at the Châtelet
+were Saint-Saëns, Wagner, Beethoven, and Berlioz.[217]
+
+[Footnote 216: It must be remembered that the prices of the seats were
+much cheaper than they are to-day; the best were only three francs.]
+
+[Footnote 217: There were about 340 performances of Saint-Saëns' works,
+380 of Wagner's, 390 of Beethoven's, and 470 of Berlioz's. I owe these
+details to the kind information of M. Charles Malherbe and M. Léon
+Petitjean, the secretary of the Colonne concerts.]
+
+Berlioz is almost the exclusive property of the Châtelet. Not only have
+they performed his works there more frequently than anywhere else,[218]
+but they are better understood there than in other places. The Colonne
+orchestra and its conductor, gifted with great warmth of spirit,--though
+it is sometimes a little intemperate--are rather bothered by works of a
+classic nature and by those that show contemplative feeling; but they
+give wonderful expression to Berlioz's tumultuous romanticism, his
+poetic enthusiasm, and the bright and delicate colouring of his
+paintings and his musical landscapes. Although Berlioz has his place at
+the Chevillard and Conservatoire concerts, it is to the Châtelet that
+his followers flock; and their enthusiasm has not been affected by the
+campaign that for several years has been directed against Berlioz by
+some French critics under the influence of the younger musical
+party--the followers of d'Indy and Debussy.
+
+[Footnote 218: The _Damnation de Faust_ alone was given in its entirety
+a hundred and fifty times in thirty years.]
+
+It is also at the Châtelet that the keenest musical passion has been
+preserved in the public, even to this day. Thanks to the size of the
+theatre, which is one of the largest in Paris, and to the great number
+of cheap seats, you may always find there a number of young students who
+make the most interested kind of public possible. And the music is
+something more than a pleasure to them--it is a necessity. There are
+some that make great sacrifices in order to have a seat at the Sunday
+concerts. And many of these young men and women live all the week on the
+thought of forgetting the world for a few hours in musical enjoyment.
+Such a public did not exist in France before 1870. It is to the honour
+of the Châtelet and the Pasdeloup concerts to have created it.
+
+Édouard Colonne has done more than educate musical taste in France; for
+no one has worked harder than he to break down the barriers that
+separated the French public from the art of other lands; and, at the
+same time, he has himself helped to make French art known to
+foreigners. When he himself was conducting concerts all over Europe he
+entrusted the conductorship at the Châtelet to the great German
+_Kapellmeister_ and to foreign composers--to Richard Strauss, Grieg,
+Tschaikowsky, Hans Richter, Hermann Levi, Mottl, Nikisch, Mengelberg,
+Siegfried Wagner, and many others. No other conductor has done so much
+for Parisian music during the last thirty years; and we must not forget
+it.[219]
+
+[Footnote 219: It is known that M. Colonne has now a helper in M.
+Gabriel Pierné, who will succeed him when he retires.]
+
+The Lamoureux concerts have had from the beginning a very different
+character from the Colonne concerts. That difference lies partly in the
+personality of the two conductors, and partly in the fact that the
+Lamoureux concerts, although of later date than the Colonne concerts by
+less than ten years, represent a new generation in music. The progress
+of the musical public was singularly rapid: hardly had they explored the
+rich treasure-house of Berlioz's music than they were making discoveries
+in the world of Wagner. And in that world they needed a new guide, who
+had intimate knowledge of Wagner's art and of German art in general.
+Charles Lamoureux was that guide. In 1873 he conducted special
+performances of Bach and Händel, given by the _Societé de l'Harmonie
+sacrée_. After leaving the conductorship of the Opera, he inaugurated,
+on 21 October, 1881, at the Château-d'Eau theatre, the _Société des
+Nouveaux Concerts_. These concerts had at first very comprehensive
+programmes of every kind of music and every kind of school. At the
+first concert there were works of Beethoven, Händel, Gluck, Sacchini,
+Cimarosa, and Berlioz. In the first year Lamoureux had Beethoven's
+_Ninth Symphony_ performed, as well as a large part of _Lohengrin_, and
+numerous works of young French musicians. Various compositions of Lalo,
+Vincent d'Indy, and Chabrier, were performed there for the first time.
+But it was especially to the study of Wagner's works that Lamoureux most
+gladly devoted himself. It was he who gave the first hearings of Wagner
+in their entirety in France, such as the first and second act of
+_Tristan_, in 1884-1885. The Wagnerian battle was still going on at that
+time, as the notice printed at the head of the programme of _Tristan_
+shows.
+
+ "The management of the _Société des Nouveaux Concerts_ is desirous
+ of avoiding any disturbance during the performance of the second
+ act of _Tristan_, and urgently and respectfully begs that the
+ audience will abstain from giving any mark of their approval or
+ disapproval before the end of the act."
+
+The same year, in the Eden theatre, to which the concerts had been
+transferred, Lamoureux conducted, for the first time in Paris, the first
+act of the _Walküre_. In these concerts the tenor, Van Dyck, made his
+_début_; later, he was one of the leading performers at Bayreuth. In
+1886-1887 Lamoureux rehearsed and conducted the only performance of
+_Lohengrin_ at the Eden theatre. Disturbances in the streets prevented
+further performances. Lamoureux then established himself in the
+concert-room of the Cirque des Champs Élysées, where for eleven years he
+has given what are called the _Concerts-Lamoureux_. He continued to
+spread the knowledge of Wagner's works, and has sometimes had the help
+of some of the most celebrated of the Bayreuth artists, among others,
+that of Mme. Materna and Lilli Lehmann. At the end of the season of 1897
+Lamoureux wished to disband his orchestra in order to conduct concerts
+abroad. But the members of the orchestra decided to remain together
+under the name of the _Association des Concerts-Lamoureux_, with
+Lamoureux's son-in-law, M. Camille Chevillard, as conductor. But
+Lamoureux was not long before he returned to the conductorship of the
+concerts, which had now returned to the Château-d'Eau theatre; and a few
+months before his death, in 1899, he conducted the first performance of
+_Tristan_ at the Nouveau theatre. And so he had the happiness of being
+present at the complete triumph of the cause for which he had fought so
+stubbornly for nearly twenty years.[220]
+
+[Footnote 220: My statements may be verified by the account published in
+the _Revue Éolienne_ of January, 1902, by M. Léon Bourgeois, secretary
+of the Committee of the _Association des Concerts-Lamoureux_.]
+
+Lamoureux's performances of Wagner's works have been among the best that
+have ever been given. He had a regard for the work as a whole and a care
+for its details, to which the Colonne orchestra did not quite attain. On
+the other hand, Lamoureux's defect was the exuberant liveliness with
+which he interpreted compositions of a romantic nature. He did not fully
+understand these works; and although he knew much more about classic art
+than his rival, he rendered its letter rather than its spirit, and paid
+such sedulous attention to detail that music like Beethoven's lost its
+intensity and its life. But both his talents and his defects fitted him
+to be an excellent interpreter of the young neo-Wagnerian school, the
+principal representatives of which in France were then M. Vincent d'Indy
+and M. Emmanuel Chabrier. Lamoureux had need, to a certain extent, to be
+himself directed either by the living traditions of Bayreuth, or by the
+thought of modern and living composers; and the greatest service he
+rendered to French music was his creation, thanks to his extreme care
+for material perfection, of an orchestra that was marvellously equipped
+for symphonic music.
+
+This seeking for perfection has been carried on by his successor, M.
+Camille Chevillard, whose orchestra is even more refined still. One may
+say, I think, that it is to-day the best in Paris. M. Chevillard is more
+attracted by pure music than Lamoureux was; and he rightly finds that
+dramatic music has been occupying too large a place in Parisian
+concerts. In a letter published by the _Mercure de France_, in January,
+1903, he reproaches the educators of public taste with having fostered a
+liking for opera, and with not having awakened a respect for pure music:
+"Any four bars from one of Mozart's quartettes have," he says, "a
+greater educational value than a showy scene from an opera." No one in
+Paris conducts classic works better than he, especially the works that
+possess clean, plastic beauty; and in Germany itself it would be
+difficult to find anyone who would give a more delicate interpretation
+of some of Händel's and Mozart's symphonic works. His orchestra has
+kept, moreover, the superiority that it had already acquired in its
+repertory of Wagner's works. But M. Chevillard has communicated a warmth
+and energy of rhythm to it that it did not possess before. His
+interpretations of Beethoven, even if they are somewhat superficial, are
+very full of life. Like Lamoureux, he has hardly caught the spirit of
+French romantic works--of Berlioz, and still less of Franck and his
+school; and he seems to have but lukewarm sympathy for the more recent
+developments of French music. But he understands well the German
+romantic composers, especially Schumann, for whom he has a marked
+liking; and he tried, though without great success, to introduce Liszt
+and Brahms into France, and was the first among us to attract real
+attention to Russian music, whose brilliant and delicate colouring he
+excels in rendering. And, like M. Colonne, he has brought the great
+German _Kapellmeister_ among us--Weingartner, Nikisch, and Richard
+Strauss, the last mentioned having directed the first performance in
+Paris of his symphonic poems, _Zarathustra_, _Don Quixote_, and
+_Heldenleben_, at the Lamoureux concerts.
+
+Nothing could have better completed the musical education of the public
+than this continuous defile, for the past ten years, of _Kapellmeister_
+and foreign virtuosi, and the comparisons that their different styles
+and interpretations afforded. Nothing has better helped forward the
+improvement of Parisian orchestras than the emulation brought about by
+the meetings between Parisian conductors and those of other countries.
+At present our own conductors are worthy rivals of the best in Germany.
+The string instruments are good; the wood has kept its old French
+superiority; and though the brass is still the weakest part of our
+orchestras, it has made great progress. One may still criticise the
+grouping of orchestras at concerts, for it is often defective; there is
+a disproportion between the different families of instruments and, in
+consequence, between their different sonorities, some of which are too
+thin and others too dull. But these defects are fairly common all over
+Europe to-day. Unhappily, more peculiar to France is the insufficiency
+or poor quality of the choirs, whose progress has been far from keeping
+pace with that of the orchestras. It is to this side of music that the
+directors of concerts must now bring their efforts to bear.
+
+The Lamoureux Concerts have not had as stable a dwelling-place as the
+Châtelet Concerts. They have wandered about Paris from one room to
+another--from the Cirque d'Hiver to the Cirque d'Été, and from the
+Château-d'Eau to the Nouveau Théâtre. At the present moment they are in
+the Salle Gaveau, which is much too small for them. In spite of the
+progress of music and musical taste, Paris has not yet a concert-hall,
+as the smallest provincial towns in Germany have; and this shameful
+indifference, unworthy of the artistic renown of Paris, obliges the
+symphonic societies to take refuge in circuses or theatres, which they
+share with other kinds of performers, though the acoustics of these
+places are not intended for concerts. And so it happens that for six
+years the Chevillard Concerts have been given at the back of a
+music-hall, which has the same entrance, and which is only separated
+from the concert-room by a small passage, so that the roaring choruses
+of a _danse du venire_ may mingle with an adagio of Beethoven's or a
+scene from the Tetralogy. Worse than this, the smallness of the place
+into which these concerts have been crammed has been a serious obstacle
+in the way of making them popular. Nevertheless, in the promenade and
+galleries of the Nouveau Théâtre, in later years, arose what may be
+called a little war over concertos. It was rather a curious episode in
+the history of the musical taste of Paris, and merits a few words here.
+In every country, but especially in those countries that are least
+musical, a virtuoso profits by public favour, often to the detriment of
+the work he is performing; for what is most liked in music is the
+musician. The virtuoso--whose importance must not be underrated, and who
+is worthy of honour when he is a reverential and sympathetic interpreter
+of genius--has too often taken a lamentable part, especially in Latin
+countries, in the degrading of musical taste; for empty virtuosity makes
+a desert of art. The fashion of inept fantasias and acrobatic
+variations has, it is true, gone by; but of late years virtuosity has
+returned in an offensive way, and, sheltering itself under the solemn
+classical name of "concertos," it usurped a place of rather exaggerated
+importance in symphony concerts, and especially in M. Chevillard's
+concerts--a place which Lamoureux would never have given it. Then the
+younger and more enthusiastic part of the public began to revolt; and
+very soon, with perfect impartiality and quite indiscriminately, began
+to hiss famous and obscure virtuosi alike in their performance of any
+concerto, whether it was splendid or detestable. Nothing found favour
+with them--neither the playing of Paderewski, nor the music of
+Saint-Saëns and the great masters. The management of the concerts went
+its own way and tried in vain to put out the disturbers, and to forbid
+them entry to the concert-room; and the battle went on for a long time,
+and critics were drawn into it. But in spite of its ridiculous excesses,
+and the barbarism of the methods by which the parterre expressed its
+opinions, that quarrel is not without interest. It proved how a passion
+and enthusiasm for music had been roused in France; and the passion,
+though unjust in its expression, was more fruitful and of far greater
+worth than indifference.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+3. _The Schola Cantorum_
+
+The Lamoureux Concerts had served their purpose, and, in their turn,
+their heroic mission came to an end. They had forced Wagner on Paris;
+and Paris, as always, had overshot the mark, and could swear by no one
+but Wagner. French musicians were translating Gounod's or Massenet's
+ideas into Wagner's style; Parisian critics repeated Wagner's theories
+at random, whether they understood them or not--generally when they did
+not understand them. A reaction was inevitable directly Paris was well
+saturated with Wagner; and it came about in 1890, among a chosen few,
+some of whom had been, and were even still, under Wagner's influence. It
+was at first only a mild reaction, and showed itself in a return to the
+classics of the past and to the great primitives in music.
+
+There had been several attempts in this direction before, but none of
+them had succeeded in making any impression on the mass of the public.
+In 1843, Joseph Napoléon Ney, Prince of Moszkowa, founded in Paris a
+society for the performance of religious and classical vocal music. This
+society, which the Prince himself conducted in his own house, set itself
+to perform the vocal works of the sixteenth and seventeenth
+centuries.[221]
+
+[Footnote 221: It published, in eleven volumes, the ancient works that
+it performed. Before this experiment there had been the _Concerts
+historiques de Fétis_, preceded by lectures, which were inaugurated in
+1832, and failed; and these were followed by Amédée Méréaux's _Concerts
+historiques_ in 1842-1844.]
+
+In 1853, Louis Niedermeyer founded in Paris an _École de musique
+religieuse et classique_, which strove "to form singers, organists,
+choir-masters, and composers of music, by the study of the classic works
+of the great masters of the fifteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth
+centuries." This school, subsidised by the State, was a nursery for
+some real musicians. It reckoned among its pupils some noted composers,
+conductors, organists, and historians; among others, M. Gabriel Fauré,
+M. André Messager, M. Eugène Gigout, and M. Henry Expert. M. Saint-Saëns
+was a professor there, and became its president. Nearly five hundred
+organists, choir-masters, and professors of music of the Conservatoire
+and other French colleges were trained there. But this school, serious
+in intention, and a refuge for the classic spirit in the midst of the
+prevailing bad taste, did not trouble itself about influencing the
+public, and, in fact, almost ignored it.
+
+Lamoureux attempted in 1873 to perform the great choral works of Bach
+and Händel; and in 1878 the celebrated French organist, M. Alexandre
+Guilmant, ventured to give concerts at the Trocadéro for the organ and
+orchestra, which were devoted to religious music of the seventeenth and
+eighteenth centuries. But the deplorable acoustics of the concert-room
+had a prejudicial effect on the works that were performed there; and the
+public did not respond very warmly to M. Guilmant's efforts, and seemed
+from the first only to find an historical interest in the masterpieces,
+and to miss their depth and life altogether.
+
+Then a pupil of Franck's, M. Henry Expert, who began his admirable works
+on Musical History in 1882, laid the foundation of the _Société J.S.
+Bach_, in order to spread the knowledge of ancient music written between
+the twelfth and eighteenth centuries. And he succeeded in interesting
+in his undertaking, not only the principal French musicians, such as
+César Franck, Saint-Saëns, and Gounod, but also foreigners, such as Hans
+von Bülow, Tschaikowsky, Grieg, Sgambati, and Gevaert. Unhappily this
+society never got farther than arranging what it wanted to do, and only
+sketched out the plans that were realised later by Charles Bordes.
+
+The general public were not really interested in the art of the old
+musicians until the _Association des Chanteurs de Saint-Gervais_ was
+founded in 1892 by Charles Bordes, the choirmaster of the church of
+Saint-Gervais. The immediate success and the noisy renown of the Society
+were due to other things besides the talent of its conductor, who
+combined with a lively artistic intelligence both common-sense and
+energy and a remarkable gift for organisation--it was due partly to the
+help of favourable circumstances, partly to the surfeit of Wagnerism, of
+which I have just spoken, and partly to the birth of a new religious
+art, which had sprung up since the death of César Franck round the
+memory of that great musician.
+
+It is not my intention here to write an appreciation of César Franck's
+genius, but it is not possible to understand the musical movement in
+Paris of the last fifteen years if one does not take into account the
+importance of his teaching. The organ class at the Conservatoire, where
+in 1872 Franck succeeded his old master Benoist, was for a long time, as
+M. Vincent d'Indy says, "the true centre for the study of Composition
+at the Conservatoire. Many of his fellow-workers could never bring
+themselves to look upon him as one of themselves, because he had the
+boldness to see in art something other than the means of earning a
+living. Indeed, César Franck was not of them; and they made him feel
+this." But the young students made no mistake about the matter. "At this
+time," M. d'Indy also tells us,[222] "that is to say from 1872 to 1876,
+the three courses of Advanced Musical Composition were given by three
+professors who were not at all fitted for their work. One was Victor
+Massé, a composer of simple light operas and a man with no understanding
+of a symphony, who was very frequently ill and had to entrust his
+teaching to one of his pupils; another was Henri Reber, an oldish
+musician with narrow and dogmatic ideas; and the third was François
+Bazin, who was not capable of distinguishing in his pupil's fugues a
+false answer from a true one, and whose highest title to glory is
+derived from a composition called _Le Voyage en Chine_. So it is not
+surprising that César Franck's teaching, founded on that of Bach and
+Beethoven, but admitting, as well, imagination and all new and liberal
+ideas, did, at that time, draw to him all young minds that had lofty
+ambitions and that were really in love with their art. And so, quite
+unconsciously, the master attracted to himself all the sincere and
+artistic talent that was scattered about the different classes of the
+Conservatoire, as well as that of his outside pupils."
+
+[Footnote 222: The following information was given by M. Vincent d'Indy
+at a lecture held on 20 February, 1903, at the _École des Hautes Études
+sociales_--a lecture which later became a chapter in M. d'Indy's book,
+_César Franck_ (1906).]
+
+Among those who received his direct teaching[223] were Henri Duparc,
+Alexis de Castillon, Vincent d'Indy, Ernest Chausson, Pierre de
+Bréville, Augusta Holmes, Louis de Serres, Charles Bordes, Guy Ropartz,
+and Guillaume Lekeu. And if to these we add the pupils in the organ
+classes, who also came under his influence, we have, among others,
+Samuel Rousseau, Gabriel Pierné, Auguste Chapuis, Paul Vidal, and
+Georges Marty; and also the virtuosi who were for some time intimate
+with him, such as Armand Parent and Eugène Ysaye, to whom Franck
+dedicated his violin sonata. And if one thinks, too, of the artists who,
+though not his pupils, felt his power--artists such as Gabriel Fauré,
+Alexandre Guilmant, Emmanuel Chabrier, and Paul Dukas--one may see that
+nearly the whole musical generation of Paris of that time took its
+inspiration from César Franck. And it was largely with the intention of
+perpetuating his teaching that his pupils, Charles Bordes and Vincent
+d'Indy, and his friend, Alexandre Guilmant, founded in 1894, four years
+after his death, the _Schola Cantorum_, which has kept his memory alive
+ever since.
+
+"Our revered father, Franck," said Vincent d'Indy, in a speech, "is in
+some ways the grandfather of the _Schola Cantorum_; for it is his system
+of teaching that we apply and try to carry on here."[224]
+
+[Footnote 223: A complete list may be found in M. d'Indy's book.]
+
+[Footnote 224 2: _Tribune de Saint-Gervais_, November, 1900.]
+
+The influence of Franck was twofold: it was artistic and moral. On the
+one hand he was, if I may so put it, an admirable professor of musical
+architecture; he founded a school of symphony and chamber-music such as
+France had never had before, which in certain directions was newer and
+more daring than that of the German symphony writers. And, on the other
+hand, he exercised by his own character a memorable influence over all
+those who came into contact with him. His profound faith, that fine,
+indulgent, and calm faith, shone round him like a glory. The Catholic
+party, who were awakening to new life in France just then, tried, after
+his death, to identify his ideals with their own. But this was, as we
+have said elsewhere,[225] to narrow Franck's mind; for its great charm
+lay in its harmonious union of religion and liberty, which never limited
+its artistic sympathies to an exclusive ideal. The composer's son, M.
+Georges César-Franck, has in vain protested against this monopoly of his
+father, and says:
+
+ "According to certain writers, who wish to reduce everything to a
+ dead level and deduce all things from a single cause, César Franck
+ was a mystic whose true domain was religious music. Nothing could
+ be wider of the mark. The public is given to generalisations, and
+ is too easily gulled. They will judge a composer on a single work,
+ or a group of works, and class him once and for all.... In
+ reality, my father was a man of all-round accomplishments. As a
+ finished musician, he was master of every form of composition. He
+ wrote both religious and secular music--melodies, dances,
+ pastorales, oratorios, symphonic poems, symphonies, sonatas, trios,
+ and operas. He did not confine his attention to any particular kind
+ of work to the exclusion of other kinds; he was able to express
+ himself in any way he chose."[226]
+
+
+But as what was really religious in him found itself in agreement with a
+current of thought that was rather powerful at that time, it was
+inevitable that this one side of his genius should be first brought to
+light, and that religious music should be the first to benefit by his
+work. And also one of the early manifestos[227] of the _Schola Cantorum_
+dealt with the reform of sacred music by carrying it back to great
+ancient models; and its first decision was as follows: "Gregorian chant
+shall rest for all time the fountain-head and the base of the Church's
+music, and shall constitute the only model by which it may be truly
+judged."[228]
+
+[Footnote 225: See the Essay on _Vincent d'Indy_.]
+
+[Footnote 226: _Revue d'histoire et de critique musicale_,
+August-September, 1901.]
+
+[Footnote 227: "The _Schola Cantorum_ aims at creating a modern music
+truly worthy of the Church" (First number of the _Tribune de
+Saint-Gervais_, the monthly bulletin of the _Schola Cantorum_, January,
+1895).]
+
+[Footnote 228: The Schola had in mind here the vigorous work of the
+French Benedictines, which had been done in silence for the past fifty
+years; it was thinking, too, of the restoration of the Gregorian chant
+during 1850 and 1860 by Dom Guéranger, the first abbot of Solesmes, a
+work continued by Dom Jausions and Dom Pothier, the abbot of
+Saint-Wandrille, who published in 1883 the _Mélodies Grégoriennes_, the
+_Liber Gradualis_, and the _Liber Antiphonarius_. This work was finally
+brought to a happy conclusion by Dom Schmitt, and Dom Mocqucreau, the
+prior of Solesmes, who in 1889 began his monumental work, the
+_Paléo-graphie Musicals_, of which nine volumes had appeared in 1906.
+This great Benedictine school is an honour to France by the scientific
+work it has lately done in music. The school is at present exiled from
+France.]
+
+They added to this, however, music _à la Palestrina_, and any music
+that conformed to its principles or was inspired by its example. Such
+archaic ideas would certainly never create a new kind of religious
+music, but at least they have helped to restore the old art; and they
+received their official consecration in the famous letter written by
+Pope Pius X on the Re-form of Sacred Music.
+
+The achievement of an artistic ideal so restricted as this would not
+have sufficed, however, to assure the success of the _Schola Cantorum_,
+nor establish its authority with a public that was, whatever people may
+say, only lukewarm in its religion, and that would only interest itself
+in the religious art of other days as it would in a passing fashion. But
+the spirit of curiosity and the meaning of modern life began to weigh
+little by little with the Schola's principles. After singing
+Palestrinian and Gregorian chants at the Church of Saint-Gervais during
+Holy Week, they played Carissimi, Schütz, and the Italian and German
+masters of the seventeenth century. Then came Bach's cantatas; and their
+performance, given by M. Bordes in the Salle d'Harcourt, attracted large
+audiences and started the cult of this master in Paris. Then they sang
+Rameau and Gluck; and, finally, all ancient music, sacred or secular,
+was approved. And so this little school, which had been consecrated to
+the cult of ancient religious music, and had made so modest a
+beginning,[229] developed into a School of Art capable of satisfying
+modern wants; and in 1900, when M. Vincent d'Indy became president of
+the _Schola_, it was decided to move the school into larger premises in
+the Rue Saint-Jacques.
+
+The programme of this new school was explained by M. Vincent d'Indy in
+his Inauguration speech on 2 November, 1900, and showed how he based the
+foundations of musical teaching upon history.
+
+ "Art, in its journey across the ages, is a microcosm which has,
+ like the world itself, successive stages of youth, maturity, and
+ old age; but it never dies--it renews itself perpetually. It is not
+ like a perfect circle; it is like a spiral, and in its growth is
+ always mounting higher. I believe in making students follow the
+ same path that art itself has followed, so that they shall undergo
+ during their term of study the same transformations that music
+ itself has undergone during the centuries. In this way they will
+ come out much better armed for the difficulties of modern art,
+ since they will have lived, so to speak, the life of art, and
+ followed the natural and inevitable order of the forms that made up
+ the different epochs of artistic development."
+
+[Footnote 229: When Charles Bordes opened the first _Schola Cantorum_ in
+the Rue Stanislas he was without help or resources, and had exactly
+thirty-seven francs and fifty centimes in hand. I mention this detail to
+give an idea of the splendidly courageous and confident spirit that
+Charles Bordes possessed.]
+
+M. d'Indy claims that this system may be applied as successfully to
+instrumentalists and singers as to future composers. "For it is as
+profitable for them to know," he says, "how to sing a liturgic monody
+properly, or to be able to play a Corelli sonata in a suitable style, as
+it is for composers to study the structure of a motet or a suite." M.
+d'Indy, moreover, obliged all students, without distinction, to attend
+the lectures on vocal music; and, besides that, he instituted a special
+class to teach the conducting of orchestras--which was something quite
+new to France. His object, as he clearly said, was to give a new form to
+modern music by means of a knowledge of the music of the past.
+
+On this subject he says:
+
+ "Where shall we find the quickening life that will give us fresh
+ forms and formulas? The source is not really difficult to discover.
+ Do not let us seek it anywhere but in the decorative art of the
+ plain-song singers, in the architectural art of the age of
+ Palestrina, and in the expressive art of the great Italians of the
+ seventeenth century. It is there, and _there alone_, that we shall
+ find melodic craft, rhythmic cadences, and a harmonic magnificence
+ that is really new--if our modern spirit can only learn how to
+ absorb their nutritious essence. And so I prescribe for all pupils
+ in the School the careful study of classic forms, because _they
+ alone_ are able to give the elements of a new life to our music,
+ which will be founded on principles that are sane, solid, and
+ trustworthy."[230]
+
+[Footnote 230: _Tribune de Saint-Gervais_, November, 1900.]
+
+This fine and intelligent eclecticism was likely to develop a critical
+spirit, but was rather less adapted to form original personalities. In
+any case, however, it was excellent discipline in the formation of
+musical taste; and, in truth, the _École Supérieure de musique_ of the
+Rue Saint-Jacques became a new Conservatoire, both more modern and more
+learned than the old Conservatoire, and freer, and yet less free,
+because more self-satisfied. The school developed very quickly. From
+having twenty-one pupils in 1896, it had three hundred and twenty in
+1908. Eminent musicians and professors learned in the history and
+science of music taught there, and M. d'Indy himself took the
+Composition classes.[231] And in its short career the _Schola_ may
+already be credited with the training of young composers, such as MM.
+Roussel, Déodat de Séverac, Gustave Bret, Labey, Samazeuilh, R. de
+Castéra, Sérieyx, Alquier, Coindreau, Estienne, Le Flem, and Groz; and
+to these may be added M. d'Indy's private pupils, Witkowski, and one of
+the foremost of modern composers, Alberic Magnard.
+
+
+[Footnote 231: There are actually nine courses of Composition at the
+_Schola_--five for men and four for women. M. d'Indy takes eight of
+them, as well as a mixed class for orchestra.]
+
+Outside the influence that the School exercises by its teaching, its
+propaganda by means of concerts and publications is very active. From
+its foundation up to 1904 it had given two hundred performances in one
+hundred and thirty provincial towns; more than one hundred and fifty
+concerts in Paris, of which fifty were of orchestral and choral music,
+sixty of organ music, and forty of chamber-music. These concerts have
+been well attended by enthusiastic and appreciative audiences, and have
+been a school for public taste. One does not look for perfect execution
+there,[232] but for intelligent interpretations and a thirst for a
+fuller knowledge of the great works of the past. They have revived
+Monteverde's _Orfeo_ and his _Incoronazione di Poppea_, which had been
+forgotten these three centuries; and it was following an interest
+created by repeated performances of Rameau at the _Schola_[233] that
+_Dardanus_ was performed at Dijon under M. d'Indy's direction, _Castor
+et Pollux_ at Montpellier under M. Charles Bordes' direction, and that
+in 1908 the Opera at Paris gave _Hippolyte et Aricie_. Branches of the
+_Schola_ have, been started at Lyons, Marseilles, Bordeaux, Avignon,
+Montpellier, Nancy, Épinal, Montluçon, Saint-Chamond, and
+Saint-Jean-deLuz.[234] A publishing house has been associated with the
+School at Paris; and from this we get Reviews, such as the _Tribune de
+Saint-Gervais_; publications of old music, such as the _Anthologie des
+maîtres religieux primitifs des XVe, XVIe, et XVIIe siècles_, edited by
+Charles Bordes; the _Archives des maîtres de l'orgue des XVIe, XVIIe, et
+XVIIIe siècles_, edited by Alexandre Guilmant and André Pirro; the
+_Concerts spirituels de la Schola_, the new editions of _Orfeo_, and the
+_Incoronazione di Poppea_, edited by M. Vincent d'Indy; and publications
+of modern music, such as the _Collection du chant populaire_, the
+_Répertoire moderne de musique vocale et d'orgue_, and, notably, the
+_Édition mutuelle_, published by the composers themselves, whose
+property it is.
+
+[Footnote 232: The orchestra is mainly composed of pupils; and, by a
+generous arrangement, the financial profits from rehearsals and
+performances are divided among the pupils who take part in them, and
+credited to their account. And so besides the exhibitioners the _Schola_
+has a great number of pupils who are not well off, but who manage by
+these concerts to defray almost the entire expenses of their education
+there. "The concerts serve more especially as aesthetic exercises for
+the pupils, and as a means of according them teaching at small expense
+to themselves." I owe this information and all that precedes it to the
+kindness of M. J. de la Laurencie, the general secretary of the
+_Schola_, whom I should like to thank.]
+
+[Footnote 233: The _Schola_ has even performed, in an open-air theatre,
+Ramcau's _La Guirlande_.]
+
+[Footnote 234: One may add to this list the choral societies of Nantes
+and Besançon, which are bodies of the same order as the _Chanteurs de
+Saint-Gervais_. And we may also attribute to the influence of the
+_Schola_ an independent society, the _Société J.S. Bach_, started in
+Paris by an old _Schola_ pupil, M. Gustave Bret, which, since 1905, has
+devoted itself to the performance of the great works of Bach. It is not
+one of the least merits of the _Schola_ that it has helped to form good
+amateur choirs of the same type as the choral societies of Germany.]
+
+And all this shows such a marvellous activity and gives evidence of such
+whole-hearted enthusiasm that I cannot bring myself to join issue with
+the critics who have lately attacked the _Schola_, though their attacks
+have been in some degree merited. Pettiness is to be found even in great
+artists, and imperfection in every human work; and defects reveal
+themselves most clearly after a victory has been won. The _Schola_ has
+not escaped the critical periods that accompany growth, through which
+every work must pass if it is to triumph and endure. Without doubt, the
+sudden illness and premature retirement of the founder of the work, M.
+Charles Bordes, deprived the _Schola_ of one of its most active
+forces--a force that was perhaps necessary for the school's successful
+development. For this man had been the school's life and soul, and
+retired, worn out by the heavy labours which he had borne alone during
+ten years.[235]
+
+[Footnote 235: M. Charles Bordes did not even then give up his labours
+altogether. Though obliged to retire to the south of France for his
+health's sake, he founded, in November, 1905, the _Schola_ of
+Montpellier. This _Schola_ has given about fifteen concerts a year, and
+has performed some of Bach's cantatas, scenes from Rameau's and Gluck's
+operas, Franck's oratorios, and Monteverde's _Orfeo_. In 1906 M. Bordes
+organised an open-air performance of Rameau's _Guirlande_. In January,
+1908, he produced _Castor et Pollux_ at the Montpellier theatre. The
+man's activity was incredible, and nothing seemed to tire him. He was
+planning to start a dramatic training-school at Montpellier for the
+production of seventeenth and eighteenth century operas, when he died,
+in November, 1909, at the age of forty-four, and so deprived French art
+of one of its best and most unselfish servants.]
+
+But M. d'Indy, like a courageous apostle, has continued the direction of
+the _Schola_ with a firm hand and unwearying care, despite his varied
+activities as composer, professor, and _Kapellmeister_; and he is one of
+the surest and most reliable guides for a young school of French music.
+And if his mind is rather given to abstractions, and his moods are
+sometimes rather combative, and certain prejudices (which are not always
+musical ones) make him lean towards ideals of reason and immovable
+faith--and if at times his followers unconsciously distort his ideas,
+and try to dam the stream which flows from life itself, I am convinced
+it is only the passing evidence of a reaction, perhaps a natural one,
+against the exaggerations they have encountered, and that the _Schola_
+will always know how to avoid the rocks where revolutionaries of the
+past have run aground and become the conservatives of the morrow. I hope
+the _Schola_ will never grow into the kind of aristocratic school that
+builds walls about itself, but will always open wide its doors and
+welcome every new force in music, even to such as have ideals opposed to
+its own. Its future renown and the well-being of French art can only
+thus be maintained.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+4. _The Chamber-Music Societies_
+
+
+On parallel lines with the big symphony concerts and the new
+_conservatoires_, societies were formed to spread the knowledge of, and
+form a taste for, chamber-music. This music, so common in Germany, was
+almost unknown in Paris before 1870. There was nothing but the Maurin
+Quartette, which gave five or six concerts every winter in the Salle
+Pleyel, and played Beethoven's last quartettes there. But these
+performances only attracted a small number of artists;[236] and so far
+as the general public was concerned the _Société des derniers quartuors
+de Beethoven_ had the reputation for devoting itself to a singular and
+incomprehensible kind of music that had been written by a deaf man.
+
+[Footnote 236: The quality of the audience atoned, it is true, for its
+small numbers. Berlioz used to come to these concerts with his friends,
+Damcke and Stephen Heller; and it was after one of these performances,
+when he had been very stirred by an _adagio_ in the E flat quartette,
+that he burst out with, "What a man! He could do everything, and the
+others nothing!"]
+
+The true founder of chamber-music concerts in Paris was M. Émile
+Lemoine, who started the society called _La Trompette_. He has given us
+a history of his work in the _Revue Musicale_ (15 October, 1903). He was
+an engineer at the École Poly-technique; and after he had left school he
+formed, about 1860, a quartette society of earnest amateurs, though they
+were not very skilled performers. This little society continued to meet
+regularly, and after perfecting itself little by little, finally opened
+its doors to the general public, which attended the concerts in
+gradually increasing numbers. Then _La Trompette_ came into being. It
+prospered from the day that M. Saint-Saëns--who was at that time a young
+man--made its acquaintance. He was pleased with these gatherings, and
+became an intimate friend of Lemoine; and he interested himself in the
+society, and induced other celebrated artists to take an interest in it,
+too. Among its early friends were MM. Alphonse Duvernoy, Diémer, Pugno,
+Delsart, Breitner, Delaborde, Ch. de Bériot, Fissot, Marsick, Loëb,
+Rémy, and Holmann. With such patronage, _La Trompette_ soon acquired
+fame in the musical world, and "it represented in classical
+chamber-music the semi-official part played by the _Société des Concerts
+du Conservatoire_ in classical orchestral music. Rubinstein, Paderewski,
+Eugène d'Albert, Hans von Bülow, Arthur de Greef, Mme. Essipoff, and
+Mme. Menter, never missed getting a hearing there when their tours led
+them to Paris; and to figure on the programme of _La Trompette_ was like
+the consecration of an artist." Such a society naturally contributed a
+great deal to the spread of classical chamber-music in Paris. M. Lemoine
+writes:
+
+ "Classical music was so little known to the musical public that
+ even the audiences of _La Trompette_, cultured as they were, did
+ not at all understand Beethoven's last quartettes; and my friends
+ jeered at my taste for enigmas. This only made me the more
+ determined that they should hear one of these great works at each
+ concert. And sometimes I would give the same work at two or three
+ concerts running if I thought it had not been properly appreciated.
+ In that case I used to say before the performance: 'It seems to me
+ that such-and-such a work has not been quite understood at the last
+ hearing; and as it is a really marvellous work, I am sure that your
+ feeling is that you do not know it sufficiently. So I have included
+ it in to-day's programme.'"[237]
+
+[Footnote 237: The name, _La Trompette_, was also the pretext for
+embellishing chamber-music, by introducing the trumpet among the other
+instruments. To this end M. Saint-Saëns wrote his fine septette for
+piano, trumpet, two violins, viola, violoncello, and double bass; and M.
+Vincent d'Indy his romantic suite in D for trumpet, two flutes, and
+string instruments.]
+
+These performances of sonatas, trios, and quartettes, were attentively
+listened to by an audience of five or six hundred persons, the greater
+part of them cultured people, students from the poly-technics and
+universities, who formed the kernel of a very discerning and
+enthusiastic public for chamber-music.
+
+By degrees, following the example of Émile Lemoine, other quartette
+societies were formed; and at present they are so numerous that it would
+be difficult to name them all. And then there sprang up the same spirit
+of intelligent curiosity that had induced the French _Kapellmeister_ of
+the symphony concert societies sometimes to introduce their German and
+Russian colleagues as conductors; and for this purpose the _Nouvelle
+Société Philharmonique de Paris_ was founded, in 1901, on the initiative
+of Dr. Fränkel and under the direction of M. Emmanuel Rey, to give a
+hearing in Paris to the principal foreign quartette players. And the
+profit was as great in one case as in the other; and the friendly
+rivalry between French quartette players and those of other countries
+bore good fruit, and gave us a fuller understanding of the inner
+character of German music.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+5. _Musical Learning and the University_
+
+
+While this movement was going on in the artistic world, scholars were
+taking their share in it, and music was beginning to invade the
+University.
+
+But the thing was brought about with some difficulty; for among these
+serious people music did not count as a serious study. Music was thought
+of as an agreeable art, a social accomplishment, and the idea of making
+it the subject of scientific teaching must have been received with some
+amusement. Even up to the present time, general histories of Art have
+refused to accord music a place, so little was thought of it; and other
+arts were indignant at being mentioned in the same breath with it. This
+is illustrated in the eternal dispute among M. Jourdain's masters, when
+the fencing-master says:
+
+ "And from this we know what great consideration is due to us in a
+ State; and how the science of Fencing is far above all useless
+ sciences, such as dancing and music."
+
+The first lectures on Aesthetics and Musical History were not given in
+France until after the war of 1870.[238] They were then given at the
+Conservatoire, and, until quite lately, were the only lectures on Music
+of any importance in Paris. Since 1878 they have been given in a very
+excellent way by M. Bourgault-Ducoudray; but, as is only natural in a
+school of music, their character is artistic rather than scientific, and
+takes the form of a sort of illustration of the practical work that is
+done at the Conservatoire. And as for Parisian musical criticism as a
+whole, it had, thirty years ago, an almost exclusively literary
+character, and was without technical precision or historical knowledge.
+
+[Footnote 238: On 12 September, 1871, at the suggestion of Ambroise
+Thomas. The first lecturer was Barbereau, who, however, only lectured
+for a year. He was succeeded by Gautier, Professor of Harmony and
+Accompaniment, who in turn was replaced, in 1878, by M.
+Bourgault-Ducoudray.]
+
+There again, on the territory of science, as on that of art, a new
+generation of musicians had sprung up since the war, a group of men
+versed in the history and aesthetics of music such as France had never
+known before. About 1890 the result of their labours began to appear.
+Henry Expert published his fine work, _Maîtres Musiciens de la
+Renaissance_, in which he revived a whole century of French music.
+Alexander Guilmant and André Pirro brought to daylight the works of our
+seventeenth and eighteenth century organists. Pierre Aubry studied
+mediaeval music. The admirable publications of the Benedictines of
+Solesmes awoke at the _Schola_ and in the world outside it a taste for
+the study of religious music. Michel Brenet attacked all epochs of
+musical history, and produced, by his solid learning, some fine work.
+Julien Tiersot began the history of French folk-song, and rescued the
+music of the Revolution from oblivion. The publisher Durand set to work
+on his great editions of Rameau and Couperin. Towards 1893 the study of
+Music was introduced at the Sorbonne by some young professors, who made
+the subject the theses for their doctor's degree.[239]
+
+[Footnote 239: The first three theses on Music accepted at the Sorbonne
+were those of M. Jules Combarieu on _The Relationship of Poetry and
+Music_, of M. Romain Holland on _The Beginnings of Opera before Lully
+and Scarlatti_, and of M. Maurice Emmanuel on _Greek Orchestics_. There
+followed, several years afterwards, M. Louis Laloy's _Aristoxenus of
+Tarento and Greek Music_ and M. Jules Écorcheville's _Musical
+Aesthetics, from Lully to Rameau_ and _French Instrumental Music of the
+Seventeenth Century_, M. André Pirro's _Aesthetics of Johann Sebastian
+Bach_, and M. Charles Lalo's _Sketch of Scientific Musical
+Aesthetics_.]
+
+This movement with regard to musical study grew rapidly; and the first
+International Congress of Music, held in Paris at the time of the
+Universal Exhibition of 1900, gave historians of music an opportunity of
+realising their influence. In a few years, teaching about music was to
+be had everywhere. At first there were the free lectures of M. Lionel
+Dauriac and M. Georges Houdard at the Sorbonne, those of MM. Aubry,
+Gastoué, Pirro, and Vincent d'Indy at the _Schola_ and the _Institut
+Catholique_; and then, at the beginning of 1902, there was the little
+Faculty of Music of the _École des Hautes Études sociales_, making a
+centre for the efforts of French scholars of music; and, in 1900, two
+official courses of lectures on Musical History and Aesthetics were
+given at the College de France and the Sorbonne.
+
+The progress of musical criticism was just as rapid. Professors of
+faculties, old pupils of the École Normale Supérieure, or the École des
+Chartes, such as Henri Lichtenberger, Louis Laloy, and Pierre Aubrey,
+examined works of the past, and even of the present, by the exact
+methods of historical criticism. Choir-masters and organists of great
+erudition, such as Andre Pirro and Gastoué, and composers like Vincent
+d'Indy, Dukas, Debussy, and some others, analysed their art with the
+confidence that the intimate knowledge of its practice brings. A
+perfect efflorescence of works on music appeared. A galaxy of
+distinguished writers and a public were found to support two separate
+collections of Biographies of Musicians (which were issued at the same
+time by different publishers), as well as five or six good musical
+journals of a scientific character, some of which rivalled the best in
+Germany. And, finally, the French section of the _Société Internationale
+de Musique_, which was founded in 1899 in Berlin to establish
+communication between the scholars of all countries, found so favourable
+a ground with us that the number of its adherents in Paris alone is now
+over one hundred.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+6. _Music and the People_
+
+Thus music had almost come back to its own, as far as the higher kind of
+teaching and the intellectual world were concerned. It remained for a
+place to be found for it in other kinds of teaching; for there, and
+especially in secondary education, its advance was less sure. It
+remained for us to make it enter into the life of the nation and into
+the people's education. This was a difficult task, for in France art has
+always had an aristocratic character; and it was a task in which neither
+the State nor musicians were very interested. The Republic still
+continued to regard music as something outside the people. There had
+even been opposition shown during the last thirty years towards any
+attempt at popular musical education. In the old days of the Pasdeloup
+concerts one could pay seventy-five centimes for the cheapest places,
+and have a seat for that; but at some of the symphony concerts to-day
+the cheapest seats are two and four francs. And so the people that
+sometimes came to the Pasdeloup concerts never come at all to the big
+concerts to-day.
+
+And that is why one should applaud the enterprise of Victor Charpentier,
+who, in March, 1905, founded a Symphonic Society of amateurs called
+_L'Orchestre_, to give free hearings for the benefit of the people. And
+in that Paris, where forty years ago one would have had a good deal of
+trouble to get together two or three amateur quartettes, Victor
+Charpentier has been able to count on one hundred and fifty good
+performers,[240] who under his direction, or that of Saint-Saëns or
+Gabriel Fauré, have already given seventeen free concerts, of which ten
+were given at the Trocadéro.[241] It is to be hoped that the State will
+help forward such a generous work for the people in a rather more
+practical way than it has done up till now.[242]
+
+[Footnote 240: There are ninety violins, fifteen violas, and fifteen
+violoncellos. Unfortunately it is much more difficult to get recruits
+for the wood wind and brass.]
+
+[Footnote 241: They have performed classical music of composers like
+Bach, Händel, Gluck, Rameau, and Beethoven; and modern music of
+composers like Berlioz, Saint-Saëns, Dukas, etc. This Society has just
+installed itself in the ancient chapel of the Dominicans of the
+Faubourg-Saint-Honoré, who have given them the use of it.]
+
+[Footnote 242: Of late years there has been a veritable outburst of
+concerts at popular prices--some of them in imitation of the German
+_Restaurationskonzerte_, such as the Concerts-Rouge, the
+Concerts-Touche, etc., where classical and modern symphony music may be
+heard. These concerts are increasing fast, and have great success among
+a public that is almost exclusively _bourgeois_, but they are yet a long
+way behind the popular performances of Händel in London, where places
+may be had for sixpence and threepence.
+
+I do not attach very much importance to the courageous, though not
+always very intelligent movement of the Universités Populaires, where
+since 1886 a collection of amateurs, of fashionable people and artists,
+meet to make themselves heard, and pretend to initiate the people into
+what are sometimes the most complicated and aristocratic works of a
+classic or decadent art. While honouring this propaganda--whose ardour
+has now abated somewhat--one must say that it has shown more good-will
+than common-sense. The people do not need amusing, still less should
+they be bored; what they need is to learn something about music. This is
+not always easy; for it is not noisy deeds we want, but patience and
+self-sacrifice. Good intentions are not enough. One knows the final
+failure of the _Conservatoire populaire de Mimi Pinson_, started by
+Gustave Charpentier, for giving musical education to the work-girls of
+Paris.]
+
+Attempts have been made at different times to found a _Théâtre Lyrique
+Populaire_. But up to the present time none has succeeded. The first
+attempts were made in 1847. M. Carvalho's old Théâtre-Lyrique was never
+a financial success, though quite distinguished performances of operas
+were given there, such as Gounod's _Faust_ and Gluck's _Orfeo_, with
+Mme. Viardot as an interpreter and Berlioz as conductor; and the
+directors who followed Carvalho--Rety, Pasdeloup, etc.--did not succeed
+any better. In 1875 Vizentini took over the Gaîté, with a grant of two
+hundred thousand francs and excellent artists; but he had to give it up.
+Since then all sorts of other schemes have been tried by Viollet-le-Duc,
+Guimet, Lamoureux, Melchior de Vogüé and Julien Goujon, Gabriel Parisot,
+Colonne and Milliet, Deville, Lagoanère, Corneille, Gailhard, and
+Carré; but none of them achieved any success. At the moment, a new
+attempt is being made; and this time the thing seems to show every sign
+of being a success.
+
+But whatever may be the educational value of the theatre and concerts,
+they are not complete enough in themselves for the people. To make their
+influence deep and enduring it must be combined with teaching. Music, no
+less than every other expression of thought, has no use for the
+illiterate.
+
+So in this case there was everything to be done. There was no other
+popular teaching but that of the numerous Galin-Paris-Chevé schools.
+These schools have rendered great service, and are continuing to render
+it; but their simplified methods are not without drawbacks and gaps.
+Their purpose is to teach the people a musical language different from
+that of cultured people; and although it may not be as difficult as is
+supposed to go from a knowledge of the one to a knowledge of the other,
+it is always wrong to raise up a fresh barrier--however small it
+is--between the cultured people and the other people, who in our own
+country are already too widely separated.
+
+And besides, it is not enough to know one's letters; one must also have
+books to read. What books have the people had?--so far songs sung at the
+café concerts and the stupid repertoires of choral societies. The
+folk-song had practically disappeared, and was not yet ready for
+re-birth; for the populace, even more readily than the cultured people,
+are inclined to blush at anything which suggests "popularity."[243]
+
+[Footnote 243: M. Maurice Buchor relates an anecdote which typifies what
+I mean. "I begged the conductor of a good men's choral society," he
+says, "to have one of Händel's choruses sung. But he seemed to hesitate.
+I had made the suggestion tentatively, and then tried to enlarge on the
+sincerity and breadth of its musical idea. 'Ah, very good,' he said, 'if
+you really want to hear it, it is easily done; but I was afraid that
+perhaps it was rather too popular.'" (_Poème de la Vie Humaine_:
+Introduction to the Second Series, 1905.) One may add to this the words
+of a professor of singing in a primary school for Higher Education in
+Paris: "Folk-music--well, it is very good for the provinces." (Quoted by
+Buchor in the Introduction to the Second Series of the _Poème_, 1902.)]
+
+It is nearly twenty-five years since M. Bourgault-Ducoudray, who was one
+of the people who fostered the growth of choral singing in France,
+pointed out, in an account of the teaching of singing, the usefulness of
+making children sing the old popular airs of the French provinces, and
+of getting the teachers to make collections of them. In 1895, as the
+result of a meeting organised by the _Correspondance générale de
+l'Instruction primaire_, delightful collections of folk-songs were
+distributed in the schools. The melodies were taken from old airs
+collected by M. Julien Tiersot, and M. Maurice Buchor had put some fresh
+and sparkling verses to them. "M. Buchor," I wrote at the time, "will
+enjoy a pleasure not common to poets of our day: his songs will soar up
+into the open air, like the lark in his _Chanson de labour_. The
+populace may even recognise its own spirit in them, and one day take
+possession of them, as if they were of their own contriving."[244] This
+prediction has been almost completely realised, and M. Buchor's songs
+are now the property of all the people of France.
+
+[Footnote 244: Taken from the _Supplement à la Correspondance générale
+de l'Instruction primaire_, 15 December, 1894.]
+
+But M. Buchor did not remain content to be a poet of popular song.
+During the last twelve years he has made, with untiring energy, a tour
+of all the Écoles Normales in France, returning several times to places
+where he found signs of good vocal ability. In each school he made the
+pupils sing his songs--in unison, or in two or three parts, sometimes
+massing the boys' and girls' schools of one town together. His ambition
+grew with his success; and to the folk-song melodies[245] he began
+gradually to add pieces of classical music. And to impress the music
+better on the singers he changed the existing words, and tried to find
+others, which by their moral and poetic beauty more exactly translated
+the musical feeling.[246]
+
+[Footnote 245: Three series of these _Chants populaires pour les Écoles_
+have already been published.]
+
+[Footnote 246: I reserve my opinion, from an artist's point of view, on
+this plagiarising of the words of songs. On principle I condemn it
+absolutely. But, in this case, it is Hobson's choice. _Primum vivere,
+deinde philosophari_. If our contemporary musicians really wished the
+people to sing, they would have written songs for them; but they seem to
+have no desire to achieve honour that way. So there is nothing else to
+be done but to have recourse to the musicians of other days; and even
+there the choice is very limited. For France formerly, like the France
+of to-day, had very few musicians who had any understanding of a great
+popular art. Berlioz came nearest to understanding the meaning of it;
+and he is not yet public property, so his airs cannot be used. It is
+curious, and rather sad, that out of eighty pieces chosen by M. Buchor
+only nine of them are French; and this is reckoning the Italians, Lully
+and Cherubini, as Frenchmen. M. Buchor has had to go to German classical
+musicians almost entirely, and, generally speaking, his choice has been
+a happy one. With a sure instinct he has given the preference to popular
+geniuses like Händel and Beethoven. We may ask why he did not keep their
+words; but we must remember that at any rate they had to be translated;
+and though it may seem rash to change the subject of a musical
+masterpiece, it is certain that M. Buchor's clever adaptations have
+resulted in driving the fine thoughts of Händel and Schubert and Mozart
+and Beethoven into the memories of the French people, and making them
+part of their lives. Had they heard the same music at a concert they
+would probably not have been very much moved. And that makes M. Buchor
+in the right. Let the French people enrich themselves with the musical
+treasures of Germany until the time comes when they are able to create a
+music of their own! This is a kind of peaceful conquest to which our art
+is accustomed. "Now then, Frenchmen," as Du Bellay used to say, "walk
+boldly up to that fine old Roman city, and decorate (as you have done
+more than once) your temples and altars with its spoils." Besides, let
+us remember that the German masters of the eighteenth century, whose
+words M. Buchor has plagiarised, did not hesitate to plagiarise
+themselves; and in turning the Berceuse of the _Oratorio de Noël_ into a
+_Sainte famille humaine_, M. Buchor has respected the musical ideas of
+Bach much more than Bach himself did when he turned it into a _Dialogue
+between Hercules and Pleasure_.]
+
+And at last he composed and grouped together twenty-four poems in his
+_Poème de la Vie humaine_[247]--fine odes and songs, written for classic
+airs and choruses, a vast repertory of the people's joys and sorrows,
+fitting the momentous hours of family or public life. With a people that
+has ancient musical traditions, as Germany has, music is the vehicle for
+the words and impresses them in the heart; but in France's case it is
+truer to say that the words have brought the music of Händel and
+Beethoven into the hearts of French school-children. The great thing is
+that the music has really got hold of them, and that now one may hear
+the provincial Écoles Normales performing choruses from _Fidelio, The
+Messiah_, Schumann's _Faust_, or Bach cantatas.[248] The honour of this
+remarkable achievement, which no one could have believed possible twenty
+years ago, belongs almost entirely to M. Maurice Buchor.[249]
+
+[Footnote 247: The _Poème_ has been published in four parts:--I. _De la
+naissance au mariage_ ("From Birth to Marriage"); II. _La Cité_ ("The
+City"); III. _De l'age viril jusqu'à la mort_ ("From Manhood to Death");
+IV. _L'Idéal_ ("Ideals"). 1900-1906.]
+
+[Footnote 248: The last chorus of _Fidelio_ has been recently sung by
+one hundred and seventy school-children at Douai; a grand chorus from
+_The Messiah_ by the Écoles Normales of Angoulême and Valence; and the
+great choral scene and the last part of Schumann's _Faust_ by the two
+Écoles Normales of Limoges. At Valence, performances are given every
+year in the theatre there before an audience of between eight hundred
+and a thousand teachers.
+
+Outside the schools, especially in the North, a certain number of
+teachers of both sexes have formed choral societies among work-girls and
+co-operative societies, such as _La Fraternelle_ at Saint Quentin.
+
+In a general way one may say that M. Maurice Buchor's campaign has
+especially succeeded in departments like that of Aisne and Drôme, where
+the ground has been prepared by the Academy Inspector. Unhappily in many
+districts the movement receives a lively opposition from music-teachers,
+who do not approve of this mnemotechnical way of learning poetry with
+music, without any instruction in solfeggio or musical science. And it
+is quite evident that this method would have its defects if it were a
+question of training musicians. But it is really a matter of training
+people who have some music in them; and so the musicians must not be too
+fastidious. I hope that great musicians will one day spring from this
+good ground--musicians more human than those of our own time, musicians
+whose music will be rooted in their hearts and in their country.]
+
+[Footnote 249: We must not forget M. Bourgault-Ducoudray, who was his
+forerunner with his _Chants de Fontenoy_, collections of songs for the
+Écoles Normales.]
+
+M. Buchor's endeavours have been the most extensive and the most
+fruitful, but he is not alone in individual effort. There was, twenty
+years ago, in the suburbs of Paris and in the provinces, a large number
+of well-meaning people who devoted themselves to the work of musical
+education with sincerity and splendid enthusiasm. But their good works
+were too isolated, and were swamped by the apathy of the people about
+them; though sometimes they kindled little fires of love and
+understanding in art, which only needed coaxing in order to burn
+brightly; and even their less happy efforts generally succeeded in
+lighting a few sparks, which were left smouldering in people's
+hearts.[250]
+
+At length, as a result of these individual efforts, the State began to
+show an interest in this educational movement, although it had for so
+long stood apart from it.[251] It discovered, in its turn, the
+educational value of singing. A musical test was instituted at the
+examination for the _Brevet supérieur_[252] which made the study of
+solfeggio a more serious matter in the Écoles Normales. In 1903 an
+endeavour was made to organise the teaching of music in the schools and
+colleges in a more rational way.[253]
+
+[Footnote 250: Mention must especially be made of little groups of young
+students, pupils of the Universities or the larger schools, who are
+devoting themselves at present to the moral and musical instruction of
+the people. Such an effort, made more than a year ago at Vaugirard,
+resulted in the _Manécanterie des petits chanteurs de la Croix de bois_,
+a small choir of the children of the people, who in the poor parishes go
+from one church to another singing Gregorian and Palestrinian music.]
+
+[Footnote 251: It is hardly necessary to recall the unfortunate statute
+of 15 March, 1850, which says: "Primary instruction _may_ comprise
+singing."]
+
+[Footnote 252: By the decree of 4 August, 1905. At the same time, a
+programme and pedagogic instructions were issued. The importance of
+musical dictation and the usefulness of the Galin methods for beginners
+were urged. Let us hope that the State will decide officially to support
+M. Buchor's endeavours, and that it will gradually introduce into
+schools M. Jacques-Delacroze's methods of rhythmic gymnastics, which
+have produced such astonishing results in Switzerland.]
+
+[Footnote 253: M. Chaumié's suggestion. See the _Revue Musicale_, 15
+July, 1903.]
+
+In 1904, following the suggestions of M. Saint-Saëns and M.
+Bourgault-Ducoudray, class-singing was incorporated with other subjects
+in the programme of teaching,[254] and a free school of choral singing
+was started in Paris under the honorary chairmanship of M. Henry Marcel,
+director of the Beaux-Arts, and under the direction of M. Radiguer.
+Quite lately a choral society for young school-girls has been formed,
+with the Vice-Provost as president and a membership of from six to seven
+hundred young girls, who since 1906 have given an annual concert under
+the direction of M. Gabriel Pierné. And lastly, at the end of 1907, an
+association of professors was started to undertake the teaching of music
+in the institutions of public instruction; its chairman was the
+Inspector-General, M. Gilles, and its honorary presidents were M. Liard
+and M. Saint-Saëns. Its object is to aid the progress of musical
+instruction by establishing a centre to promote friendly relations among
+professors of music; by centralising their interests and studies; by
+organising a circulating library of music and a periodical magazine in
+which questions relating to music may be discussed; by establishing
+communication between French professors and foreign professors; and by
+seeking to bring together professors of music and professors in other
+branches of public teaching.
+
+[Footnote 254: _Revue Musicale_, December 15, 1903, and 1 and 15
+January, 1904.]
+
+All this is not much, and we are yet terribly behindhand, especially as
+regards secondary teaching, which is considered less important than
+primary teaching.[255] But we are scrambling out of an abyss of
+ignorance, and it is something to have the desire to get out of it. We
+must remember that Germany has not always been in its present plethoric
+state of musical prosperity. The great choral societies only date from
+the end of the eighteenth century. Germany in the time of Bach was
+poor--if not poorer--in means for performing choral works than France
+to-day. Bach's only executants were his pupils at the Thomasschule at
+Leipzig, of which barely a score knew how to sing.[256] And now these
+people gather together for the great _Männergesangsfeste_ (choral
+festivals) and the _Musikfeste_ (music festivals) of Imperial Germany.
+
+[Footnote 255: "In this," says M. Buchor, "as in many other things, the
+children of the people set an example to the children of the middle
+classes." That is true; but one must not blame the middle-class children
+so much as those in authority, who, "in this, as in many other things,"
+have not fulfilled their duties.]
+
+[Footnote 256: _The Passion according to St. Matthew_ was given first of
+all by two little choirs, consisting of from twelve to sixteen students,
+including the soloists.]
+
+Let us hope on and persevere. The main thing is that a start has been
+made; the thing that remains is to have patience and--persistence.
+
+
+THE PRESENT CONDITION OF FRENCH MUSIC
+
+We have seen how the musical education of France is going on in
+theatres, in concerts, in schools, by lectures and by books; and the
+Parisian's rather restless desire for knowledge seems to be satisfied
+for the moment. The mind of Paris has made a journey--a hasty journey,
+it is true through the music of other countries and other times,[257]
+and is now becoming introspective. After a mad enthusiasm over
+discoveries in strange lands, music and musical criticism have regained
+their self-possession and their jealous love of independence. A very
+decided reaction against foreign music has been shown since the time of
+the Universal Exhibition of 1900. This movement is not unconnected,
+consciously or unconsciously, with the nationalist train of thought,
+which was stirred up in France, and especially in Paris, somewhere about
+the same time. But it is also a natural development in the evolution of
+music. French music felt new vigour springing up within her, and was
+astonished at it; her days of preparation were over, and she aspired to
+fly alone; and, in accordance with the eternal rule of history, the
+first use she made of her newly-acquired strength was to defy her
+teachers. And this revolt against foreign influences was directed--one
+had expected it--against the strongest of the influences--the influence
+of German music as personified by Wagner. Two discussions in magazines,
+in 1903 and 1904, brought this state of mind curiously to light: one was
+an enquiry held by M. Jacques Morland in the _Mercure de France_
+(January, 1903) as to _The Influence of German Music in France_; and the
+other was that of M. Paul Landormy in the _Revue Bleue_ (March and
+April, 1904) as to _The Present Condition of French Music_. The first
+was like a shout of deliverance, and was not without exaggeration and a
+good deal of ingratitude; for it represented French musicians and
+critics throwing off Wagner's influence because it had had its day; the
+second set forth the theories of the new French school, and declared the
+independence of that school.
+
+[Footnote 257: It is hardly necessary to mention the curious attraction
+that some of our musicians are beginning to feel for the art of
+civilisations that are quite opposed to those of the West. Slowly and
+quietly the spirit of the Far East is insinuating itself into European
+music.]
+
+For several years the leader of the young school, M. Claude Debussy,
+has, in his writings in the _Revue Blanche_ and _Gil Blas_, attacked
+Wagnerian art. His personality is very French--capricious, poetic, and
+_spirituelle_, full of lively intelligence, heedless, independent,
+scattering new ideas, giving vent to paradoxical caprice, criticising
+the opinions of centuries with the teasing impertinence of a little
+street boy, attacking great heroes of music like Gluck, Wagner, and
+Beethoven, upholding only Bach, Mozart, and Weber, and loudly professing
+his preference for the old French masters of the eighteenth century. But
+in spite of this he is bringing back to French music its true nature and
+its forgotten ideals--its clearness, its elegant simplicity, its
+naturalness, and especially its grace and plastic beauty. He wishes
+music to free itself from all literary and philosophic pretensions,
+which have burdened German music in the nineteenth century (and perhaps
+have always done so); he wishes music to get away from the rhetoric
+which has been handed down to us through the centuries, from its heavy
+construction and precise orderliness, from its harmonic and rhythmic
+formulas, and the exercises of oratorical embroidery. He wishes that
+all about it shall be painting and poetry; that it shall explain its
+true feeling in a clear and direct way; and that melody, harmony, and
+rhythm shall develop broadly along the lines of inner laws, and not
+after the pretended laws of some intellectual arrangement. And he
+himself preaches by example in his _Pelléas et Mélisande_, and breaks
+with all the principles of the Bayreuth drama, and gives us the model of
+the new art of his dreams. And on all sides discerning and well-informed
+critics, such as M. Pierre Lalo of _Le Temps_, M. Louis Laloy of the
+_Revue Musicale_ and the _Mercure Musicale_, and M. Marnold of _Le
+Mercure de France_, have championed his doctrines and his art. Even the
+_Schola Cantorum_, whose eclectic and archaic spirit is very different
+from that of Debussy, seemed at first to be drawn into the same current
+of thought; and this school which had so helped to propagate the foreign
+influences of the past, did not seem to be quite insensible to the
+nationalistic preoccupation of the last few years. So the _Schola_
+devoted itself more and more--as was moreover its right and duty--to the
+French music of the past, and filled its concert programmes with French
+works of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries--with Marc Antoine
+Charpentier, Du Mont, Leclair, Clérambault, Couperin, and the French
+primitive composers for the organ, the harpsichord, and the violin; and
+with the works of dramatic composers, especially of the great Rameau,
+who, after a period of complete oblivion, suddenly benefited by this
+excessive reaction, to the detriment of Gluck, whom the young critics,
+following M. Debussy's example, severely abused.[258] There was even a
+moment when the _Schola_ took a decided share in the battle, and,
+through M. Charles Bordes, issued a manifesto--_Credo_, as they called
+it--about a new art founded on the ancient traditions of French music:
+
+ "We wish to have free speech in music--a sustained recitative,
+ infinite variety, and, in short, complete liberty in musical
+ utterance. We wish for the triumph of natural music, so that it
+ shall be as free and full of movement as speech, and as plastic and
+ rhythmic as a classical dance."
+
+It was open war against the metrical art of the last three centuries, in
+the name of national tradition (more or less freely interpreted), of
+folk-song, and of Gregorian chant. And "the constant and avowed purpose
+of all this campaign was the triumph of French music, and its
+cult."[259]
+
+[Footnote 258: There is no need to say that Rameau's genius justified
+all this enthusiasm; but one cannot help believing that it was aroused,
+not so much on account of his musical genius as on account of his
+supposed championship of the French music of the past against foreign
+art; though that art was well adapted to the laws of French opera, as we
+may see for ourselves in Gluck's case.]
+
+[Footnote 259: _La Tribune de Saint-Gervais_, September, 1903.]
+
+This manifesto reflects in its own way the spirit of Debussy and his
+untrammelled musical impressionism; and though it shows a good deal of
+naïveté and some intolerance, there was in it a strength of youthful
+enthusiasm that accorded with the great hopes of the time, and foretold
+glorious days to come and a splendid harvest of music.
+
+Not many years have passed since then; yet the sky is already a little
+clouded, the light not quite so bright. Hope has not failed; but it has
+not been fulfilled. France is waiting, and is getting a little
+impatient. But the impatience is unnecessary; for to found an art we
+must bring time to our aid; art must ripen tranquilly. Yet tranquillity
+is what is most lacking in Parisian art. The artists, instead of working
+steadily at their own tasks and uniting in a common aim, are given up to
+sterile disputes. The young French school hardly exists any longer, as
+it has now split up into two or three parties. To a fight against
+foreign art has succeeded a fight among themselves: it is the
+deep-rooted evil of the country, this vain expenditure of force. And
+most curious of all is the fact that the quarrel is not between the
+conservatives and the progressives in music, but between the two most
+advanced sections: the _Schola_ on the one hand, who, should it gain the
+victory, would through its dogmas and traditions inevitably develop the
+airs of a little academy; and, on the other hand, the independent party,
+whose most important representative is M. Debussy. It is not for us to
+enter into the quarrel; we would only suggest to the parties in question
+that if any profit is to result from their misunderstanding, it will be
+derived by a third party--the party in favour of routine, the party that
+has never lost favour with the great theatre-going public,--a party
+that will soon make good the place it has lost if those who aim at
+defending art set about fighting one another. Victory has been
+proclaimed too soon; for whatever the optimistic representatives of the
+young school may say, victory has not yet been gained; and it will not
+be gained for some time yet--not until public taste is changed, not
+while the nation lacks musical education, nor until the cultured few are
+united to the people, through whom their thoughts shall be preserved.
+For not only--with a few rare and generous exceptions--do the more
+aristocratic sections of society ignore the education of the people, but
+they ignore the very existence of the people's soul. Here and there, a
+composer--such as Bizet and M. Saint-Saëns, or M. d'Indy and his
+disciples--will build up symphonies and rhapsodies and very difficult
+pieces for the piano on the popular airs of Auvergne, Provence, or the
+Cevennes; but that is only a whim of theirs, a little ingenious pastime
+for clever artists, such as the Flemish masters of the fifteenth century
+indulged in when they decorated popular airs with polyphonic
+elaborations. In spite of the advance of the democratic spirit, musical
+art--or at least all that counts in musical art--has never been more
+aristocratic than it is to-day. Probably the phenomenon is not peculiar
+to music, and shows itself more or less in other arts; but in no other
+art is it so dangerous, for no other has roots less firmly fixed in the
+soil of France. And it is no consolation to tell oneself that this is
+according to the great French traditions, which have nearly always been
+aristocratic. Traditions, great and small, are menaced to-day; the axe
+is ready for them. Whoever wishes to live must adapt himself to the new
+conditions of life. The future of art is at stake. To continue as we are
+doing is not only to weaken music by condemning it to live in unhealthy
+conditions, but also to risk its disappearing sooner or later under the
+rising flood of popular misconceptions of music. Let us take warning by
+the fact that we have already had to defend music[260] when it was
+attacked at some of the parliamentary assemblies; and let us remember
+the pitifulness of the defence. We must not let the day come when a
+famous speech will be repeated with a slight alteration--"The Republic
+has no need of musicians."
+
+[Footnote 260: At any rate, certain forms of music--the highest. See the
+discussions at the Chambre des Députés on the budget of the Beaux-Arts
+in February, 1906; and the speeches of MM. Théodore Denis, Beauquier,
+and Dujardin-Beaumetz, on Religious Music, the Niedermeyer School, and
+the civic value of the organ.]
+
+It is the historian's duty to point out the dangers of the present hour,
+and to remind the French musicians who have been satisfied with their
+first victory that the future is anything but sure, and that we must
+never disarm while we have a common enemy before us, an enemy especially
+dangerous in a democracy--mediocrity.
+
+The road that stretches before us is long and difficult. But if we turn
+our heads and look back over the way we have come we may take heart.
+Which of us does not feel a little glow of pride at the thought of what
+has been done in the last thirty years? Here is a town where, before
+1870, music had fallen to the most miserable depths, which to-day teems
+with concerts and schools of music--a town where one of the first
+symphonic schools in Europe has sprung from nothing, a town where an
+enthusiastic concert-going public has been formed, possessing among its
+members some great critics with broad interests and a fine, free
+spirit--all this is the pride of France. And we have, too, a little band
+of musicians; among them, in the first rank, that great painter of
+dreams, Claude Debussy; that master of constructive art, Dukas; that
+impassioned thinker, Albéric Magnard; that ironic poet, Ravel; and those
+delicate and finished writers, Albert Roussel and Déodat de Séverac;
+without mention of the younger musicians who are in the vanguard of
+their art. And all this poetic force, though not the most vigorous, is
+the most original in Europe to-day. Whatever gaps one may find in our
+musical organisation, still so new, whatever results this movement may
+lead to, it is impossible not to admire a people whom defeat has
+aroused, and a generation that has accomplished the magnificent work of
+reviving the nation's music with such untiring perseverance and such
+steadfast faith. The names of Camille Saint-Saëns, César Franck, Charles
+Bordes, and Vincent d'Indy, will remain associated before all others
+with this work of national regeneration, where so much talent and so
+much devotion, from the leaders of orchestras and celebrated composers
+down to that obscure body of artists and music-lovers, have joined
+forces in the fight against indifference and routine. They have the
+right to be proud of their work. But for ourselves, let us waste no time
+in thinking about it. Our hopes are great. Let us justify them.
+
+
+WILLIAM BRENDON AND SON, LTD PRINTERS, PLYMOUTH
+
+
+THE MUSICIAN'S BOOKSHELF.
+
+A NEW SERIES.
+
+_Crown 8vo. Occasionally Illustrated._
+
+EDITED BY CLAUDE LANDI, L.R.A.M., A.R.C.M.
+
+MUSICIANS OF TO-DAY. By ROMAIN ROLLAND, Author of "Jean-Christophe."
+Translated by MARY BLAIKLOCK.
+
+PRACTICAL SINGING. By CLIFTON COOKE and CLAUDE LANDI.
+
+THE UNREST IN THE MUSIC WORLD. By SYDNEY BLAKISTON.
+
+THE SONATA IN MUSIC. By A. EAGLEFIELD HULL, Mus. Doc.
+
+THE SYMPHONY IN MUSIC. By the same.
+
+ON LISTENING TO MUSIC. By E. MARKHAM LEE, M.A., Mus. Doc.
+
+COUNTERPOINT. By G.G. BERNARDI. Translated by C. LANDI.
+
+OPERA. By HARRY BURGESS.
+
+_Other Volumes in preparation_.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Musicians of To-Day, by Romain Rolland
+
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Musicians of To-Day, by Romain Rolland
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Musicians of To-Day
+
+Author: Romain Rolland
+
+Commentator: Claude Landi
+
+Translator: Mary Blaiklock
+
+Release Date: August 7, 2005 [EBook #16467]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MUSICIANS OF TO-DAY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Newman, Chuck Greif and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+ <h1>MUSICIANS OF TO-DAY</h1>
+ <h3>BY</h3>
+ <h2>ROMAIN ROLLAND</h2>
+ <h3>AUTHOR OF "JEAN-CHRISTOPHE"</h3>
+ <h3>TRANSLATED BY MARY BLAIKLOCK</h3>
+ <h3>WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY CLAUDE LANDI</h3>
+ <div class="center">
+ <img src="images/decorative2.png" alt="decoration" title="decoration" />
+ </div>
+ <h4>THE MUSICIAN'S BOOKSHELF. A NEW SERIES.</h4>
+ <h4><i>Crown 8vo. Occasionally Illustrated.</i></h4>
+ <h4>EDITED BY CLAUDE LANDI, L.R.A.M., A.R.C.M.</h4>
+ <h4>NEW YORK</h4>
+ <h4>HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY</h4>
+ <h4>1915</h4>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+ <h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+ <div style="margin-left: 10em;">
+ <ul>
+ <li><a href="#INTRODUCTION"><b>INTRODUCTION</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#BERLIOZ"><b>BERLIOZ I</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#II"><b>BERLIOZ II</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#WAGNER"><b>WAGNER: "SIEGFRIED"</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#TRISTANquot"><b>WAGNER: "TRISTAN"</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#CAMILLE_SAINT_SAENS"><b>CAMILLE SAINT-SA&Euml;NS</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#VINCENT_DINDY"><b>VINCENT D'INDY</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#RICHARD_STRAUSS"><b>RICHARD STRAUSS</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#HUGO_WOLF"><b>HUGO WOLF</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#DON_LORENZO_PEROSI"><b>DON LORENZO PEROSI</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#FRENCH_AND_GERMAN_MUSIC"><b>FRENCH AND GERMAN MUSIC</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#CLAUDE_DEBUSSY"><b>CLAUDE DEBUSSY: "Pell&eacute;as et
+ M&eacute;lisande"</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#AWAKENING"><b>THE AWAKENING: A SKETCH OF THE MUSICAL MOVEMENT IN
+ PARIS SINCE 1870</b></a></li>
+ <li style='list-style-type: none'> <ul>
+ <li><a href="#paris"><b>PARIS AND MUSIC</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#before"><b>MUSICAL INSTITUTIONS BEFORE 1870</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#new"><b>NEW MUSICAL INSTITUTIONS</b></a></li>
+ </ul></li>
+
+ <li><a href="#present"><b>THE PRESENT CONDITION OF FRENCH MUSIC</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#FOOTNOTES"><b>FOOTNOTES</b></a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+ <h2><a name="INTRODUCTION" id="INTRODUCTION"></a>INTRODUCTION</h2>
+ <p>It is perhaps fitting that the series of volumes comprising <i>The Musician's
+ Bookshelf</i> should be inaugurated by the present collection of essays. To the
+ majority of English readers the name of that strange and forceful personality, Romain
+ Rolland, is known only through his magnificent, intimate record of an artist's life
+ and aspirations, embracing ten volumes, <i>Jean-Christophe</i>. This is not the place
+ in which to discuss that masterpiece. A few biographical facts concerning the author
+ may not, however, be out of place here.</p>
+ <p>Romain Rolland is forty-eight years old. He was born on January 29, 1866, at
+ Clamecy (Ni&egrave;vre), France. He came very early under the influence of Tolstoy
+ and Wagner and displayed a remarkable critical faculty. In 1895 (at the age of
+ twenty-nine) we find him awarded the coveted Grand Prix of the Acad&eacute;mie
+ Fran&ccedil;aise for his work <i>Histoire de l'Op&eacute;ra en Europe avant Lulli et
+ Scarlatti</i>, and in the same year he sustained, before the faculty of the
+ Sorbonne&mdash;where he now occupies the chair of musical criticism&mdash;a
+ remarkable dissertation on <i>The Origin of</i> <i>the Modern Lyrical
+ Drama</i>&mdash;his thesis for the Doctorate. This, in reality, is a vehement protest
+ against the indifference for the Art of Music which, up to that time, had always been
+ displayed by the University. In 1903 he published a remarkable <i>Life of
+ Beethoven</i>, followed by a <i>Life of Hugo Wolf</i> in 1905. The present volume,
+ together with its companion, <i>Musiciens d'Autrefois</i>, appeared in 1908. Both
+ form remarkable essays and reveal a consummate and most intimate knowledge of the
+ life and works of our great contemporaries. A just estimate of a composer's work is
+ not to be arrived at without a study of his works and of the conditions under which
+ these were produced. To take, for instance, the case of but one of the composers
+ treated in this volume, Hector Berlioz. No composer has been so misunderstood, so
+ vilified as he, simply because those who have written about him, either wilfully or
+ through ignorance, have grossly misrepresented him.</p>
+ <p>The essay on Berlioz, in the present volume, reveals a true insight into the
+ personality of this unfortunate and great artist, and removes any false
+ misconceptions which unsympathetic and superficial handling may have engendered.
+ Indeed, the same introspective faculty is displayed in all the other essays which
+ form this volume, which, it is believed, will prove of the greatest value not only to
+ the professional student, but also to the <i>intelligent listener</i>, for whom the
+ present series of volumes has been primarily planned. We hear much, nowadays, of the
+ value of "Musical Appreciation." It is high time that something was done to educate
+ our audiences and to dispel the hitherto prevalent fallacy that Music need not be
+ regarded seriously. We do not want more creative artists, more executants; the world
+ is full of them&mdash;good, bad and indifferent&mdash;but we <i>do</i> want more
+ <i>intelligent listeners</i>.</p>
+ <p>I do not think it is an exaggeration to assert that the majority of listeners at a
+ high-class concert or recital are absolutely bored. How can it be otherwise, when the
+ composers represented are mere names to them? Why should the general public
+ appreciate a Bach fugue, an intricate symphony or a piece of chamber-music? Do we
+ professional musicians appreciate the technique of a wonderful piece of sculpture, of
+ an equally wonderful feat of engineering or even of a miraculous surgical operation?
+ It may be argued that an analogy between sculpture, engineering, surgery and music is
+ absurd, because the three former do not appeal to the masses in the same manner as
+ music does. Precisely: it is because of this universal appeal on the part of music
+ that the public should be educated to <i>listen</i> to <i>good</i> music; that they
+ should be given, in a general way, a chance to acquaint themselves with the laws underlying the
+ "Beautiful in Music" and should be shown the demands which a right appreciation of
+ the Art makes upon the Intellect and the Emotions.</p>
+ <p>And, surely, such a "desideratum" may best be effected by a careful perusal of the
+ manuals to be included in the present series. It is incontestable that the reader of
+ the following pages&mdash;apart from a knowledge of the various musical forms, of
+ orchestration, etc.&mdash;all of which will be duly treated in successive
+ volumes&mdash;will be in a better position to appreciate the works of the several
+ composers to which he may be privileged to listen. The last essay, especially, will
+ be read with interest to-day, when we may hope to look forward to a cessation of
+ race-hatred and distrust, and to what a writer in the <i>Musical Times</i>
+ (September, 1914) has called, "a new sense of the emotional solidarity of mankind.
+ From that sense alone," he adds, "can the real music of the future be born."</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>CLAUDE LANDI.</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+ <a name="page1" id="page1"/>
+ <h2>MUSICIANS OF TO-DAY</h2>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+ <h3><a id="BERLIOZ" name='BERLIOZ'></a>BERLIOZ</h3>
+ <h3>I</h3>
+ <p>It may seem a paradox to say that no musician is so little known as Berlioz. The
+ world thinks it knows him. A noisy fame surrounds his person and his work. Musical
+ Europe has celebrated his centenary. Germany disputes with France the glory of having
+ nurtured and shaped his genius. Russia, whose triumphal reception consoled him for
+ the indifference and enmity of Paris,<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1"
+ class="fnanchor">[1]</a> has said, through the voice of Balakirew,
+ that he was "the only musician France possessed." His chief compositions are often
+ played at concerts; and some of them have the rare quality of appealing both to the
+ cultured and the crowd; a few have even reached great popularity. Works have been
+ dedicated to him, and he himself has been described and criticised by many writers.
+ He is popular even to his face; for his face, like his music, was so striking and
+ singular that it seemed to show you his character at a glance. No clouds hide his
+ mind and its creations, which, unlike Wagner's, need no initia<a name="page2" id="page2"/>tion to be understood; they
+ seem to have no hidden meaning, no subtle mystery; one is instantly their friend or
+ their enemy, for the first impression is a lasting one.</p>
+ <p>That is the worst of it; people imagine that they understand Berlioz with so very
+ little trouble. Obscurity of meaning may harm an artist less than a seeming
+ transparency; to be shrouded in mist may mean remaining long misunderstood, but those
+ who wish to understand will at least be thorough in their search for the truth. It is
+ not always realised how depth and complexity may exist in a work of clear design and
+ strong contrasts&mdash;in the obvious genius of some great Italian of the Renaissance
+ as much as in the troubled heart of a Rembrandt and the twilight of the North.</p>
+ <p>That is the first pitfall; but there are many more that will beset us in the
+ attempt to understand Berlioz. To get at the man himself one must break down a wall
+ of prejudice and pedantry, of convention and intellectual snobbery. In short, one
+ must shake off nearly all current ideas about his work if one wishes to extricate it
+ from the dust that has drifted about it for half a century.</p>
+ <p>Above all, one must not make the mistake of contrasting Berlioz with Wagner,
+ either by sacrificing Berlioz to that Germanic Odin, or by forcibly trying to
+ reconcile one to the other. For there are some who condemn Berlioz in the name of
+ Wagner's theories; and others who, not liking the sacrifice, seek to make him a
+ forerunner of Wagner, or kind of elder brother, whose mission was to clear a way and
+ <a name="page3" id="page3"/>prepare a road for a
+ genius greater than his own. Nothing is falser. To understand Berlioz one must shake
+ off the hypnotic influence of Bayreuth. Though Wagner may have learnt something from
+ Berlioz, the two composers have nothing in common; their genius and their art are
+ absolutely opposed; each one has ploughed his furrow in a different field.</p>
+ <p>The Classical misunderstanding is quite as dangerous. By that I mean the clinging
+ to superstitions of the past, and the pedantic desire to enclose art within narrow
+ limits, which still flourish among critics. Who has not met these censors of music?
+ They will tell you with solid complacence how far music may go, and where it must
+ stop, and what it may express and what it must not. They are not always musicians
+ themselves. But what of that? Do they not lean on the example of the past? The past!
+ a handful of works that they themselves hardly understand. Meanwhile, music, by its
+ unceasing growth, gives the lie to their theories, and breaks down these weak
+ barriers. But they do not see it, do not wish to see it; since they cannot advance
+ themselves, they deny progress. Critics of this kind do not think favourably of
+ Berlioz's dramatic and descriptive symphonies. How should they appreciate the boldest
+ musical achievement of the nineteenth century? These dreadful pedants and zealous
+ defenders of an art that they only understand after it has ceased to live are the
+ worst enemies of unfettered genius, and may do more harm than a whole army of
+ ignorant people. For in a country like ours, where musical education <a name="page4" id="page4"/>is poor, timidity is great
+ in the presence of a strong, but only half-understood, tradition; and anyone who has
+ the boldness to break away from it is condemned without judgment. I doubt if Berlioz
+ would have obtained any consideration at all from lovers of classical music in France
+ if he had not found allies in that country of classical music, Germany&mdash;"the
+ oracle of Delphi," "Germania alma parens,"<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2"
+ class="fnanchor">[2]</a> as he called her. Some of the young
+ German school found inspiration in Berlioz. The dramatic symphony that he created
+ flourished in its German form under Liszt; the most eminent German composer of
+ to-day, Richard Strauss, came under his influence; and Felix Weingartner, who with
+ Charles Malherbe edited Berlioz's complete works, was bold enough to write, "In spite
+ of Wagner and Liszt, we should not be where we are if Berlioz had not lived." This
+ unexpected support, coming from a country of traditions, has thrown the partisans of
+ Classic tradition into confusion, and rallied Berlioz's friends.</p>
+ <p>But here is a new danger. Though it is natural that Germany, more musical than
+ France, should recognise the grandeur and originality of Berlioz's music before
+ France, it is doubtful whether the German nature could ever fully understand a soul
+ so French in its essence. It is, perhaps, what is exterior in Berlioz, his positive
+ originality, that the Germans appreciate. They prefer the <i>Requiem</i> to
+ <i>Rom&eacute;o</i>. A Richard Strauss would be attracted by an almost insignificant
+ work like the <a name="page5"
+ id="page5"/><i>Ouverture du roi Lear</i>; a Weingartner would single out for notice
+ works like the <i>Symphonic fantastique</i> and <i>Harold</i>, and exaggerate their
+ importance. But they do not feel what is intimate in him. Wagner said over the tomb
+ of Weber, "England does you justice, France admires you, but only Germany loves you;
+ you are of her own being, a glorious day of her life, a warm drop of her blood, a
+ part of her heart...." One might adapt his words to Berlioz; it is as difficult for a
+ German really to love Berlioz as it is for a Frenchman to love Wagner or Weber. One
+ must, therefore, be careful about accepting unreservedly the judgment of Germany on
+ Berlioz; for in that would lie the danger of a new misunderstanding. You see how both
+ the followers and opponents of Berlioz hinder us from getting at the truth. Let us
+ dismiss them.</p>
+ <p>Have we now come to the end of our difficulties? Not yet; for Berlioz is the most
+ illusive of men, and no one has helped more than he to mislead people in their
+ estimate of him. We know how much he has written about music and about his own life,
+ and what wit and understanding he shows in his shrewd criticisms and charming
+ <i>M&eacute;moires</i>.
+<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a>
+ <a name="page6"
+ id="page6"/>One would think that such an imaginative and skilful
+ writer, accustomed in his profession of critic to express every shade of feeling,
+ would be able to tell us more exactly his ideas of art than a Beethoven or a Mozart.
+ But it is not so. As too much light may blind the vision, so too much intellect may
+ hinder the understanding. Berlioz's mind spent itself in details; it reflected light
+ from too many facets, and did not focus itself in one strong beam which would have
+ made known his power. He did not know how to dominate either his life or his work; he
+ did not even try to dominate them. He was the incarnation of romantic genius, an
+ unrestrained force, unconscious of the road he trod. I would not go so far as to say
+ that he did not understand himself, but there are certainly times when he is past
+ understanding himself. He allows himself to drift where chance will take him,<a
+ name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4"
+ class="fnanchor">[4]</a> like an old Scandinavian pirate laid at the bottom of his
+ boat, staring up at the sky; and he dreams and groans and laughs and gives himself up
+ to his feverish delusions. He lived with his emotions as uncertainly as he lived with
+ his art. In his music, as in his criticisms of music, he often contradicts himself,
+ hesitates, and turns back; he is not sure either of his feelings or his thoughts. He
+ has poetry in his soul, and strives to write operas; but his admiration wavers
+ between Gluck and Meyerbeer. He has a popular genius, but despises the people. He is
+ a daring musical revolutionary, <a name="page7"
+ id="page7"/>but he allows the control of this musical movement to be
+ taken from him by anyone who wishes to have it. Worse than that: he disowns the
+ movement, turns his back upon the future, and throws himself again into the past. For
+ what reason? Very often he does not know. Passion, bitterness, caprice, wounded
+ pride&mdash;these have more influence with him than the serious things of life. He is
+ a man at war with himself.</p>
+ <p>Then contrast Berlioz with Wagner. Wagner, too, was stirred by violent passions,
+ but he was always master of himself, and his reason remained unshaken by the storms
+ of his heart or those of the world, by the torments of love or the strife of
+ political revolutions. He made his experiences and even his errors serve his art; he
+ wrote about his theories before he put them into practice; and he only launched out
+ when he was sure of himself, and when the way lay clear before him. And think how
+ much Wagner owes to this written expression of his aims and the magnetic attraction
+ of his arguments. It was his prose works that fascinated the King of Bavaria before
+ he had heard his music; and for many others also they have been the key to that
+ music. I remember being impressed by Wagner's ideas when I only half understood his
+ art; and when one of his compositions puzzled me, my confidence was not shaken, for I
+ was sure that the genius who was so convincing in his reasoning would not blunder;
+ and that if his music baffled me, it was I who was at fault. Wagner was really his
+ own best friend, his own most trusty champion; and his was the <a name="page8" id="page8"/>guiding hand that led one
+ through the thick forest and over the rugged crags of his work.</p>
+ <p>Not only do you get no help from Berlioz in this way, but he is the first to lead
+ you astray and wander with you in the paths of error. To understand his genius you
+ must seize hold of it unaided. His genius was really great, but, as I shall try to
+ show you, it lay at the mercy of a weak character.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>Everything about Berlioz was misleading, even his appearance. In legendary
+ portraits he appears as a dark southerner with black hair and sparkling eyes. But he
+ was really very fair and had blue eyes,<a name="FNanchor_5_5"
+ id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> and Joseph
+ d'Ortigue tells us they were deep-set and piercing, though sometimes clouded by
+ melancholy or languor.<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> He had a broad forehead furrowed with
+ wrinkles by the time he was thirty, and a thick mane of hair, or, as E.
+ Legouv&eacute; puts it, "a large umbrella of hair, projecting like a movable awning
+ over the beak of a bird of prey."<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a></p>
+ <p><a name="page9" id="page9"/>His mouth was well
+ cut, with lips compressed and puckered at the corners in a severe fold, and his chin
+ was prominent. He had a deep voice,<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> but his speech was halting and often
+ tremulous with emotion; he would speak passionately of what interested him, and at
+ times be effusive in manner, but more often he was ungracious and reserved. He was of
+ medium height, rather thin and angular in figure, and when seated he seemed much
+ taller than he really was.<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> He was very restless, and inherited
+ from his native land, Dauphin&eacute;, the mountaineer's passion for walking and
+ climbing, and the love of a vagabond life, which remained with him nearly to his
+ death.<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10"
+ class="fnanchor">[10]</a> He had an iron constitution, but he wrecked it by privation
+ and excess, by his walks in the rain, and by sleeping out-of-doors in all weathers,
+ even when there was snow on the ground.<a name="FNanchor_11_11"
+ id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a></p>
+ <p>But in this strong and athletic frame lived a feverish and sickly soul that was
+ dominated and tormented by a morbid craving for love and sympathy: "that imperative
+ need of love which is killing me...."<a name="FNanchor_12_12"
+ id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> To love,
+ to be loved&mdash;he would give up all for that.</p>
+ <p><a name="page10" id="page10"/>But his love
+ was that of a youth who lives in dreams; it was never the strong, clear-eyed passion
+ of a man who has faced the realities of life, and who sees the defects as well as the
+ charms of the woman he loves, Berlioz was in love with love, and lost himself among
+ visions and sentimental shadows. To the end of his life he remained "a poor little
+ child worn out by a love that was beyond him."<a name="FNanchor_13_13"
+ id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> But this
+ man who lived so wild and adventurous a life expressed his passions with delicacy;
+ and one finds an almost girlish purity in the immortal love passages of <i>Les
+ Troyens</i> or the "<i>nuit sereine"</i> of <i>Rom&eacute;o et Juliette</i>. And
+ compare this Virgilian affection with Wagner's sensual raptures. Does it mean that
+ Berlioz could not love as well as Wagner? We only know that Berlioz's life was made
+ up of love and its torments. The theme of a touching passage in the Introduction of
+ the <i>Symphonic fantastique</i> has been recently identified by M. Julien Tiersot,
+ in his interesting book,<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> with a romance composed by Berlioz
+ at the age of twelve, when he loved a girl of eighteen "with large eyes and pink
+ shoes"&mdash;Estelle, <i>Stella mentis, Stella matutina</i>. These
+ words&mdash;perhaps the saddest he ever wrote&mdash;might serve as an emblem of his
+ life, a life that was a prey to love and melancholy, doomed to wringing of the heart
+ and awful loneliness; a life lived in a hollow world, among worries that chilled the
+ blood; a life that was distasteful and had no solace to offer him in its end.<a
+ name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15"
+ class="fnanchor">[15]</a> He has himself described this terrible "<i>mal de
+ l'isolement</i>,"<a name="page11" id="page11"/>
+ which pursued him all his life, vividly and minutely.<a name="FNanchor_16_16"
+ id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> He was
+ doomed to suffering, or, what was worse, to make others suffer.</p>
+ <p><a name="page12" id="page12"/>Who does not
+ know his passion for Henrietta Smithson? It was a sad story. He fell in love with an
+ English actress who played Juliet (Was it she or Juliet whom he loved?). He caught
+ but a glance of her, and it was all over with him. He cried out, "Ah, I am lost!" He
+ desired her; she repulsed him. He lived in a delirium of suffering and passion; he
+ wandered about for days and nights like a madman, up and down Paris and its
+ neighbourhood, without purpose or rest or relief, until sleep overcame him wherever
+ it found him&mdash;among the sheaves in a field near Villejuif, in a meadow near
+ Sceaux, on the bank of the frozen Seine near Neuilly, in the snow, and once on a
+ table in the Caf&eacute; Cardinal, where he slept for five hours, to the great alarm
+ of the waiters, who thought he was dead.<a name="FNanchor_17_17"
+ id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a>
+ Meanwhile, he was told slanderous gossip about Henrietta, which he readily believed.
+ Then he despised her, and dishonoured her publicly in his <i>Symphonie
+ fantastique</i>, paying homage in his bitter resentment to Camille Moke, a pianist,
+ to whom he lost his heart without delay.</p>
+ <p>After a time Henrietta reappeared. She had now lost her youth and her power; her
+ beauty was waning, and she was in debt. Berlioz's passion was at once rekindled. This
+ time Henrietta accepted his advances. He made alterations in his symphony, and
+ offered it to her in homage of his love. He won her, and married her, with fourteen
+ thousand francs debt. He had captured his dream&mdash;Juliet! Ophelia! What was she
+ really? A charming Englishwoman, cold, loyal, and sober-minded, who understood
+ nothing of his passion; and who, from the time she became his wife, loved him
+ jealously and sincerely, and thought to confine him within the narrow world of
+ domestic life. But his affections became restive, and he lost his heart to a Spanish
+ actress (it was always an actress, a virtuoso, or a part) and left poor Ophelia, and
+ went off with Marie Recio, the In&egrave;s of <i>Favorite</i>, the page of <i>Comte
+ Ory</i>&mdash;a practical, hard<a name="page13"
+ id="page13"/>headed woman, an indifferent singer with a mania for
+ singing. The haughty Berlioz was forced to fawn upon the directors of the theatre in
+ order to get her parts, to write flattering notices in praise of her talents, and
+ even to let her make his own melodies discordant at the concerts he arranged.<a
+ name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18"
+ class="fnanchor">[18]</a> It would all be dreadfully ridiculous if this weakness of
+ character had not brought tragedy in its train.</p>
+ <p>So the one he really loved, and who always loved him, remained alone, without
+ friends, in Paris, where she was a stranger. She drooped in silence and pined slowly
+ away, bedridden, paralysed, and unable to speak during eight years of suffering.
+ Berlioz suffered too, for he loved her still and was torn with pity&mdash;"pity, the
+ most painful of all emotions."<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> But of what use was this pity? He
+ left Henrietta to suffer alone and to die just the same. And, what was worse, as we
+ learn from Legouv&eacute;, he let his mistress, the odious Recio, make a scene before
+ poor Henrietta.<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> Recio told him of it and boasted
+ about what she had done.</p>
+ <p><a name="page14" id="page14"/>And Berlioz did
+ nothing&mdash;"How could I? I love her."</p>
+ <p>One would be hard upon such a man if one was not disarmed by his own sufferings.
+ But let us go on. I should have liked to pass over these traits, but I have no right
+ to; I must show you the extraordinary feebleness of the man's character. "Man's
+ character," did I say? No, it was the character of a woman without a will, the victim
+ of her nerves.<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a></p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>Such people are destined to unhappiness; and if they make other people suffer, one
+ may be sure that it is only half of what they suffer themselves. They have a peculiar
+ gift for attracting and gathering <a name="page15"
+ id="page15"/>up trouble; they savour sorrow like wine, and do not lose
+ a drop of it. Life seemed desirous that Berlioz should be steeped in suffering; and
+ his misfortunes were so real that it would be unnecessary to add to them any
+ exaggerations that history has handed down to us.</p>
+ <p>People find fault with Berlioz's continual complaints; and I, too, find in them a
+ lack of virility and almost a lack of dignity. To all appearances, he had far fewer
+ material reasons for unhappiness than&mdash;I won't say Beethoven&mdash;Wagner and
+ other great men, past, present, and future. When thirty-five years old he had
+ achieved glory; and Paganini proclaimed him Beethoven's successor. What more could he
+ want? He was discussed by the public, disparaged by a Scudo and an Adolphus Adam, and
+ the theatre only opened its doors to him with difficulty. It was really splendid!</p>
+ <p>But a careful examination of facts, such as that made by M. Julien Tiersot, shows
+ the stifling mediocrity and hardship of his life. There were, first of all, his
+ material cares. When thirty-six years old "Beethoven's successor" had a fixed salary
+ of fifteen hundred francs as assistant keeper of the Conservatoire Library, and not
+ quite as much for his contributions to the <i>Debits</i>-contributions which
+ exasperated and humiliated him, and were one of the crosses of his life, as they
+ obliged him to speak anything but the truth.<a name="FNanchor_22_22"
+ id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a></p>
+ <p><a name="page16" id="page16"/>That made a
+ total of three thousand francs, hardly gained on which he had to keep a wife and
+ child&mdash;"<i>m&ecirc;me deux</i>," as M. Tiersot says. He attempted a festival at
+ the Opera; the result was three hundred and sixty francs loss. He organised a
+ festival at the 1844 Exhibition; the receipts were thirty-two thousand francs, out of
+ which he got eight hundred francs. He had the <i>Damnation de Faust</i> performed; no
+ one came to it, and he was ruined. Things went better in Russia; but the manager who
+ brought him to England became bankrupt. He was haunted by thoughts of rents and
+ doctors' bills. Towards the end of his life his financial affairs mended a little,
+ and a year before his death he uttered these sad words: "I suffer a great deal, but I
+ do not want to die now&mdash;I have enough to live upon."</p>
+ <p>One of the most tragic episodes of his life is that of the symphony which he did
+ not write because of his poverty. One wonders why the page that finishes his
+ <i>M&eacute;moires</i> is not better known, for it touches the depths of human
+ suffering.</p>
+ <p>At the time when his wife's health was causing him most anxiety, there came to him
+ one night an inspiration for a symphony. The first part of it&mdash;an allegro in
+ two-four time in A minor&mdash;was ringing in his head. He got up and began to write,
+ and then he thought,</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"If I begin this bit, I shall have to write the whole symphony. It will be a big
+ thing, and I shall have to spend three or four months over it. That means I shall
+ write no more articles and earn no money. And when the symphony is finished<a name="page17" id="page17"/>I shall not be able to
+ resist the temptation of having it copied (which will mean an expense of a thousand
+ or twelve hundred francs), and then of having it played. I shall give a concert,
+ and the receipts will barely cover half the cost. I shall lose what I have not got;
+ the poor invalid will lack necessities; and I shall be able to pay neither my
+ personal expenses nor my son's fees when he goes on board ship.... These thoughts
+ made me shudder, and I threw down my pen, saying, 'Bah! to-morrow I shall have
+ forgotten the symphony.' The next night I heard the allegro clearly, and seemed to
+ see it written down. I was filled with feverish agitation; I sang the theme; I was
+ going to get up ... but the reflections of the day before restrained me; I steeled
+ myself against the temptation, and clung to the thought of forgetting it. At last I
+ went to sleep; and the next day, on waking, all remembrance of it had, indeed, gone
+ for ever."<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>That page makes one shudder. Suicide is less distressing. Neither Beethoven nor
+ Wagner suffered such tortures. What would Wagner have done on a like occasion? He
+ would have written the symphony without doubt&mdash;and he would have been right. But
+ poor Berlioz, who was weak enough to sacrifice his duty to love, was, alas! also
+ heroic enough to sacrifice his genius to duty.<a name="FNanchor_24_24"
+ id="FNanchor_24_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a><a name="page18" id="page18"/></p>
+ <p>And in spite of all this material misery and the sorrow of being misunderstood,
+ people speak of the glory he enjoyed. What did his compeers think of him&mdash;at
+ least, those who called themselves such? He knew that Mendelssohn, whom he loved and
+ esteemed, and who styled himself his "good friend," despised him and did not
+ recognise his genius.<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> The large-hearted Schumann, who was,
+ with the exception of Liszt,<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> the only person who intuitively felt
+ his greatness, admitted that he used sometimes to wonder if he ought to be looked
+ upon as "a genius or a musical adventurer."<a name="FNanchor_27_27"
+ id="FNanchor_27_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a></p>
+ <p><a name="page19" id="page19"/>Wagner, who
+ treated his symphonies with scorn before he had even read them,<a
+ name="FNanchor_28_28" id="FNanchor_28_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_28"
+ class="fnanchor">[28]</a> who certainly understood his genius, and who deliberately
+ ignored him, threw himself into Berlioz's arms when he met him in London in 1855. "He
+ embraced him with fervour, and wept; and hardly had he left him when <i>The Musical
+ World</i> published passages from his book, <i>Oper und Drama</i>, where he pulls
+ Berlioz to pieces mercilessly."<a name="FNanchor_29_29" id="FNanchor_29_29"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a> In France, the young Gounod, <i>doli
+ fabricator Epeus</i>, as Berlioz called him, lavished flattering words upon him, but
+ spent his time in finding fault with his compositions,<a name="FNanchor_30_30"
+ id="FNanchor_30_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> or in
+ trying to supplant him at the theatre. At the Opera he was passed over in favour of a
+ Prince Poniatowski.</p>
+ <p>He presented himself three times at the Academy, and was beaten the first time by
+ Onslow, the second time by Clapisson, and the third time he conquered by a majority
+ of one vote against Panseron, Vogel, Leborne, and others, including, as always,
+ Gounod. He died before the <i>Damnation de Faust</i> was appreciated in France,
+ although it was the most remarkable musical composition France had produced. They
+ hissed its performance? Not at all; "they were merely indifferent"&mdash;it is
+ Berlioz who tells us this. It passed unnoticed. He died before he had seen <i>Les
+ Troyens</i> played in its entirety, though it <a name="page20"
+ id="page20"/>was one of the noblest works of the French lyric theatre
+ that had been composed since the death of Gluck.<a name="FNanchor_31_31"
+ id="FNanchor_31_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a> But there
+ is no need to be astonished. To hear these works to-day one must go to Germany. And
+ although the dramatic work of Berlioz has found its Bayreuth&mdash;thanks to Mottl,
+ to Karlsruhe and Munich&mdash;and the marvellous <i>Benvenuto Cellini</i> has been
+ played in twenty German towns,<a name="FNanchor_32_32" id="FNanchor_32_32"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> and regarded as a masterpiece by
+ Weingartner and Richard Strauss, what manager of a French theatre would think of
+ producing such works?</p>
+ <p>But this is not all. What was the bitterness of failure compared with the great
+ anguish of death? Berlioz saw all those he loved die one after the other: his father,
+ his mother, Henrietta Smithson, Marie Recio. Then only his son Louis remained.</p>
+ <p><a name="page21" id="page21"/>He was the
+ captain of a merchant vessel; a clever, good-hearted boy, but restless and nervous,
+ irresolute and unhappy, like his father. "He has the misfortune to resemble me in
+ everything," said Berlioz; "and we love each other like a couple of twins."<a
+ name="FNanchor_33_33" id="FNanchor_33_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33_33"
+ class="fnanchor">[33]</a> "Ah, my poor Louis," he wrote to him, "what should I do
+ without you?" A few months afterwards he learnt that Louis had died in far-away
+ seas.</p>
+ <p>He was now alone.<a name="FNanchor_34_34" id="FNanchor_34_34"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_34_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a> There were no more friendly voices;
+ all that he heard was a hideous duet between loneliness and weariness, sung in his
+ ear during the bustle of the day and in the silence of the night.<a
+ name="FNanchor_35_35" id="FNanchor_35_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_35_35"
+ class="fnanchor">[35]</a> He was wasted with disease. In 1856, at Weimar, following
+ great fatigue, he was seized with an internal malady. It began with great mental
+ distress; he used to sleep in the streets. He suffered constantly; he was like "a
+ tree without leaves, streaming with rain." At the end of 1861, the disease was in an
+ acute stage. He had attacks of pain sometimes lasting thirty hours, during which he
+ would writhe in agony in his bed. "I live in the midst of my physical pain,
+ overwhelmed with weariness. Death is very slow."<a name="FNanchor_36_36"
+ id="FNanchor_36_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_36_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a></p>
+ <p><a name="page22" id="page22"/>Worst of all,
+ in the heart of his misery, there was nothing that comforted him. He believed in
+ nothing&mdash;neither in God nor immortality.</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"I have no faith.... I hate all philosophy and everything that resembles it,
+ whether religious or otherwise.... I am as incapable of making a medicine of faith
+ as of having faith in medicine."<a name="FNanchor_37_37" id="FNanchor_37_37"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_37_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a></p>
+ <p>"God is stupid and cruel in his complete indifference."<a name="FNanchor_38_38"
+ id="FNanchor_38_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_38_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>He did not believe in beauty or honour, in mankind or himself.</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"Everything passes. Space and time consume beauty, youth, love, glory, genius.
+ Human life is nothing; death is no better. Worlds are born and die like ourselves.
+ All is nothing. Yes, yes, yes! All is nothing.... To love or hate, enjoy or suffer,
+ admire or sneer, live or die&mdash;what does it matter? There is nothing in
+ greatness or littleness, beauty or ugliness. Eternity is indifferent; indifference
+ is eternal."<a name="FNanchor_39_39" id="FNanchor_39_39"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_39_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a></p>
+ <p>"I am weary of life; and I am forced to see that belief in absurdities is
+ necessary to human minds, and that it is born in them as insects are born in
+ swamps."<a name="FNanchor_40_40" id="FNanchor_40_40"></a><a href="#Footnote_40_40"
+ class="fnanchor">[40]</a></p>
+ </div>
+ <a name="page23" id="page23"/>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"You make me laugh with your old words about a mission to fulfil. What a
+ missionary! But there is in me an inexplicable mechanism which works in spite of
+ all arguments; and I let it work because I cannot stop it. What disgusts me most is
+ the certainty that beauty does not exist for the majority of these human
+ monkeys."<a name="FNanchor_41_41" id="FNanchor_41_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_41_41"
+ class="fnanchor">[41]</a></p>
+ <p>"The unsolvable enigma of the world, the existence of evil and pain, the fierce
+ madness of mankind, and the stupid cruelty that it inflicts hourly and everywhere
+ on the most inoffensive beings and on itself&mdash;all this has reduced me to the
+ state of unhappy and forlorn resignation of a scorpion surrounded by live coals.
+ The most I can do is not to wound myself with my own dart."<a name="FNanchor_42_42"
+ id="FNanchor_42_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_42_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a></p>
+ <p>"I am in my sixty-first year; and I have no more hopes or illusions or
+ aspirations. I am alone; and my contempt for the stupidity and dishonesty of men,
+ and my hatred for their wicked cruelty, are at their height. Every hour I say to
+ Death, 'When you like!' What is he waiting for?"<a name="FNanchor_43_43"
+ id="FNanchor_43_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_43_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>And yet he fears the death he invites. It is the strongest, the bitterest, the
+ truest feeling he has. No musician since old Roland de Lassus has feared it with that
+ intensity. Do you remember Herod's sleepless nights in <i>L'Enfance du Christ</i>, or
+ Faust's soliloquy, or the anguish of Cassandra, or the burial of<a name="page24" id="page24"/>Juliette?&mdash;through
+ all this you will find the whispered fear of annihilation. The wretched man was
+ haunted by this fear, as a letter published by M. Julien Tiersot shows:&mdash;</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"My favourite walk, especially when it is raining, really raining in torrents,
+ is the cemetery of Montmartre, which is near my house. I often go there; there is
+ much that draws me to it. The day before yesterday I passed two hours in the
+ cemetery; I found a comfortable seat on a costly tomb, and I went to sleep....
+ Paris is to me a cemetery and her pavements are tomb-stones. Everywhere are
+ memories of friends or enemies that are dead.... I do nothing but suffer unceasing
+ pain and unspeakable weariness. I wonder night and day if I shall die in great pain
+ or with little of it&mdash;I am not foolish enough to hope to die without any pain
+ at all. Why are we not dead?"<a name="FNanchor_44_44" id="FNanchor_44_44"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_44_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>His music is like these mournful words; it is perhaps even more terrible, more
+ gloomy, for it breathes death.<a name="FNanchor_45_45" id="FNanchor_45_45"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_45_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a> What a contrast: a soul greedy of
+ life and preyed upon by death. It is this that makes his life such an awful tragedy.
+ When Wagner met Berlioz he heaved a sigh of relief&mdash;he had at last found a man
+ more unhappy than himself.<a name="FNanchor_46_46" id="FNanchor_46_46"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_46_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a><a
+ name="page25" id="page25"/></p>
+ <p>On the threshold of death he turned in despair to the one ray of light left
+ him&mdash;<i>Stella montis</i>, the inspiration of his childish love; Estelle, now
+ old, a grandmother, withered by age and grief. He made a pilgrimage to Meylan, near
+ Grenoble, to see her. He was then sixty-one years old and she was nearly seventy.
+ "The past! the past! O Time! Nevermore! Nevermore!"<a name="FNanchor_47_47"
+ id="FNanchor_47_47"></a><a href="#Footnote_47_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a></p>
+ <p>Nevertheless, he loved her, and loved her desperately. How pathetic it is. One has
+ little inclination to smile when one sees the depths of that desolate heart. Do you
+ think he did not see, as clearly as you or I would see, the wrinkled old face, the
+ indifference of age, the "<i>triste raison</i>," in her he idealised? Remember, he
+ was the most ironical of men. But he did not wish to see these things, he wished to
+ cling to a little love, which would help him to live in the wilderness of life.</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"There is nothing real in this world but that which lives in the heart.... My
+ life has been wrapped up in the obscure little village where she lives.... Life is
+ only endurable when I tell myself: 'This autumn I shall spend a month beside her.'
+ I should die in this hell of a Paris if she did not allow me to write to her, and
+ if from time to time I had not letters from her."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>So he spoke to Legouv&eacute;; and he sat down on a stone in a Paris street, and
+ wept. In the meantime, the old lady did not understand this foolishness; she hardly
+ tolerated it, and sought to undeceive him.<a name="page26"
+ id="page26"/></p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"When one's hair is white one must leave dreams&mdash;even those of
+ friendship.... Of what use is it to form ties which, though they hold to-day, may
+ break to-morrow?"</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>What were his dreams? To live with her? No; rather to die beside her; to feel she
+ was by his side when death should come.</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"To be at your feet, my head on your knees, your two hands in mine&mdash;so to
+ finish."<a name="FNanchor_48_48" id="FNanchor_48_48"></a><a href="#Footnote_48_48"
+ class="fnanchor">[48]</a></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>He was a little child grown old, and felt bewildered and miserable and frightened
+ before the thought of death.</p>
+ <p>Wagner, at the same age, a victor, worshipped, flattered, and&mdash;if we are to
+ believe the Bayreuth legend&mdash;crowned with prosperity; Wagner, sad and suffering,
+ doubting his achievements, feeling the inanity of his bitter fight against the
+ mediocrity of the world, had "fled far from the world"<a name="FNanchor_49_49"
+ id="FNanchor_49_49"></a><a href="#Footnote_49_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a> and
+ thrown himself into religion; and when a friend looked at him in surprise as he was
+ saying grace at table, he answered: "Yes, I believe in my Saviour."<a
+ name="FNanchor_50_50" id="FNanchor_50_50"></a><a href="#Footnote_50_50"
+ class="fnanchor">[50]</a><a name="page27"
+ id="page27"/></p>
+ <p>Poor beings! Conquerors of the world, conquered and broken!</p>
+ <p>But of the two deaths, how much sadder is that of the artist who was without a
+ faith, and who had neither strength nor stoicism enough to be happy without one; who
+ slowly died in that little room in the rue de Calais amid the distracting noise of an
+ indifferent and even hostile Paris;<a name="FNanchor_51_51"
+ id="FNanchor_51_51"></a><a href="#Footnote_51_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a> who shut
+ himself up in savage silence; who saw no loved face bending over him in his last
+ moments; who had not the comfort of belief in his work;<a name="FNanchor_52_52"
+ id="FNanchor_52_52"></a><a href="#Footnote_52_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a> who could
+ not think calmly of what he had done, nor look proudly back over the road he had
+ trodden, nor rest content in the thought of a life well lived; and who began and
+ closed his <i>M&eacute;moires</i> with Shakespeare's gloomy words, and repeated them
+ when dying:&mdash;</p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span>"Life's but a walking shadow, a poor player<br />
+ </span> <span>That struts and frets his hour upon the stage<br />
+ </span> <span>And then is heard no more: it is a tale<br />
+ </span> <span>Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,<br />
+ </span> <span>Signifying nothing."<a name="FNanchor_53_53"
+ id="FNanchor_53_53"></a><a href="#Footnote_53_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a><br />
+ </span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <a name="page28" id="page28"/>
+ <p>Such was the unhappy and irresolute heart that found itself united to one of the
+ most daring geniuses in the world. It is a striking example of the difference that
+ may exist between genius and greatness&mdash;for the two words are not synonymous.
+ When one speaks of greatness, one speaks of greatness of soul, nobility of character,
+ firmness of will, and, above all, balance of mind. I can understand how people deny
+ the existence of these qualities in Berlioz; but to deny his musical genius, or to
+ cavil about his wonderful power&mdash;and that is what they do daily in
+ Paris&mdash;is lamentable and ridiculous. Whether he attracts one or not, a
+ thimbleful of some of his work, a single part in one of his works, a little bit of
+ the <i>Fantastique</i> or the overture of <i>Benvenuto</i>, reveal more
+ genius&mdash;I am not afraid to say it&mdash;than all the French music of his
+ century. I can understand people arguing about him in a country that produced
+ Beethoven and Bach; but with us in France, who can we set up against him? Gluck and
+ C&eacute;sar Franck were much greater men, but they were never geniuses of his
+ stature. If genius is a creative force, I cannot find more than four or five geniuses
+ in the world who rank above him. When I have named Beethoven, Mozart, Bach,<a name="page29" id="page29"/>H&auml;ndel, and Wagner,
+ I do not know who else is superior to Berlioz; I do not even know who is his
+ equal.</p>
+ <p>He is not only a musician, he is music itself. He does not command his familiar
+ spirit, he is its slave. Those who know his writings know how he was simply possessed
+ and exhausted by his musical emotions. They were really fits of ecstasy or
+ convulsions. At first "there was feverish excitement; the veins beat violently and
+ tears flowed freely. Then came spasmodic contractions of the muscles, total numbness
+ of the feet and hands, and partial paralysis of the nerves of sight and hearing; he
+ saw nothing, heard nothing; he was giddy and half faint." And in the case of music
+ that displeased him, he suffered, on the contrary, from "a painful sense of bodily
+ disquiet and even from nausea."<a name="FNanchor_54_54" id="FNanchor_54_54"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_54_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a></p>
+ <p>The possession that music held over his nature shows itself clearly in the sudden
+ outbreak of his genius.<a name="FNanchor_55_55" id="FNanchor_55_55"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_55_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a> His family opposed the idea of his
+ becoming a musician; and until he was twenty-two or twenty-three years old his weak
+ will sulkily gave way to their wishes. In obedience to his father he began his
+ studies in medicine at Paris. One evening he heard <i>Les Dana&iuml;des</i> of
+ Salieri. It came upon him like a thunderclap. He ran to the Conservatoire library and
+ read Gluck's scores.</p>
+ <p><a name="page30" id="page30"/>He forgot to
+ eat and drink; he was like a man in a frenzy. A performance of <i>Iphig&eacute;nie en
+ Tauride</i> finished him. He studied under Lesueur and then at the Conservatoire. The
+ following year, 1827, he composed <i>Les Francs-Juges</i>; two years afterwards the
+ <i>Huit sc&egrave;nes de Faust</i>, which was the nucleus of the future
+ <i>Damnation</i>;<a name="FNanchor_56_56" id="FNanchor_56_56"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_56_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a> three years afterwards, the
+ <i>Symphonie fantastique</i> (commenced in 1830).<a name="FNanchor_57_57"
+ id="FNanchor_57_57"></a><a href="#Footnote_57_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a> And he
+ had not yet got the <i>Prix de Rome</i>! Add to this that in 1828 he had already
+ ideas for <i>Rom&eacute;o et Juliette</i>, and that he had written a part of
+ <i>Lelio</i> in 1829. Can one find elsewhere a more dazzling musical debut? Compare
+ that of Wagner who, at the same age, was shyly writing <i>Les F&eacute;es,
+ D&eacute;fense d'aimer</i>, and <i>Rienzi</i>.</p>
+ <p>He wrote them at the same age, but ten years later; for <i>Les F&eacute;es</i>
+ appeared in 1833, when Berlioz had already written the <i>Fantastique</i>, the
+ <i>Huit sc&egrave;nes de Faust, Lelio</i>, and <i>Harold; Rienzi</i> was only played
+ in 1842, after <i>Benvenuto</i> (1835), <i>Le Requiem</i> (1837), <i>Rom&eacute;o</i>
+ (1839), <i>La Symphonie fun&egrave;bre et triomphale</i> (1840)&mdash;that is to say,
+ when <a name="page31" id="page31"/>Berlioz had
+ finished all his great works, and after he had achieved his musical revolution. And
+ that revolution was effected alone, without a model, without a guide. What could he
+ have heard beyond the operas of Gluck and Spontini while he was at the Conservatoire?
+ At the time when he composed the <i>Ouverture des Francs-Juges</i> even the name of
+ Weber was unknown to him,<a name="FNanchor_58_58" id="FNanchor_58_58"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_58_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a> and of Beethoven's compositions he
+ had only heard an <i>andante</i>.<a name="FNanchor_59_59" id="FNanchor_59_59"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_59_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a></p>
+ <p>Truly, he is a miracle and the most startling phenomenon in the history of
+ nineteenth-century music. His audacious power dominates all his age; and in the face
+ of such a genius, who would not follow Paganini's example, and hail him as
+ Beethoven's only successor?<a name="FNanchor_60_60" id="FNanchor_60_60"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_60_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a> Who does not see what a poor figure
+ the young Wagner cut at that time, working away in laborious and self-satisfied
+ mediocrity? But Wagner soon made up for lost ground; for he knew what he wanted, and
+ he wanted it obstinately.</p>
+ <p>The zenith of Berlioz's genius was reached, when he was thirty-five years old,
+ with the <i>Requiem</i> and <i>Rom&eacute;o</i>. They are his two most important
+ works, and are two works about which one may feel very differently. For my part, I am
+ very fond of the <a name="page32" id="page32"/>
+ one, and I dislike the other; but both of them open up two great new roads in art,
+ and both are placed like two gigantic arches on the triumphal way of the revolution
+ that Berlioz started. I will return to the subject of these works later.</p>
+ <p>But Berlioz was already getting old. His daily cares and stormy domestic life,<a
+ name="FNanchor_61_61" id="FNanchor_61_61"></a><a href="#Footnote_61_61"
+ class="fnanchor">[61]</a> his disappointments and passions, his commonplace and often
+ degrading work, soon wore him out and, finally, exhausted his power. "Would you
+ believe it?" he wrote to his friend Ferrand, "that which used to stir me to
+ transports of musical passion now fills me with indifference, or even disdain. I feel
+ as if I were descending a mountain at a great rate. Life is so short; I notice that
+ thoughts of the end have been with me for some time past." In 1848, at forty-five
+ years old, he wrote in his <i>M&eacute;moires</i>: "I find myself so old and tired
+ and lacking inspiration." At forty-five years old, Wagner had patiently worked out
+ his theories and was feeling his power; at forty-five he was writing <i>Tristan</i>
+ and <i>The Music of the Future</i>. Abused by critics, unknown to the public, "he
+ remained calm, in the belief that he would be master of the musical world in fifty
+ years' time."<a name="FNanchor_62_62" id="FNanchor_62_62"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_62_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a></p>
+ <p>Berlioz was disheartened. Life had conquered him. It was not that he had lost any
+ of his artistic mastery; on the contrary, his compositions became more and more
+ finished; and nothing in his earlier work attained the pure beauty of some of the
+ pages of <i>L'Enfance du Christ</i> (1850-4), or of <i>Les Troyens</i><a name="page33" id="page33"/>(1855-63). But he was
+ losing his power; and his intense feeling, his revolutionary ideas, and his
+ inspiration (which in his youth had taken the place of the confidence he lacked) were
+ failing him. He now lived on the past&mdash;the <i>Huit sc&egrave;nes de Faust</i>
+ (1828) held the germs of <i>La Damnation de Faust</i> (1846); since 1833, he had been
+ thinking of <i>B&eacute;atrice et B&eacute;n&eacute;dict</i> (1862); the ideas in
+ <i>Les Troyens</i> were inspired by his childish worship of Virgil, and had been with
+ him all his life. But with what difficulty he now finished his task! He had only
+ taken seven months to write <i>Rom&eacute;o</i>, and "on account of not being able to
+ write the <i>Requiem</i> fast enough, he had adopted a kind of musical shorthand";<a
+ name="FNanchor_63_63" id="FNanchor_63_63"></a><a href="#Footnote_63_63"
+ class="fnanchor">[63]</a> but he took seven or eight years to write <i>Les
+ Troyens</i>, alternating between moods of enthusiasm and disgust, and feeling
+ indifference and doubt about his work. He groped his way hesitatingly and unsteadily;
+ he hardly understood what he was doing. He admired the more mediocre pages of his
+ work: the scene of the Laocoon, the finale of the last act of the <i>Les Troyens
+ &agrave; Troie</i>, the last scene with Aeneas in <i>Les Troyens &agrave;
+ Carthage</i>.<a name="FNanchor_64_64" id="FNanchor_64_64"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_64_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a> The empty pomposities of Spontini
+ mingle with the loftiest conceptions. One might say that his genius became a stranger
+ to him: it was the mechanical work of <a name="page34"
+ id="page34"/>an unconscious force, like "stalactites in a dripping
+ grotto." He had no impetus. It was only a matter of time before the roof of the
+ grotto would give way. One is struck with the mournful despair with which he works;
+ it is his last will and testament that he is making. And when he has finished it, he
+ will have finished everything. His work is ended; if he lived another hundred years
+ he would not have the heart to add anything more to it. The only thing that
+ remains&mdash;and it is what he is about to do&mdash;is to wrap himself in silence
+ and die.</p>
+ <p>Oh, mournful destiny! There are great men who have outlived their genius; but with
+ Berlioz genius outlived desire. His genius was still there; one feels it in the
+ sublime pages of the third act of <i>Les Troyens &agrave; Carthage</i>. But Berlioz
+ had ceased to believe in his power; he had lost faith in everything. His genius was
+ dying for want of nourishment; it was a flame above an empty tomb. At the same hour
+ of his old age the soul of Wagner sustained its glorious flight; and, having
+ conquered everything, it achieved a supreme victory in renouncing everything for its
+ faith. And the divine songs of Parsifal resounded as in a splendid temple, and
+ replied to the cries of the suffering Amfortas by the blessed words: "<i>Selig in
+ Glauben! Selig in Liebe</i>!"</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+ <a name="page35" id="page35"/>
+ <h3><a name="II" id="II"></a>II</h3>
+ <p>Berlioz's work did not spread itself evenly over his life; it was accomplished in
+ a few years. It was not like the course of a great river, as with Wagner and
+ Beethoven; it was a burst of genius, whose flames lit up the whole sky for a little
+ while, and then died gradually down.<a name="FNanchor_65_65"
+ id="FNanchor_65_65"></a><a href="#Footnote_65_65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a> Let me
+ try to tell you about this wonderful blaze.</p>
+ <p>Some of Berlioz's musical qualities are so striking that it is unnecessary to
+ dwell upon them here. His instrumental colouring, so intoxicating and exciting,<a
+ name="FNanchor_66_66" id="FNanchor_66_66"></a><a href="#Footnote_66_66"
+ class="fnanchor">[66]</a> his extraordinary discoveries concerning timbre, his
+ inventions of new nuances (as in the famous combining of flutes and trombones in the
+ <i>Hostias et preces</i> of the <i>Requiem</i>, and the curious use of the harmonics
+ of violins and harps), and his huge and nebulous orchestra&mdash;all this lends
+ itself to the most subtle expression of thought.<a name="FNanchor_67_67"
+ id="FNanchor_67_67"></a><a href="#Footnote_67_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a></p>
+ <p><a name="page36" id="page36"/>Think of the
+ effect that such works must have produced at that period. Berlioz was the first to be
+ astonished when he heard them for the first time. At the <i>Ouverture des
+ Francs-Juges</i> he wept and tore his hair, and fell sobbing on the kettledrums. At
+ the performance of his <i>Tuba mirum</i>, in Berlin, he nearly fainted. The composer
+ who most nearly approached him was Weber, and, as we have already seen, Berlioz only
+ knew him late in life. But how much less rich and complex is Weber's music, in spite
+ of its nervous brilliance and dreaming poetry. Above all, Weber is much more mundane
+ and more of a classicist; he lacks Berlioz's revolutionary passion and plebeian
+ force; he is less expressive and less grand.</p>
+ <p>How did Berlioz come to have this genius for orchestration almost from the very
+ first? He himself says that his two masters at the Conservatoire taught him nothing
+ in point of instrumentation:&mdash;</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"Lesueur had only very limited ideas about the art. Reicha knew the particular
+ resources of most of the wind instruments; but I think that he had not very
+ advanced ideas on the subject of grouping them."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Berlioz taught himself. He used to read the score of an opera while it was being
+ performed.<a name="page37" id="page37"/></p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"It was thus," he says,<a name="FNanchor_68_68" id="FNanchor_68_68"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_68_68" class="fnanchor">[68]</a> "that I began to get familiar with
+ the use of the orchestra, and to know its expression and timbre, as well as the
+ range and mechanism of most of the instruments. By carefully comparing the effect
+ produced with the means used to produce it, I learned the hidden bond which unites
+ musical expression to the special art of instrumentation; but no one put me in the
+ way of this. The study of the methods of the three modern masters, Beethoven,
+ Weber, and Spontini, the impartial examination of the traditions of instrumentation
+ and of little-used forms and combinations, conversations with virtuosi, and the
+ effects I made them try on their different instruments, together with a little
+ instinct, did the rest for me."<a name="FNanchor_69_69" id="FNanchor_69_69"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_69_69" class="fnanchor">[69]</a></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>That he was an originator in this direction no one doubts. And no one disputes, as
+ a rule, "his devilish cleverness," as Wagner scornfully called it, or remains
+ insensible to his skill and mastery in the mechanism of expression, and his power
+ over sonorous matter, which make him, apart from his creative power, a sort of
+ magician of music, a king of tone and rhythm. This gift is recognised even by his
+ enemies&mdash;by Wagner, who seeks with some unfairness to restrict his genius within
+ narrow limits, and to reduce it to "a structure with wheels <a
+ name="page38" id="page38"/>of infinite ingenuity and extreme cunning
+ ... a marvel of mechanism."<a name="FNanchor_70_70" id="FNanchor_70_70"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_70_70" class="fnanchor">[70]</a></p>
+ <p>But though there is hardly anyone that Berlioz does not irritate or attract, he
+ always strikes people by his impetuous ardour, his glowing romance, and his seething
+ imagination, all of which makes and will continue to make his work one of the most
+ picturesque mirrors of his age. His frenzied force of ecstasy and despair, his
+ fulness of love and hatred, his perpetual thirst for life, which "in the heart of the
+ deepest sorrow lights the Catherine wheels and crackers of the wildest joy"<a
+ name="FNanchor_71_71" id="FNanchor_71_71"></a><a href="#Footnote_71_71"
+ class="fnanchor">[71]</a>&mdash;these are the qualities that stir up the crowds in
+ <i>Benvenuto</i> and the armies in the <i>Damnation</i>, that shake earth, heaven,
+ and hell, and are never quenched, but remain devouring and "passionate even when the
+ subject is far removed from passion, and yet also express sweet and tender sentiments
+ and the deepest calm."<a name="FNanchor_72_72" id="FNanchor_72_72"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_72_72" class="fnanchor">[72]</a><a
+ name="page39" id="page39"/></p>
+ <p>Whatever one may think of this volcanic force, of this torrential stream of youth
+ and passion, it is impossible to deny them; one might as well deny the sun.</p>
+ <p>And I shall not dwell on Berlioz's love of Nature, which, as M. Prudhomme shows
+ us, is the soul of a composition like the <i>Damnation</i> and, one might say, of all
+ great compositions. No musician, with the exception of Beethoven, has loved Nature so
+ profoundly. Wagner himself did not realise the intensity of emotion which she roused
+ in Berlioz,<a name="FNanchor_73_73" id="FNanchor_73_73"></a><a href="#Footnote_73_73"
+ class="fnanchor">[73]</a> and how this feeling impregnated the music of the
+ <i>Damnation</i>, of <i>Rom&eacute;o</i>, and of <i>Les Troyens</i>.</p>
+ <p>But this genius had other characteristics which are less well known, though they
+ are not less unusual. The first is his sense of pure beauty. Berlioz's exterior
+ romanticism must not make us blind to this. He had a Virgilian soul; and if his
+ colouring recalls that of Weber, his design has often an Italian suavity. Wagner
+ never had this love of beauty in the Latin sense of the word. Who has understood the
+ Southern nature, beautiful form, and harmonious movement like Berlioz? Who, since
+ Gluck, has recognised so well the secret of classical beauty? Since <i>Orfeo</i> was
+ composed, no one has carved in music a bas-relief so perfect as <a name="page40" id="page40"/>the entrance of
+ Andromache in the second act of <i>Les Troyens &agrave; Troie</i>. In <i>Les Troyens
+ &agrave; Carthage</i>, the fragrance of the Aeneid is shed over the night of love,
+ and we see the luminous sky and hear the murmur of the sea. Some of his melodies are
+ like statues, or the pure lines of Athenian friezes, or the noble gesture of
+ beautiful Italian girls, or the undulating profile of the Albanian hills filled with
+ divine laughter. He has done more than felt and translated into music the beauty of
+ the Mediterranean&mdash;he has created beings worthy of a Greek tragedy. His
+ Cassandre alone would suffice to rank him among the greatest tragic poets that music
+ has ever known. And Cassandre is a worthy sister of Wagner's Br&uuml;nnhilde; but she
+ has the advantage of coming of a nobler race, and of having a lofty restraint of
+ spirit and action that Sophocles himself would have loved.</p>
+ <p>Not enough attention has been drawn to the classical nobility from which Berlioz's
+ art so spontaneously springs. It is not fully acknowledged that he was, of all
+ nineteenth-century musicians, the one who had in the highest degree the sense of
+ plastic beauty. Nor do people always recognise that he was a writer of sweet and
+ flowing melodies. Weingartner expressed the surprise he felt when, imbued with
+ current prejudice against Berlioz's lack of melodic invention, he opened, by chance,
+ the score of the overture of <i>Benvenuto</i> and found in that short composition,
+ which barely takes ten minutes to play, not one or two, but four or five melodies of
+ admirable richness and originality:&mdash;<a name="page41"
+ id="page41"/></p>
+ <p>"I began to laugh, both with pleasure at having discovered such a treasure, and
+ with annoyance at finding how narrow human judgment is. Here I counted five themes,
+ all of them plastic and expressive of personality; of admirable workmanship, varied
+ in form, working up by degrees to a climax, and then finishing with strong effect.
+ And this from a composer who was said by critics and the public to be devoid of
+ creative power! From that day on there has been for me another great citizen in the
+ republic of art."<a name="FNanchor_74_74" id="FNanchor_74_74"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_74_74" class="fnanchor">[74]</a></p>
+ <p>Before this, Berlioz had written in 1864:&mdash;</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"It is quite easy for others to convince themselves that, without even limiting
+ me to take a very short melody as the theme of a composition&mdash;as the greatest
+ musicians have often done&mdash;I have always endeavoured to put a wealth of melody
+ into my compositions. One may, of course, dispute the worth of these melodies,
+ their distinction, originality, or charm&mdash;it is not for me to judge
+ them&mdash;but to deny their existence is either unfair or foolish. They are often
+ on a large scale; and an immature or short-sighted musical vision may not clearly
+ distinguish their form; or, again, they may be accompanied by secondary melodies
+ which, to a limited vision, may veil the form of the principal ones. Or, lastly,
+ shallow musicians may find these melodies so unlike the funny little things that
+ they call <a name="page42" id="page42"/>
+ melodies, that they cannot bring themselves to give the same name to both."<a
+ name="FNanchor_75_75" id="FNanchor_75_75"></a><a href="#Footnote_75_75"
+ class="fnanchor">[75]</a></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>And what a splendid variety there is in these melodies: there is the song in
+ Gluck's style (Cassandre's airs), the pure German <i>lied</i> (Marguerite's song,
+ "D'amour l'ardente flamme"), the Italian melody, after Bellini, in its most limpid
+ and happy form (arietta of Arlequin in <i>Benvenuto</i>), the broad Wagnerian phrase
+ (finale of <i>Rom&eacute;o</i>), the folk-song (chorus of shepherds in <i>L'Enfance
+ du Christ</i>), and the freest and most modern recitative (the monologues of Faust),
+ which was Berlioz's own invention, with its full development, its pliant outline, and
+ its intricate nuances.<a name="FNanchor_76_76" id="FNanchor_76_76"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_76_76" class="fnanchor">[76]</a></p>
+ <p>I have said that Berlioz had a matchless gift for expressing tragic melancholy,
+ weariness of life, and the pangs of death. In a general way, one may say that he was
+ a great elegist in music. Ambros, who was a very discerning and unbiassed critic,
+ said: "Berlioz feels with inward delight and profound emotion what no musician,
+ except Beethoven, has felt before." And Heinrich Heine had a keen perception of
+ Berlioz's originality when he called him "a colossal nightingale, a lark the size of
+ an eagle." The simile is not only picturesque, but of remarkable aptness. For
+ Berlioz's colossal force is at the service of a forlorn and tender heart; he has
+ nothing of the heroism of Beethoven, or H&auml;ndel, <a
+ name="page43" id="page43"/>or Gluck, or even Schubert. He has all the
+ charm of an Umbrian painter, as is shown in <i>L'Enfance du Christ</i>, as well as
+ sweetness and inward sadness, the gift of tears, and an elegiac passion.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>Now I come to Berlioz's great originality, an originality which is rarely spoken
+ of, though it makes him more than a great musician, more than the successor of
+ Beethoven, or, as some call him, the forerunner of Wagner. It is an originality that
+ entitles him to be known, even more fitly than Wagner himself, as the creator of "an
+ art of the future," the apostle of a new music, which even to-day has hardly made
+ itself felt.</p>
+ <p>Berlioz is original in a double sense. By the extraordinary complexity of his
+ genius he touched the two opposite poles of his art, and showed us two entirely
+ different aspects of music&mdash;that of a great popular art, and that of music made
+ free.</p>
+ <p>We are all enslaved by the musical tradition of the past. For generations we have
+ been so accustomed to carry this yoke that we scarcely notice it. And in consequence
+ of Germany's monopoly of music since the end of the eighteenth century, musical
+ traditions&mdash;which had been chiefly Italian in the two preceding
+ centuries&mdash;now became almost entirely German. We think in German forms: the plan
+ of phrases, their development, their balance, and all the rhetoric of music and the
+ grammar of composition comes to us from foreign thought, slowly elaborated by German
+ masters. That <a name="page44" id="page44"/>
+ domination has never been more complete or more heavy since Wagner's victory. Then
+ reigned over the world this great German period&mdash;a scaly monster with a thousand
+ arms, whose grasp was so extensive that it included pages, scenes, acts, and whole
+ dramas in its embrace. We cannot say that French writers have ever tried to write in
+ the style of Goethe or Schiller; but French composers have tried and are still trying
+ to write music after the manner of German musicians.</p>
+ <p>Why be astonished at it? Let us face the matter plainly. In music we have not, so
+ to speak, any masters of French style. All our greatest composers are foreigners. The
+ founder of the first school of French opera, Lulli, was Florentine; the founder of
+ the second school, Gluck, was German; the two founders of the third school were
+ Rossini, an Italian, and Meyerbeer, a German; the creators of
+ <i>op&eacute;ra-comique</i> were Duni, an Italian, and Gretry, a Belgian; Franck, who
+ revolutionised our modern school of opera, was also Belgian. These men brought with
+ them a style peculiar to their race; or else they tried to found, as Gluck did, an
+ "international" style,<a name="FNanchor_77_77" id="FNanchor_77_77"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_77_77" class="fnanchor">[77]</a> by which they effaced the more
+ individual characteristics of the French spirit. The most French of all these styles
+ is the <i>op&eacute;ra-comique</i>, the work of two foreigners, but owing much more
+ to the <i>op&eacute;ra-bouffe</i> than is generally admitted, and, in any case,
+ representing France very insufficiently.</p>
+ <p><a name="page45" id="page45"/>Some more
+ rational minds have tried to rid themselves of this Italian and German influence, but
+ have mostly arrived at creating an intermediate Germano-Italian style, of which the
+ operas of Auber and Ambroise Thomas are a type.</p>
+ <p>Before Berlioz's time there was really only one master of the first rank who made
+ a great effort to liberate French music: it was Rameau; and, despite his genius, he
+ was conquered by Italian art.<a name="FNanchor_78_78" id="FNanchor_78_78"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_78_78" class="fnanchor">[78]</a></p>
+ <p>By force of circumstance, therefore, French music found itself moulded in foreign
+ musical forms. And in the same way that Germany in the eighteenth century tried to
+ imitate French architecture and literature, so France in the nineteenth century
+ acquired the habit of speaking German in music. As most men speak more than they
+ think, even thought itself became Germanised; and it was difficult then to discover,
+ through this traditional insincerity, the true and spontaneous form of French musical
+ thought.</p>
+ <p>But Berlioz's genius found it by instinct. From the first he strove to free French
+ music from the oppression of the foreign tradition that was suffocating it.<a
+ name="FNanchor_79_79" id="FNanchor_79_79"></a><a href="#Footnote_79_79"
+ class="fnanchor">[79]</a><a name="page46"
+ id="page46"/></p>
+ <p>He was fitted in every way for the part, even by his deficiencies and his
+ ignorance. His classical education in music was incomplete. M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns tells
+ us that "the past did not exist for him; he did not understand the old composers, as
+ his knowledge of them was limited to what he had read about them." He did not know
+ Bach. Happy ignorance! He was able to write oratorios like <i>L'Enfance du Christ</i>
+ without being worried by memories and traditions of the German masters of oratorio.
+ There are men like Brahms who have been, nearly all their life, but reflections of
+ the past. Berlioz never sought to be anything but himself. It was thus that he
+ created that masterpiece, <i>La Fuite en &Eacute;gypte</i>, which sprang from his
+ keen sympathy with the people.</p>
+ <p>He had one of the most untrammelled spirits that ever breathed. Liberty was for
+ him a desperate necessity. "Liberty of heart, of mind, of soul&mdash;of
+ everything.... Real liberty, absolute and immense!"<a name="FNanchor_80_80"
+ id="FNanchor_80_80"></a><a href="#Footnote_80_80" class="fnanchor">[80]</a> And this
+ passionate love of liberty, which was his misfortune in life, since it deprived him
+ of the comfort of any faith, refused him any refuge for his thoughts, robbed him of
+ peace, and even of the soft pillow of scepticism&mdash;this "real liberty" formed the
+ unique originality and grandeur of his musical conceptions.<a
+ name="page47" id="page47"/></p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"Music," wrote Berlioz to C. Lobe, in 1852, "is the most poetic, the most
+ powerful, the most living of all arts. She ought to be the freest, but she is not
+ yet.... Modern music is like the classic Andromeda, naked and divinely beautiful.
+ She is chained to a rock on the shores of a vast sea, and awaits the victorious
+ Perseus who shall loose her bonds and break in pieces the chimera called
+ Routine."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>The business was to free music from its limited rhythms and from the traditional
+ forms and rules that enclosed it;<a name="FNanchor_81_81" id="FNanchor_81_81"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_81_81" class="fnanchor">[81]</a> and, above all, it needed to be free
+ from the domination of speech, and to be released from its humiliating bondage to
+ poetry. Berlioz wrote to the Princess of Wittgenstein, in 1856:&mdash;</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"I am for free music. Yes, I want music to be proudly free, to be victorious, to
+ be supreme. I want her to take all she can, so that there may be no more Alps or
+ Pyrenees for her. But she <a name="page48"
+ id="page48"/>must achieve her victories by fighting in person, and
+ not rely upon her lieutenants. I should like her to have, if possible, good verse
+ drawn up in order of battle; but, like Napoleon, she must face the fire herself,
+ and, like Alexander, march in the front ranks of the phalanx. She is so powerful
+ that in some cases she would conquer unaided; for she has the right to say with
+ Medea: 'I, myself, am enough.'"</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Berlioz protested vigorously against Gluck's impious theory<a
+ name="FNanchor_82_82" id="FNanchor_82_82"></a><a href="#Footnote_82_82"
+ class="fnanchor">[82]</a> and Wagner's "crime" in making music the slave of speech.
+ Music is the highest poetry and knows no master.<a name="FNanchor_83_83"
+ id="FNanchor_83_83"></a><a href="#Footnote_83_83" class="fnanchor">[83]</a> It was
+ for Berlioz, therefore, continually to increase the power of expression in pure
+ music.</p>
+ <p><a name="page49" id="page49"/>And while
+ Wagner, who was more moderate and a closer follower of tradition, sought to establish
+ a compromise (perhaps an impossible one) between music and speech, and to create the
+ new lyric drama, Berlioz, who was more revolutionary, achieved the dramatic symphony,
+ of which the unequalled model to-day is still <i>Rom&eacute;o et Juliette</i>.</p>
+ <p>The dramatic symphony naturally fell foul of all formal theories. Two arguments
+ were set up against it: one derived from Bayreuth, and by now an act of faith; the
+ other, current opinion, upheld by the crowd that speaks of music without
+ understanding it.</p>
+ <p>The first argument, maintained by Wagner, is that music cannot really express
+ action without the help of speech and gesture. It is in the name of this opinion that
+ so many people condemn <i>a priori</i> Berlioz's <i>Rom&eacute;o</i>. They think it
+ childish to try and <i>translate</i> action into music. I suppose they think it less
+ childish to <i>illustrate</i> an action by music. Do they think that gesture
+ associates itself very happily with music? If only they would try to root up this
+ great fiction, which has bothered us for the last three centuries; if only they would
+ open their eyes and see&mdash;what great men like Rousseau and Tolstoy saw so
+ clearly&mdash;the silliness of opera; if only they would see the anomalies of the
+ Bayreuth show. In the second act of <i>Tristan</i> there is a celebrated passage,
+ where Ysolde, burning with desire, is waiting for Tristan; she sees him come at last,
+ and from afar she waves her scarf to the accompaniment of a phrase repeated several
+ times by the orchestra. I cannot express the effect produced on me by that
+ <i>imitation</i> (for it is nothing else) of a series of sounds by a series of
+ gestures; I can never see it without indignation or without laughing.<a name="page50" id="page50"/>The curious thing is
+ that when one hears this passage at a concert, one sees the gesture. At the theatre
+ either one does not "see" it, or it appears childish. The natural action becomes
+ stiff when clad in musical armour, and the absurdity of trying to make the two agree
+ is forced upon one. In the music of <i>Rheingold</i> one pictures the stature and
+ gait of the giants, and one sees the lightning gleam and the rainbow reflected on the
+ clouds. In the theatre it is like a game of marionettes; and one feels the impassable
+ gulf between music and gesture. Music is a world apart. When music wishes to depict
+ the drama, it is not real action which is reflected in it, it is the ideal action
+ transfigured by the spirit, and perceptible only to the inner vision. The worst
+ foolishness is to present two visions&mdash;one for the eyes and one for the spirit.
+ Nearly always they kill each other.</p>
+ <p>The other argument urged against the symphony with a programme is the pretended
+ classical argument (it is not really classical at all). "Music," they say, "is not
+ meant to express definite subjects; it is only fitted for vague ideas. The more
+ indefinite it is, the greater its power, and the more it suggests." I ask, What is an
+ indefinite art? What is a vague art? Do not the two words contradict each other? Can
+ this strange combination exist at all? Can an artist write anything that he does not
+ clearly conceive? Do people think he composes at random as his genius whispers to
+ him? One must at least say this: A symphony of Beethoven's is a "definite" work down
+ to its innermost folds; and Beethoven <a name="page51"
+ id="page51"/>had, if not an exact knowledge, at least a clear
+ intuition of what he was about. His last quartets are descriptive symphonies of his
+ soul, and very differently carried out from Berlioz's symphonies. Wagner was able to
+ analyse one of the former under the name of "A Day with Beethoven." Beethoven was
+ always trying to translate into music the depths of his heart, the subtleties of his
+ spirit, which are not to be explained clearly by words, but which are as definite as
+ words&mdash;in fact, more definite; for a word, being an abstract thing, sums up many
+ experiences and comprehends many different meanings. Music is a hundred times more
+ expressive and exact than speech; and it is not only her right to express particular
+ emotions and subjects, it is her duty. If that duty is not fulfilled, the result is
+ not music&mdash;it is nothing at all.</p>
+ <p>Berlioz is thus the true inheritor of Beethoven's thought. The difference between
+ a work like <i>Rom&eacute;o</i> and one of Beethoven's symphonies is that the former,
+ it would seem, endeavours to express objective emotions and subjects in music. I do
+ not see why music should not follow poetry in getting away from introspection and
+ trying to paint the drama of the universe. Shakespeare is as good as Dante. Besides,
+ one may add, it is always Berlioz himself that is discovered in his music: it is his
+ soul starving for love and mocked at by shadows which is revealed through all the
+ scenes of <i>Rom&eacute;o</i>.</p>
+ <p>I will not prolong a discussion where so many things must be left unsaid. But I
+ would suggest <a name="page52" id="page52"/>
+ that, once and for all, we get rid of these absurd endeavours to fence in art. Do not
+ let us say: Music can.... Music cannot express such-and-such a thing. Let us say
+ rather, If genius pleases, everything is possible; and if music so wishes, she may be
+ painting and poetry to-morrow. Berlioz has proved it well in his
+ <i>Rom&eacute;o</i>.</p>
+ <p>This <i>Rom&eacute;o</i> is an extraordinary work: "a wonderful isle, where a
+ temple of pure art is set up." For my part, not only do I consider it equal to the
+ most powerful of Wagner's creations, but I believe it to be richer in its teaching
+ and in its resources for art&mdash;resources and teaching which contemporary French
+ art has not yet fully turned to account. One knows that for several years the young
+ French school has been making efforts to deliver our music from German models, to
+ create a language of recitative that shall belong to France and that the
+ <i>leitmotif</i> will not overwhelm; a more exact and less heavy language, which in
+ expressing the freedom of modern thought will not have to seek the help of the
+ classical or Wagnerian forms. Not long ago, the <i>Schola Cantorum</i> published a
+ manifesto that proclaimed "the liberty of musical declamation ... free speech in free
+ music ... the triumph of natural music with the free movement of speech and the
+ plastic rhythm of the ancient dance"&mdash;thus declaring war on the metrical art of
+ the last three centuries.<a name="FNanchor_84_84" id="FNanchor_84_84"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_84_84" class="fnanchor">[84]</a></p>
+ <p>Well, here is that music; you will nowhere find a more perfect model. It is true
+ that many <a name="page53" id="page53"/>who
+ profess the principles of this music repudiate the model, and do not hide their
+ disdain for Berlioz. That makes me doubt a little, I admit, the results of their
+ efforts. If they do not feel the wonderful freedom of Berlioz's music, and do not see
+ that it was the delicate veil of a very living spirit, then I think there will be
+ more of archaism than real life in their pretensions to "free music." Study, not only
+ the most celebrated pages of his work, such as the <i>Sc&egrave;ne d'amour</i> (the
+ one of all his compositions that Berlioz himself liked best),<a name="FNanchor_85_85"
+ id="FNanchor_85_85"></a><a href="#Footnote_85_85" class="fnanchor">[85]</a> <i>La
+ Tristesse de Rom&eacute;o</i>, or <i>La F&ecirc;te des Capulet</i> (where a spirit
+ like Wagner's own unlooses and subdues again tempests of passion and joy), but take
+ less well-known pages, such as the <i>Scherzetto chant&eacute; de la reine Mab</i>,
+ or the <i>R&eacute;veil de Juliette</i>, and the music describing the death of the
+ two lovers.<a name="FNanchor_86_86" id="FNanchor_86_86"></a><a href="#Footnote_86_86"
+ class="fnanchor">[86]</a> In the one what light grace there is, in the other what
+ vibrating passion, and in both of them what freedom and apt expression of ideas. The
+ language is magnificent, of wonderful clearness and simplicity; not a word too much,
+ and not a word that does not reveal an unerring pen. In nearly all the big works of
+ Berlioz before 1845 (that is up to the <i>Damnation</i>) you will find this nervous
+ precision and sweeping liberty.</p>
+ <p>Then there is the freedom of his rhythms. Schumann, who was nearest to Berlioz of
+ all musicians <a name="page54" id="page54"/>of
+ that time, and, therefore, best able to understand him, had been struck by this since
+ the composition of the <i>Symphonic fantastique</i>,<a name="FNanchor_87_87"
+ id="FNanchor_87_87"></a><a href="#Footnote_87_87" class="fnanchor">[87]</a> He
+ wrote:&mdash;</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"The present age has certainly not produced a work in which similar times and
+ rhythms combined with dissimilar times and rhythms have been more freely used. The
+ second part of a phrase rarely corresponds with the first, the reply to the
+ question. This anomaly is characteristic of Berlioz, and is natural to his southern
+ temperament."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Far from objecting to this, Schumann sees in it something necessary to musical
+ evolution.</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"Apparently music is showing a tendency to go back to its beginnings, to the
+ time when the laws of rhythm did not yet trouble her; it seems that she wishes to
+ free herself, to regain an utterance that is unconstrained, and raise herself to
+ the dignity of a sort of poetic language."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>And Schumann quotes these words of Ernest Wagner: "He who shakes off the tyranny
+ of time and delivers us from it will, as far as one can see, give back freedom to
+ music."<a name="FNanchor_88_88" id="FNanchor_88_88"></a><a href="#Footnote_88_88"
+ class="fnanchor">[88]</a><a name="page55"
+ id="page55"/></p>
+ <p>Remark also Berlioz's freedom of melody. His musical phrases pulse and flow like
+ life itself. "Some phrases taken separately," says Schumann, "have such an intensity
+ that they will not bear harmonising&mdash;<i>as in many ancient
+ folk-songs</i>&mdash;and often even an accompaniment spoils their fulness."<a
+ name="FNanchor_89_89" id="FNanchor_89_89"></a><a href="#Footnote_89_89"
+ class="fnanchor">[89]</a> These melodies so correspond with the emotions, that they
+ reproduce the least thrills of body and mind by their vigorous workings-up and
+ delicate reliefs, by splendid barbarities of modulation and strong and glowing
+ colour, by gentle gradations of light and shade or imperceptible ripples of thought,
+ which flow over the body like a steady tide. It is an art of peculiar sensitiveness,
+ more delicately expressive than that of Wagner; not satisfying itself with the modern
+ tonality, but going back to old modes&mdash;a rebel, as M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns remarks,
+ to the polyphony which had governed music since Bach's day, and which is perhaps,
+ after all, "a heresy destined to disappear."<a name="FNanchor_90_90"
+ id="FNanchor_90_90"></a><a href="#Footnote_90_90" class="fnanchor">[90]</a></p>
+ <p>How much finer, to my idea, are Berlioz's recitatives, with their long and winding
+ rhythms,<a name="FNanchor_91_91" id="FNanchor_91_91"></a><a href="#Footnote_91_91"
+ class="fnanchor">[91]</a> than<a name="page56"
+ id="page56"/>Wagner's declamations, which&mdash;apart from the climax
+ of a subject, where the air breaks into bold and vigorous phrases, whose influence
+ elsewhere is often weak&mdash;limit themselves to the quasi-notation of spoken
+ inflections, and jar noisily against the fine harmonies of the orchestra. Berlioz's
+ orchestration, too, is of a more delicate temper, and has a freer life than Wagner's,
+ flowing in an impetuous stream, and sweeping away everything in its course; it is
+ also less united and solid, but more flexible; its nature is undulating and varied,
+ and the thousand imperceptible impulses of the spirit and of action are reflected
+ there. It is a marvel of spontaneity and caprice.</p>
+ <p>In spite of appearances, Wagner is a classicist compared with Berlioz; he carried
+ on and perfected the work of the German classicists; he made no innovations; he is
+ the pinnacle and the close of one evolution of art. Berlioz began a new art; and one
+ finds in it all the daring and gracious ardour of youth. The iron laws that bound the
+ art of Wagner are not to be found in Berlioz's early works, which give one the
+ illusion of perfect freedom.<a name="FNanchor_92_92" id="FNanchor_92_92"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_92_92" class="fnanchor">[92]</a></p>
+ <a name="page57" id="page57"/>
+ <p>As soon as the profound originality of Berlioz's music has been grasped, one
+ understands why it encountered, and still encounters, so much secret hostility. How
+ many accomplished musicians of distinction and learning, who pay honour to artistic
+ tradition, are incapable of understanding Berlioz because they cannot bear the air of
+ liberty breathed by his music. They are so used to thinking in German, that Berlioz's
+ speech upsets and shocks them. I can well believe it. It is the first time a French
+ musician has dared to think in French; and that is the reason why I warned you of the
+ danger of accepting too meekly German ideas about Berlioz. Men like Weingartner,
+ Richard Strauss, and Mottl&mdash;thoroughbred musicians&mdash;are, without doubt,
+ able to appreciate Berlioz's genius better and more quickly than we French musicians.
+ But I rather mistrust the kind of appreciation they feel for a spirit so opposed to
+ their own. It is for France and French people to learn to read his thoughts; they
+ <a name="page58" id="page58"/>are intimately
+ theirs, and one day will give them their salvation.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>Berlioz's other great originality lay in his talent for music that was suited to
+ the spirit of the common people, recently raised to sovereignty, and the young
+ democracy. In spite of his aristocratic disdain, his soul was with the masses. M.
+ Hippeau applies to him Taine's definition of a romantic artist: "the plebeian of a
+ new race, richly gifted, and filled with aspirations, who, having attained for the
+ first time the world's heights, noisily displays the ferment of his mind and heart."
+ Berlioz grew up in the midst of revolutions and stories of Imperial achievement. He
+ wrote his cantata for the <i>Prix de Rome</i> in July, 1830, "to the hard, dull noise
+ of stray bullets, which whizzed above the roofs, and came to flatten themselves
+ against the wall near his window."<a name="FNanchor_93_93" id="FNanchor_93_93"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_93_93" class="fnanchor">[93]</a> When he had finished this cantata,
+ he went, "pistol in hand, to play the blackguard in Paris with the <i>sainte
+ canaille</i>." He sang the <i>Marseillaise</i>, and made "all who had a voice and
+ heart and blood in their veins"<a name="FNanchor_94_94" id="FNanchor_94_94"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_94_94" class="fnanchor">[94]</a> sing it too. On his journey to Italy
+ he travelled from Marseilles to Livourne with Mazzinian conspirators, who were going
+ to take part in the insurrection of Modena and Bologna. Whether he was conscious of
+ it or not, he was the musician of revolutions; his sympathies were with the people.
+ <a name="page59" id="page59"/>Not only did he
+ fill his scenes in the theatre with swarming and riotous crowds, like those of the
+ Roman Carnival in the second act of <i>Benvenuto</i> (anticipating by thirty years
+ the crowds of <i>Die Meistersinger</i>), but he created a music of the masses and a
+ colossal style. His model here was Beethoven; Beethoven of the Eroica, of the C
+ minor, of the A, and, above all, of the Ninth Symphony. He was Beethoven's follower
+ in this as well as other things, and the apostle who carried on his work.<a
+ name="FNanchor_95_95" id="FNanchor_95_95"></a><a href="#Footnote_95_95"
+ class="fnanchor">[95]</a> And with his understanding of material effects and sonorous
+ matter, he built edifices, as he says, that were "Babylonian and Ninevitish,"<a
+ name="FNanchor_96_96" id="FNanchor_96_96"></a><a href="#Footnote_96_96"
+ class="fnanchor">[96]</a> "music after Michelangelo,"<a name="FNanchor_97_97"
+ id="FNanchor_97_97"></a><a href="#Footnote_97_97" class="fnanchor">[97]</a> "on an
+ immense scale."<a name="FNanchor_98_98" id="FNanchor_98_98"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_98_98" class="fnanchor">[98]</a></p>
+ <p><a name="page60" id="page60"/>It was the
+ <i>Symphonie fun&egrave;bre et triomphale</i> for two orchestras and a choir, and the
+ <i>Te Deum</i> for orchestra, organ, and three choirs, which Berlioz loved (whose
+ finale <i>Judex crederis</i> seemed to him the most effective thing he had ever
+ written<a name="FNanchor_99_99" id="FNanchor_99_99"></a><a href="#Footnote_99_99"
+ class="fnanchor">[99]</a>), as well as the <i>Imp&eacute;riale</i>, for two
+ orchestras and two choirs, and the famous <i>Requiem</i>, with its "four orchestras
+ of brass instruments, placed round the main orchestra and the mass of voices, but
+ separated and answering one another at a distance." Like the <i>Requiem</i>, these
+ compositions are often crude in style and of rather commonplace sentiment, but their
+ grandeur is overwhelming. This is not due only to the hugeness of the means employed,
+ but also to "the breadth of the style and to the formidable slowness of some of the
+ progressions&mdash;whose final aim one cannot guess&mdash;which gives these
+ compositions a strangely gigantic character."<a name="FNanchor_100_100"
+ id="FNanchor_100_100"></a><a href="#Footnote_100_100" class="fnanchor">[100]</a>
+ Berlioz has left in these compositions striking examples of the beauty that may
+ reveal itself in a crude mass of music. Like the towering Alps, they move one by
+ their very immensity. A German critic says: "In these Cyclopean works the composer
+ lets the elemental and brute forces of sound and pure rhythm have their fling."<a
+ name="FNanchor_101_101" id="FNanchor_101_101"></a><a href="#Footnote_101_101"
+ class="fnanchor">[101]</a> It is scarcely music, it is the force of Nature herself.
+ Berlioz himself calls his <i>Requiem</i> "a musical cataclysm."<a
+ name="FNanchor_102_102" id="FNanchor_102_102"></a><a href="#Footnote_102_102"
+ class="fnanchor">[102]</a></p>
+ <p><a name="page61" id="page61"/>These
+ hurricanes are let loose in order to speak to the people, to stir and rouse the dull
+ ocean of humanity. The <i>Requiem</i> is a Last Judgment, not meant, like that of the
+ Sixtine Chapel (which Berlioz did not care for at all) for great aristocracies, but
+ for a crowd, a surging, excited, and rather savage crowd. The <i>Marche de
+ Rakoczy</i> is less an Hungarian march than the music for a revolutionary fight; it
+ sounds the charge; and Berlioz tells us it might bear Virgil's verses for a
+ motto:&mdash;</p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span>" ... Furor iraque mentes<br />
+ </span> <span>Praecipitant, pulchrumque mori succurrit in armis."<a
+ name="FNanchor_103_103" id="FNanchor_103_103"></a><a href="#Footnote_103_103"
+ class="fnanchor">[103]</a><br />
+ </span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>When Wagner heard the <i>Symphonic fun&egrave;bre et triomphale</i> he was forced
+ to admit Berlioz's "skill in writing compositions that were popular in the best sense
+ of the word."</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"In listening to that symphony I had a lively impression that any little street
+ boy in a blue blouse and red bonnet would understand it perfectly. I have no
+ hesitation in giving precedence to that work over Berlioz's other works; it is big
+ and noble from the first note to the last; a fine and eager patriotism rises from
+ its first expression of compassion to the final glory of the apotheosis, and keeps
+ it from any unwholesome exaggeration. I want gladly to express my conviction that
+ that symphony will fire men's courage and will live as long as a nation bears the
+ name of France."<a name="FNanchor_104_104" id="FNanchor_104_104"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_104_104" class="fnanchor">[104]</a></p>
+ </div>
+ <a name="page62" id="page62"/>
+ <p>How do such works come to be neglected by our Republic? How is it they have not a
+ place in our public life? Why are they not part of our great ceremonies? That is what
+ one would wonderingly ask oneself if one had not seen, for the last century, the
+ indifference of the State to Art. What might not Berlioz have done if the means had
+ been given him, or if his works had found a place in the f&ecirc;tes of the
+ Revolution? Unhappily, one must add that here again his character was the enemy of
+ his genius. As this apostle of musical freedom, in the second part of his life,
+ became afraid of himself and recoiled before the results of his own principles, and
+ returned to classicism, so this revolutionary fell to sullenly disparaging the people
+ and revolutions; and he talks about "the republican cholera," "the dirty and stupid
+ republic," "the republic of street-porters and rag-gatherers," "the filthy rabble of
+ humanity a hundred times more stupid and animal in its twitchings and revolutionary
+ grimacings than the baboons and orang-outangs of Borneo."<a name="FNanchor_105_105"
+ id="FNanchor_105_105"></a><a href="#Footnote_105_105" class="fnanchor">[105]</a>
+ <a name="page63" id="page63"/>What ingratitude!
+ He owed to these revolutions, to these democratic storms, to these human tempests,
+ the best of all his genius&mdash;and he disowned it all. This musician of a new era
+ took refuge in the past.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>Well, what did it matter? Whether he wished it or not, he opened out some
+ magnificent roads for Art. He has shown the music of France the way in which her
+ genius should tread; he has shown her possibilities she had never before dreamed of.
+ He has given us a musical utterance at once truthful and expressive, free from
+ foreign traditions, coming from the depths of our being, and reflecting our spirit;
+ an utterance which responded to his imagination, to his instinct for what was
+ picturesque, to his fleeting impressions, and his delicate shades of feeling. He has
+ laid the strong foundation of a national and popular music for the greatest republic
+ in Europe.</p>
+ <p>These are shining qualities. If Berlioz had had Wagner's reasoning power and had
+ made the utmost use of his intuitions, if he had had Wagner's will and had shaped the
+ inspirations of his genius and welded them into a solid whole, I venture to say that
+ he would have made a revolution in music greater than Wagner's own; for Wagner,
+ though stronger and more master of himself, was less original and, at bottom, but the
+ close of a glorious past.<a name="page64"
+ id="page64"/></p>
+ <p>Will that revolution still be accomplished? Perhaps; but it has suffered half a
+ century's delay. Berlioz bitterly calculated that people would begin to understand
+ him about the year 1940.<a name="FNanchor_106_106" id="FNanchor_106_106"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_106_106" class="fnanchor">[106]</a></p>
+ <p>After all, why be astonished that his mighty mission was too much for him? He was
+ so alone.<a name="FNanchor_107_107" id="FNanchor_107_107"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_107_107" class="fnanchor">[107]</a> As people forsook him, his
+ loneliness stood out in greater relief. He was alone in the age of Wagner, Liszt,
+ Schumann, and Franck; alone, yet containing a whole world in himself, of which his
+ enemies, his friends, his admirers, and he himself, were not quite conscious; alone,
+ and tortured by his loneliness. Alone&mdash;the word is repeated by the music of his
+ youth and his old age, by the <i>Symphonie fantastique</i> and <i>Les Troyens</i>. It
+ is the word I read in the portrait before me as I write these lines&mdash;the
+ beautiful portrait of the <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, where his face looks out in sad and
+ stern reproach on the age that so misunderstood him.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+ <a name="page65" id="page65"/>
+ <h2><a name="WAGNER" id="WAGNER"></a>WAGNER</h2>
+ <h2>"SIEGFRIED"</h2>
+ <p>There is nothing so thrilling as first impressions. I remember when, as a child, I
+ heard fragments of Wagner's music for the first time at one of old Pasdeloup's
+ concerts in the Cirque d'Hiver. I was taken there one dull and foggy Sunday
+ afternoon; and as we left the yellow fog outside and entered the hall we were met by
+ an overpowering warmth, a dazzling blaze of light, and the murmuring voice of the
+ crowd. My eyes were blinded, I breathed with difficulty, and my limbs soon became
+ cramped; for we sat on wooden benches, crushed in a narrow space between solid walls
+ of human beings. But with the first note of the music all was forgotten, and one fell
+ into a state of painful yet delicious torpor. Perhaps one's very discomfort made the
+ pleasure keener. Those who know the intoxication of climbing a mountain know also how
+ closely it is associated with the discomforts of the climb&mdash;with fatigue and the
+ blinding light of the sun, with out-of-breathness, and all the other sensations that
+ rouse and stimulate life and make the body tingle, so that the remembrance of it all
+ is carved indelibly on the mind. The comfort of a playhouse adds <a name="page66" id="page66"/>nothing to the illusion
+ of a play; and it may even be due to the entire inconvenience of the old
+ concert-rooms that I owe my vivid recollection of my first meeting with Wagner's
+ work.</p>
+ <p>How mysterious it was, and what a strange agitation it filled me with! There were
+ new effects of orchestration, new timbres, new rhythms, and new subjects; it held the
+ wild poetry of the far-away Middle Ages and old legends, it throbbed with the fever
+ of our hidden sorrows and desires. I did not understand it very well. How should I?
+ The music was taken from works quite unknown to me. It was almost impossible to seize
+ the connection of the ideas on account of the poor acoustics of the room, the bad
+ arrangement of the orchestra, and the unskilled players&mdash;all of which served to
+ break up the musical design and spoil the harmony of its colouring. Passages that
+ should have been made prominent were slurred over, and others were distorted by
+ faulty time or want of precision. Even to-day, when our orchestras are seasoned by
+ years of study, I should often be unable to follow Wagner's thought throughout a
+ whole scene if I did not happen to know the score, for the outline of a melody is
+ often smothered by the accompaniment, and so its sentiment is lost. If we still find
+ obscurity of meaning in Wagner's works you can imagine how much worse it was then.
+ But what did it matter? I used to feel myself stirred with passions that were not
+ human: some magnetic influence seemed to thrill me with both pleasure and pain, and I
+ felt invigorated and happy, for it brought me strength.<a
+ name="page67" id="page67"/>It seemed as if my child's heart were torn
+ from me and the heart of a hero put in its place.</p>
+ <p>Nor was I alone in the experience. On the faces of the people round about me I saw
+ the reflection of my own emotions. What was the meaning of it? The audience consisted
+ chiefly of poor and commonplace people, whose faces were lined with the wear and tear
+ of a life without interest or ideals; their minds were dull and heavy, and yet here
+ they responded to the divine spirit of the music. There is no more impressive sight
+ than that of thousands of people held spellbound by a melody; it is by turns sublime,
+ grotesque, and touching.</p>
+ <p>What a place in my life those Sunday concerts held! All the week I lived for those
+ two hours; and when they were over I thought about them until the following Sunday.
+ The fascination of Wagner's music for youth has often troubled people; they think it
+ poisons the thoughts and dulls the activities. But the generation that was then
+ intoxicated by Wagner does not seem to have shown signs of demoralisation since. Why
+ do not people understand that if we had need of that music it was not because it was
+ death to us, but life. Cramped by the artificiality of a town, far from action, or
+ nature, or any strong or real life, we expanded under the influence of this noble
+ music&mdash;music which flowed from a heart filled with understanding of the world
+ and the breath of Nature. In <i>Die Meistersinger</i>, in <i>Tristan</i>, and in
+ <i>Siegfried</i>, we went to find the joy, the love, and the vigour that we so
+ lacked.<a name="page68" id="page68"/></p>
+ <p>At the time when I was feeling Wagner's seductiveness so strongly there were
+ always some carping people among my elders ready to quench my admiration and say with
+ a superior smile: "That is nothing. One can't judge Wagner at a concert. You must
+ hear him in the opera-house at Bayreuth." Since then I have been several times to
+ Bayreuth; I have seen Wagner's works performed in Berlin, in Dresden, in Munich, and
+ in other German towns, but I have never again felt the old intoxication. People are
+ wrong to pretend that closer acquaintance with a fine work adds to one's enjoyment of
+ it. It may throw light upon it, but it nips one's imagination and dispels the
+ mystery. The puzzling fragments one hears at concerts will take on splendid
+ proportions on account of all the mind adds to them. That epic poem of the
+ <i>Niebelungen</i> was once like a forest in our dreams, where strange and awful
+ beings flashed before our vision and then vanished. Later on, when we had explored
+ all its paths, we discovered that order and reason reigned in the midst of this
+ apparent jungle; and when we came to know the least wrinkle on the faces of its
+ inhabitants, the confusion and emotion of other days no longer filled us.</p>
+ <p>But this may be the result of growing older; and if I do not recognise the Wagner
+ of other days, it is perhaps because I do not recognise my former self. A work of
+ art, and above all a work of musical art, changes with ourselves. <i>Siegfried</i>,
+ for example, is for me no longer full of mystery. The qualities in it that strike me
+ to-day are its cheerful vigour, its <a name="page69"
+ id="page69"/>clearness of form, its virile force and freedom, and the
+ extraordinary healthiness of the hero, and, indeed, of the whole work.</p>
+ <p>I sometimes think of poor Nietzsche and his passion for destroying the things he
+ loved, and how he sought in others the decadence that was really in himself. He tried
+ to embody this decadence in Wagner, and, led away by his flights of fancy and his
+ mania for paradox (which would be laughable if one did not remember that his whims
+ were not hatched in hours of happiness), he denied Wagner his most obvious
+ qualities&mdash;his vigour, his determination, his unity, his logic, and his power of
+ progress. He amused himself by comparing Wagner's style with that of Goncourt, by
+ making him&mdash;with amusing irony&mdash;a great miniaturist painter, a poet of
+ half-tones, a musician of affectations and melancholy, so delicate and effeminate in
+ style that "after him all other musicians seemed too robust."<a
+ name="FNanchor_108_108" id="FNanchor_108_108"></a><a href="#Footnote_108_108"
+ class="fnanchor">[108]</a> He has painted Wagner and his time delightfully. We all
+ enjoy these little pictures of the Tetralogy, delicately drawn and worked up by the
+ aid of a magnifying-glass&mdash;pictures of Wagner, languishing and beautiful, in a
+ mournful salon, and pictures of the athletic meetings of the other musicians, who
+ were "too robust"! The amusing part is that this piece of wit has been taken
+ seriously by certain arbiters of elegance, who are only too happy to be able to run
+ counter to any current opinion, whatever it may be.</p>
+ <p>I do not say that there may not be a decadent <a
+ name="page70" id="page70"/>side in Wagner, revealing
+ super-sensitiveness or even hysteria and other modern nervous affections. And if this
+ side was lacking he would not be representative of his time, and that is what every
+ great artist ought to be. But there is certainly something more in him than
+ decadence; and if women and young men cannot see anything beyond it, it only proves
+ their inability to get outside themselves. A long time ago Wagner himself complained
+ to Liszt that neither the public nor artists knew how to listen to or understand any
+ side of his music but the effeminate side: "They do not grasp its strength," he said.
+ "My supposed successes," he also tells us, "are founded on misunderstanding. My
+ public reputation isn't worth a walnut-shell." And it is true he has been applauded,
+ patronised, and monopolised for a quarter of a century by all the decadents of art
+ and literature. Scarcely anyone has seen in him a vigorous musician and a classic
+ writer, or has recognised him as Beethoven's direct successor, the inheritor of his
+ heroic and pastoral genius, of his epic inspirations and battlefield rhythms, of his
+ Napoleonic phrases and atmosphere of stirring trumpet-calls.</p>
+ <p>Nowhere is Wagner nearer to Beethoven than in <i>Siegfried</i>. In <i>Die
+ Walk&uuml;re</i> certain characters, certain phrases of Wotan, of Br&uuml;nnhilde,
+ and, especially, of Siegmund, bear a close relationship to Beethoven's symphonies and
+ sonatas. I can never play the recitative <i>con espressione e semplice</i> of the
+ seventeenth sonata for the piano (Op. 31, No. 2) without being reminded of the
+ forests of <i>Die Walk&uuml;re</i><a name="page71"
+ id="page71"/>and the fugitive hero. But in <i>Siegfried</i> I find,
+ not only a likeness to Beethoven in details, but the same spirit running through the
+ work&mdash;both the poem and the music. I cannot help thinking that Beethoven would
+ perhaps have disliked <i>Tristan</i>, but would have loved <i>Siegfried</i>; for the
+ latter is a perfect incarnation of the spirit of old Germany, virginal and gross,
+ sincere and malicious, full of humour and sentiment, of deep feeling, of dreams of
+ bloody and joyous battles, of the shade of great oak-trees and the song of birds.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>In my opinion, <i>Siegfried</i>, in spirit and in form, stands alone in Wagner's
+ work. It breathes perfect health and happiness, and it overflows with gladness. Only
+ <i>Die Meistersinger</i> rivals it in merriment, though even there one does not find
+ such a nice balance of poetry and music.</p>
+ <p>And <i>Siegfried</i> rouses one's admiration the more when one thinks that it was
+ the offspring of sickness and suffering. The time at which Wagner wrote it was one of
+ the saddest in his life. It often happens so in art. One goes astray in trying to
+ interpret an artist's life by his work, for it is exceptional to find one a
+ counterpart of the other. It is more likely that an artist's work will express the
+ opposite of his life&mdash;the things that he did not experience. The object of art
+ is to fill up what is missing in the artist's experience: "Art begins where life
+ leaves off," said Wagner. A man of action is rarely pleased with stimulating works of
+ art. Borgia and Sforza <a name="page72"
+ id="page72"/>patronised Leonardo. The strong, full-blooded men of the
+ seventeenth century; the apoplectic court at Versailles (where Fagon's lancet played
+ so necessary a part); the generals and ministers who harassed the Protestants and
+ burned the Palatinate&mdash;all these loved pastorales. Napoleon wept at a reading of
+ <i>Paul et Virginie</i>, and delighted in the pallid music of Paesiello. A man
+ wearied by an over-active life seeks repose in art; a man who lives a narrow,
+ commonplace life seeks energy in art. A great artist writes a gay work when he is
+ sad, and a sad work when he is gay, almost in spite of himself. Beethoven's symphony
+ <i>To Joy</i> is the offspring of his misery; and Wagner's <i>Meistersinger</i> was
+ composed immediately after the failure of <i>Tannh&auml;user</i> in Paris. People try
+ to find in <i>Tristan</i> the trace of some love-story of Wagner's, but Wagner
+ himself says: "As in all my life I have never truly tasted the happiness of love, I
+ will raise a monument to a beautiful dream of it: I have the idea of <i>Tristan und
+ Isolde</i> in my head." And so it was with his creation of the happy and heedless
+ <i>Siegfried</i>.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>The first ideas of <i>Siegfried</i> were contemporary with the Revolution of 1848,
+ which Wagner took part in with the same enthusiasm he put into everything else. His
+ recognised biographer, Herr Houston Stewart Chamberlain&mdash;who, with M. Henri
+ Lichtenberger, has succeeded best in unravelling Wagner's complex soul, though he is
+ not without certain <a name="page73"
+ id="page73"/>prejudices&mdash;has been at great pains to prove that
+ Wagner was always a patriot and a German monarchist. Well, he may have been so later
+ on, but it was not, I think, the last phase of his evolution. His actions speak for
+ themselves. On 14 June, 1848, in a famous speech to the National Democratic
+ Association, Wagner violently attacked the organisation of society itself, and
+ demanded both the abolition of money and the extinction of what was left of the
+ aristocracy. In <i>Das Kunstwerk der Zukunft</i> (1849) he showed that beyond the
+ "local nationalism" were signs of a "supernational universalism." And all this was
+ not merely talk, for he risked his life for his ideas. Herr Chamberlain himself
+ quotes the account of a witness who saw him, in May, 1849, distributing revolutionary
+ pamphlets to the troops who were besieging Dresden. It was a miracle that he was not
+ arrested and shot. We know that after Dresden was taken a warrant was out against
+ him, and he fled to Switzerland, with a passport on which was a borrowed name. If it
+ be true that Wagner later declared that he had been "involved in error and led away
+ by his feelings" it matters little to the history of that time. Errors and
+ enthusiasms are an integral part of life, and one must not ignore them in a man's
+ biography under the pretext that he regretted them twenty or thirty years later, for
+ they have, nevertheless, helped to guide his actions and impressed his imagination.
+ It was out of the Revolution itself that <i>Siegfried</i> directly sprang.</p>
+ <p>In 1848, Wagner was not yet thinking of a<a name="page74"
+ id="page74"/>Tetralogy, but of an heroic opera in three acts called
+ <i>Siegfried's Tod</i>, in which the fatal power of gold was to be symbolised in the
+ treasure of the Niebelungen; and Siegfried was to represent "a socialist redeemer
+ come down to earth to abolish the reign of Capital." As the rough draft developed,
+ Wagner went up the stream of his hero's life. He dreamed of his childhood, of his
+ conquest of the treasure, of the awakening of Br&uuml;nnhilde; and in 1851 he wrote
+ the poem of <i>Der Junge Siegfried</i>. Siegfried and Br&uuml;nnhilde represent the
+ humanity of the future, the new era that should be realised when the earth was set
+ free from the yoke of gold. Then Wagner went farther back still, to the sources of
+ the legend itself, and Wotan appeared, the symbol of our time, a man such as you or
+ I&mdash;in contrast to Siegfried, man as he ought to be, and one day will be. On this
+ subject Wagner says, in a letter to Roeckel: "Look well at Wotan; he is the
+ unmistakable likeness of ourselves, and the sum of the present-day spirit, while
+ Siegfried is the man we wait and wish for&mdash;the future man whom we cannot create,
+ but who will create himself by our annihilation&mdash;the most perfect man I can
+ imagine." Finally Wagner conceived the Twilight of the Gods, the fall of the
+ Valhalla&mdash;our present system of society&mdash;and the birth of a regenerated
+ humanity. Wagner wrote to Uhlig in 1851 that the complete work was to be played after
+ the great Revolution.</p>
+ <p>The opera public would probably be very astonished to learn that in
+ <i>Siegfried</i> they applaud a revolutionary work, expressly directed by Wagner
+ against <a name="page75" id="page75"/>this
+ detested Capital, whose downfall would have been so dear to him. And he never doubted
+ that he was expressing grief in all these pages of shining joy.</p>
+ <p>Wagner went to Zurich after a stay in Paris, where he felt "so much distrust for
+ the artistic world and horror for the restraint that he was forced to put upon
+ himself" that he was seized with a nervous malady which nearly killed him. He
+ returned to work at <i>Der Junge Siegfried</i>, and he says it brought him great
+ joy.</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"But I am unhappy in not being able to apply myself to anything but music. I
+ know I am feeding on an illusion, and that reality is the only thing worth having.
+ My health is not good, and my nerves are in a state of increasing weakness. My
+ life, lived entirely in the imagination and without sufficient action, tires me so,
+ that I can only work with frequent breaks and long intervals of rest; otherwise I
+ pay the penalty with long and painful suffering.... I am very lonely. I often wish
+ for death.</p>
+ <p>"While I work I forget my troubles; but the moment I rest they come flocking
+ about me, and I am very miserable. What a splendid life is an artist's! Look at it!
+ How willingly would I part with it for a week of real life.</p>
+ <p>"I can't understand how a really happy man could think of serving art. If we
+ enjoyed life, we should have no need of art. When the present has nothing more to
+ offer us we cry out our needs <a name="page76"
+ id="page76"/>by means of art. To have my youth again and my health,
+ to enjoy nature, to have a wife who would love me devotedly, and fine
+ children&mdash;for this I would give up <i>all my art</i>. Now I have said
+ it&mdash;give me what is left."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Thus the poem of the Tetralogy was written with doubts, as he said, as to whether
+ he should abandon art and all belonging to it and become a healthy, normal
+ man&mdash;a son of nature. He began to compose the music of the poem while in a state
+ of suffering, which every day became more acute.</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"My nights are often sleepless; I get out of bed, wretched and exhausted, with
+ the thought of a long day before me, which will not bring me a single joy. The
+ society of others tortures me, and I avoid it only to torture myself. Everything I
+ do fills me with disgust. It can't go on for ever. I can't stand such a life any
+ longer. I will kill myself rather than live like this.... I don't believe in
+ anything, and I have only one desire&mdash;to sleep so soundly that human misery
+ will exist no more for me. I ought to be able to get such a sleep somehow; it
+ should not be really difficult."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>For distraction he went to Italy; Turin, Genoa, Spezia, and Nice. But there, in a
+ strange world, his loneliness seemed so frightful that he became very depressed, and
+ made all haste back to Zurich. It was there he wrote the happy music of <i>Das
+ Rheingold</i>. He began the score of <i>Die Walk&uuml;re</i> at a time when his
+ normal condition was one of suffering.<a name="page77"
+ id="page77"/>Then he discovered Schopenhauer, whose philosophy only
+ helped to confirm and crystallise his instinctive pessimism. In the spring of 1855 he
+ went to London to give concerts; but he was ill there, and this fresh contact with
+ the world only served to annoy him further. He had some difficulty in again taking up
+ <i>Die Walk&uuml;re</i>; but he finished it at last in spite of frequent attacks of
+ facial erysipelas, for which he afterwards had to undergo a hydropathic cure at
+ Geneva. He began the score of <i>Siegfried</i> towards the end of 1856, while the
+ thought of Tristan was stirring within him. In <i>Tristan</i> he wished to depict
+ love as "a dreadful anguish"; and this idea obsessed him so completely that he could
+ not finish <i>Siegfried</i>. He seemed to be consumed by a burning fever; and,
+ abandoning <i>Siegfried</i> in the middle of the second act, he threw himself madly
+ into <i>Tristan</i>. "I want to gratify my desire for love," he says, "until it is
+ completely satiated; and in the folds of the black flag that floats over its
+ consummation I wish to wrap myself and die."<a name="FNanchor_109_109"
+ id="FNanchor_109_109"></a><a href="#Footnote_109_109" class="fnanchor">[109]</a>
+ <i>Siegfried</i> was not finished until 5 February, 1871, at the end of the
+ Franco-Prussian war&mdash;that is fourteen years later, after several
+ interruptions.</p>
+ <p>Such is, in a few words, the history of this heroic idyll. It is perhaps as well
+ to remind the public now and then that the hours of distraction they enjoy by means
+ of art may represent years of suffering for the artist.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <a name="page78" id="page78"/>
+ <p>Do you know the amusing account Tolstoy gave of a performance of <i>Siegfried</i>?
+ I will quote it from his book, <i>What is Art</i>?&mdash;</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"When I arrived, an actor in tight-fitting breeches was seated before an object
+ that was meant to represent an anvil. He wore a wig and false beard; his white and
+ manicured hands had nothing of the workman about them; and his easy air, prominent
+ belly, and flabby muscles readily betrayed the actor. With an absurd hammer he
+ struck&mdash;as no one else would ever strike&mdash;a fantastic-looking
+ sword-blade. One guessed he was a dwarf, because when he walked he bent his legs at
+ the knees. He cried out a great deal, and opened his mouth in a queer fashion. The
+ orchestra also emitted peculiar noises like several beginnings that had nothing to
+ do with one another. Then another actor appeared with a horn in his belt, leading a
+ man dressed up as a bear, who walked on all-fours. He let loose the bear on the
+ dwarf, who ran away, but forgot to bend his knees this time. The actor with the
+ human face represented the hero, Siegfried. He cried out for a long time, and the
+ dwarf replied in the same way. Then a traveller arrived&mdash;the god Wotan. He had
+ a wig, too; and, settling himself down with his spear, in a silly attitude, he told
+ Mimi all about things he already knew, but of which the audience was ignorant. Then
+ Siegfried seized some bits that were supposed to represent pieces of a sword, and
+ sang:<a name="page79" id="page79"/></p>
+ <p>'Heaho, heaho, hoho! Hoho, hoho, hoho, hoho! Hoheo, haho, haheo, hoho!' And that
+ was the end of the first act. It was all so artificial and stupid that I had great
+ difficulty in sitting it out. But my friends begged me to stay, and assured me that
+ the second act would be better.</p>
+ <p>"The next scene represented a forest. Wotan was waking up the dragon. At first
+ the dragon said, 'I want to go to sleep'; but eventually he came out of his grotto.
+ The dragon was represented by two men clothed in a green skin with some scales
+ stuck about it. At one end of the skin they wagged a tail, and at the other end
+ they opened a crocodile's mouth, out of which came fire. The dragon, which ought to
+ have been a frightful beast&mdash;and perhaps he would have frightened children
+ about five years old&mdash;said a few words in a bass voice. It was so childish and
+ feeble that one was astonished to see grown-up people present; even thousands of
+ so-called cultured people looked on and listened attentively, and went into
+ raptures. Then Siegfried arrived with his horn. He lay down during a pause, which
+ is reputed to be very beautiful; and sometimes he talked to himself, and sometimes
+ he was quite silent. He wanted to imitate the song of the birds, and cut a rush
+ with his horn, and made a flute out of it. But he played the flute badly, and so he
+ began to blow his horn. The scene is intolerable, and there is not the least trace
+ of music in it. I was annoyed to see three thousand people round about me,
+ listening <a name="page80" id="page80"/>
+ submissively to this absurdity and dutifully admiring it.</p>
+ <p>"With some courage I managed to wait for the next scene&mdash;Siegfried's fight
+ with the dragon. There were roarings and flames of fire and brandishings of the
+ sword. But I could not stand it any longer; and I fled out of the theatre with a
+ feeling of disgust that I have not yet forgotten."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>I admit I cannot read this delightful criticism without laughing; and it does not
+ affect me painfully like Nietzsche's pernicious and morbid irony. It used to be a
+ grief to me that two men whom I loved with an equal affection, and whom I reverenced
+ as the finest spirits in Europe, remained strangers and hostile to each other. I
+ could not bear the thought that a genius, hopelessly misunderstood by the crowd,
+ should be bent on making his solitude more bitter and narrow by refusing, with a sort
+ of jealous waywardness, to be reconciled to his equals, or to offer them the hand of
+ friendship. But now I think that perhaps it was better so. The first virtue of genius
+ is sincerity. If Nietzsche had to go out of his way <i>not</i> to understand Wagner,
+ it is natural, on the other hand, that Wagner should be a closed book to Tolstoy; it
+ would be almost surprising if it were otherwise. Each one has his own part to play,
+ and has no need to change it. Wagner's wonderful dreams and magic intuition of the
+ inner life are not less valuable to us than Tolstoy's pitiless truth, in which he
+ exposes modern society and tears away the veil of hypocrisy with which she covers
+ <a name="page81" id="page81"/>herself. So I
+ admire <i>Siegfried</i>, and at the same time enjoy Tolstoy's satire; for I like the
+ latter's sturdy humour, which is one of the most striking features of his realism,
+ and which, as he himself noticed, makes him closely resemble Rousseau. Both men show
+ us an ultra-refined civilisation, and both are uncompromising apostles of a return to
+ nature.</p>
+ <p>Tolstoy's rough banter recalls Rousseau's sarcasm about an opera of Rameau's. In
+ the <i>Nouvelle H&eacute;lo&iuml;se</i>, he rails in a similar fashion against the
+ sadly fantastic performances at the theatre. It was, even then, a question of
+ monsters, "of dragons animated by a blockhead of a Savoyard, who had not enough
+ spirit for the beast."</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"They assured me that they had a tremendous lot of machinery to make all this
+ movement, and they offered several times to show it to me; but I felt no curiosity
+ about little effects achieved by great efforts.... The sky is represented by some
+ blue rags suspended from sticks and cords, like a laundry display.... The chariots
+ of the gods and goddesses are made of four joists in a frame, suspended by a thick
+ rope, as a swing might be. Then a plank is stuck across the joists, and on this is
+ seated a god. In front of him hangs a piece of daubed cloth, which serves as a
+ cloud upon which his splendid chariot may rest.... The theatre is furnished with
+ little square trap-doors which, opening as occasion requires, show that the demons
+ can be let loose from the cellars.<a name="page82"
+ id="page82"/>When the demons have to fly in the air, dummies of
+ brown cloth are substituted, or sometimes real chimney-sweeps, who swing in the
+ air, suspended by cords, until they are gloriously lost in the rag sky....</p>
+ <p>"But you can have no idea of the dreadful cries and roarings with which the
+ theatre resounds.... What is so extraordinary is that these howlings are almost the
+ only things that the audience applaud. By the way they clap their hands one would
+ take them to be a lot of deaf creatures, who were so delighted to catch a few
+ piercing sounds now and then that they wanted the actors to do them all over again.
+ I am quite sure that people applaud the bawling of an actress at the opera as they
+ would a mountebank's feats of skill at a fair&mdash;one suffers while they are
+ going on, but one is so delighted to see them finish without an accident that one
+ willingly demonstrates one's pleasure.... With these beautiful sounds, as true as
+ they are sweet, those of the orchestra blend very worthily. Imagine an unending
+ clatter of instruments without any melody; a lingering and endless groaning among
+ the bass parts; and the whole the most mournful and boring thing that I ever heard
+ in my life. I could not put up with it for half an hour without getting a violent
+ headache.</p>
+ <p>"All this forms a sort of psalmody, possessing neither tune nor time. But if by
+ any chance a lively air is played, there is a general stamping; the audience is set
+ in motion, and follows, with a <a name="page83"
+ id="page83"/>great deal of trouble and noise, some performer in the
+ orchestra. Delighted to feel for a few moments the rhythm that is so lacking, they
+ torment the ear, the voice, the arms, the legs, and all the body, to chase after a
+ tune that is ever ready to escape them...."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>I have quoted this rather long passage to show how the impression made by one of
+ Rameau's operas on his contemporaries resembled that made by Wagner on his enemies.
+ It was not without reason that Rameau was said to be Wagner's forerunner, as Rousseau
+ was Tolstoy's forerunner.</p>
+ <p>In reality, it was not against <i>Siegfried</i> itself that Tolstoy's criticism
+ was directed; and Tolstoy was closer than he thought to the spirit of this drama. Is
+ not Siegfried the heroic incarnation of a free and healthy man, sprung directly from
+ Nature? In a sketch of <i>Siegfried</i>, written in 1848, Wagner says:</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"To follow the impulses of my heart is my supreme law; what I can accomplish by
+ obeying my instincts is what I ought to do. Is that voice of instinct cursed or
+ blessed? I do not know; but I yield to it, and never force myself to run counter to
+ my inclination."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Wagner fought against civilisation by quite other methods than those employed by
+ Tolstoy; and if the efforts of the two were equally great, the practical result
+ is&mdash;one must really say it&mdash;as poor on one side as on the other.<a name="page84" id="page84"/></p>
+ <p>What Tolstoy's raillery is really aimed at is not Wagner's work, but the way in
+ which his work was represented. The splendours of the setting do not hide the
+ childishness of the ideas behind them: the dragon Fafna, Fricka's rams, the bear, the
+ serpent, and all the Valhalla menagerie have always been ridiculous. I will only add
+ that the dragon's failure to be terrifying was not Wagner's fault, for he never
+ attempted to depict a terrifying dragon. He gave it quite clearly, and of his own
+ choice, a comic character. Both the text and the music make Fafner a sort of ogre, a
+ simple creature, but, above all, a grotesque one.</p>
+ <p>Besides, I cannot help feeling that scenic reality takes away rather than adds to
+ the effect of these great philosophical fairylands. Malwida von Meysenbug told me
+ that at the Bayreuth festival of 1876, while she was following one of the <i>Ring</i>
+ scenes very attentively with her opera-glasses, two hands were laid over her eyes,
+ and she heard Wagner's voice say impatiently: "Don't look so much at what is going
+ on. Listen!" It was good counsel. There are dilettanti who pretend that at a concert
+ the best way to enjoy Beethoven's last works&mdash;where the sonority is
+ defective&mdash;is to stop the ears and read the score. One might say with less of a
+ paradox that the best way to follow a performance of Wagner's operas is to listen
+ with the eyes shut. So perfect is the music, so powerful its hold on the imagination,
+ that it leaves nothing to be desired; what it suggests to the mind is infinitely
+ finer than what the eyes may see. I have never shared the <a
+ name="page85" id="page85"/>opinion that Wagner's works may be best
+ appreciated in the theatre. His works are epic symphonies. As a frame for them I
+ should like temples; as scenery, the illimitable land of thought; as actors, our
+ dreams.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>The first act of <i>Siegfried</i> is one of the most dramatic in the Tetralogy.
+ Nothing satisfied me more completely at Bayreuth, both as regards the actors and the
+ dramatic effects. Fantastic creatures like Alberich and Mimi, who seem to be out of
+ their element in France, are rooted deep down in German imaginations. The Bayreuth
+ actors surpassed themselves in making them startlingly lifelike, with a trembling and
+ grimacing realism. Burgstaller, who was then making his debut in <i>Siegfried</i>,
+ acted with an impetuous awkwardness which accorded well with the part. I remember
+ with what zest&mdash;which seemed in no way affected&mdash;he played the hero smith,
+ labouring like a true workman, blowing the fire and making the blade glow, dipping it
+ in the steaming water, and working it on the anvil; and then, in a burst of Homeric
+ gaiety, singing that fine hymn at the end of the first act, which sounds like an air
+ by Bach or H&auml;ndel.</p>
+ <p>But in spite of all this, I felt how much better it was to dream, or to hear this
+ poem of a youthful soul at a concert. It is then that the magic murmurs of the forest
+ in the second act speak more directly to the heart. However beautiful the scenery of
+ glades <a name="page86" id="page86"/>and woods,
+ however cleverly the light is made to change and dance among the trees&mdash;and it
+ is manipulated now like a set of organ stops&mdash;it still seems almost wrong to
+ listen with open eyes to music that, unaided, can show us a glorious summer's day,
+ and make us see the swaying of the tree-tops, and hear the brush of the wind against
+ the leaves. Through the music alone the hum and murmur of a thousand little voices is
+ about us, the glorious song of the birds floats into the depths of a blue sky; or
+ comes a silence, vibrating with invisible life, when Nature, with her mysterious
+ smile, opens her arms and hushes all things in a divine sleep.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>Wagner left <i>Siegfried</i> asleep in the forest in order to embark on the
+ funereal vessel of <i>Tristan und Isolde</i>. But he left Siegfried with some anguish
+ of heart. When writing to Liszt in 1857, he says:</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"I have taken young Siegfried into the depths of a lonely forest; there I have
+ left him under a lime-tree, and said good-bye to him with tears in my eyes. It has
+ torn my heart to bury him alive, and I had a hard and painful fight with myself
+ before I could do it.... Shall I ever go back to him? No, it is all finished. Don't
+ let us speak of it again."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Wagner had reason to be sad. He knew well that he would never find his young
+ Siegfried again. He <a name="page87"
+ id="page87"/>roused him up ten years later. But all was changed. That
+ splendid third act has not the freshness of the first two. Wotan has become an
+ important figure, and brought reason and pessimism with him into the drama. Wagner's
+ later conceptions were perhaps loftier, and his genius was more master of itself
+ (think of the classic dignity in the awakening of Br&uuml;nnhilde); but the ardour
+ and happy expression of youth is gone. I know that this is not the opinion of most of
+ Wagner's admirers; but, with the exception of a few pages of sublime beauty, I have
+ never altogether liked the love scenes at the end of <i>Siegfried</i> and at the
+ beginning of <i>G&ouml;tterd&auml;mmerung</i>. I find their style rather pompous and
+ declamatory; and their almost excessive refinement makes them border upon dulness.
+ The form of the duet, too, seems cut and dried, and there are signs of weariness in
+ it. The heaviness of the last pages of <i>Siegfried</i> recalls <i>Die
+ Meistersinger</i>, which is also of that period. It is no longer the same joy nor the
+ same quality of joy that is found in the earlier acts.</p>
+ <p>Yet it does not really matter, for joy is there, nevertheless; and so splendid was
+ the first inspiration of the work that the years have not dimmed its brilliancy. One
+ would like to end with <i>Siegfried</i>, and escape the gloomy
+ <i>G&ouml;tterd&auml;mmerung</i>. For those who have sensitive feelings the fourth
+ day of the Tetralogy has a depressing effect. I remember the tears I have seen shed
+ at the end of the <i>Ring</i>, and the words of a friend, as we left the theatre at
+ Bayreuth and descended the hill at night: "I feel as <a
+ name="page88" id="page88"/>though I were coming away from the burial
+ of someone I dearly loved." It was truly a time of mourning. Perhaps there was
+ something incongruous in building such a structure when it had universal death for
+ its conclusion&mdash;or at least in making the whole an object of show and
+ instruction. <i>Tristan</i> achieves the same end with much more power, as the action
+ is swifter. Besides that, the end of <i>Tristan</i> is not without comfort, for life
+ there is terrible. But it is not the same in <i>G&ouml;tterd&auml;mmerung</i>; for in
+ spite of the absurdity of the spell which is set upon the love of Siegfried and
+ Br&uuml;nnhilde, life with them is happy and desirable, since they are beings capable
+ of love, and death appears to be a splendid but awful catastrophe. And one cannot say
+ the <i>Ring</i> breathes a spirit of renunciation and sacrifice like <i>Parsifal</i>;
+ renunciation and sacrifice are only talked about in the <i>Ring</i>; and, in spite of
+ the last transports which impel Br&uuml;nnhilde to the funeral pyre, they are neither
+ an inspiration nor a delight. One has the impression of a great gulf yawning at one's
+ feet, and the anguish of seeing those one loves fall into it.</p>
+ <p>I have often regretted that Wagner's first conception of <i>Siegfried</i> changed
+ in the course of years; and in spite of the magnificent <i>d&eacute;nouement</i> of
+ <i>G&ouml;tterd&auml;mmerung</i> (which is really more effective in a concert room,
+ for the real tragedy ends with Siegfried's death), I cannot help thinking with regret
+ how fine a more optimistic poem from this revolutionary of '48 might have been.
+ People tell me that it would then have been less true to life.<a name="page89" id="page89"/>But why should it be
+ truthful to depict life only as a bad thing? Life is neither good nor bad it is just
+ what we make it, and the result of the way in which we look at it. Joy is as real as
+ sorrow, and a very fertile source of action. What inspiration there is in the laugh
+ of a great man! Let us welcome, therefore, the sparkling if transient gaiety of
+ <i>Siegfried</i>.</p>
+ <p>Wagner wrote to Malwida von Meysenbug: "I have, by chance, just been reading
+ Plutarch's life of Timoleon. That life ended very happily&mdash;a rare and unheard-of
+ thing, especially in history. It does one good to think that such a thing is
+ possible. It moved me profoundly."</p>
+ <p>I feel the same when I hear <i>Siegfried</i>. We are rarely allowed to contemplate
+ happiness in great tragic art; but when we may, how splendid it is, and how good for
+ one!</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+ <a name="page90" id="page90"/>
+ <h2><a name="TRISTANquot" id="TRISTANquot"></a>"TRISTAN"</h2>
+ <p>Tristan towers like a mountain above all other love poems, as Wagner above all
+ other artists of his century. It is the outcome of a sublime conception, though the
+ work as a whole is far from perfect. Of perfect works there is none where Wagner is
+ concerned. The effort necessary for the creation of them was too great to be long
+ sustained; for a single work might means years of toil. And the tense emotions of a
+ whole drama cannot be expressed by a series of sudden inspirations put into form the
+ moment they are conceived. Long and arduous labour is necessary. These giants,
+ fashioned like Michelangelo's, these concentrated tempests of heroic force and
+ decadent complexity, are not arrested, like the work of a sculptor or painter, in one
+ moment of their action; they live and go on living in endless detail of sensation. To
+ expect sustained inspiration is to expect what is not human. Genius may reveal what
+ is divine; it may call up and catch a glimpse of <i>die M&uuml;tter</i>, but it
+ cannot always breathe in the exhausted air of this world. So will must sometimes take
+ the place of inspiration; though the will is uncertain and often stumbles in its
+ task. That is why we encounter things that jar and jolt in the greatest
+ works&mdash;they are the marks of human weakness. Well, perhaps there is less <a name="page91" id="page91"/>weakness in
+ <i>Tristan</i> than in Wagner's other dramas&mdash;<i>G&ouml;tterd&auml;mmerung</i>,
+ for instance&mdash;for nowhere else is the effort of his genius more strenuous or its
+ flight more dizzy. Wagner himself knew it well. His letters show the despair of a
+ soul wrestling with its familiar spirit, which it clutches and holds, only to lose
+ again. And we seem to hear cries of pain, and feel his anger and despair.</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"I can never tell you what a really wretched musician I am. In my inmost heart I
+ know I am a bungler and an absolute failure. You should see me when I say to
+ myself, 'It ought to go now,' and sit down to the piano and put together some
+ miserable rubbish, which I fling away again like an idiot. I know quite well the
+ kind of musical trash I produce.... Believe me, it is no good expecting me to do
+ anything decent. Sometimes I really think it was Reissiger who inspired me to write
+ <i>Tannh&auml;user</i> and <i>Lohengrin</i>."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>This is how Wagner wrote to Liszt when he was finishing this amazing work of art.
+ In the same way Michelangelo wrote to his father in 1509: "I am in agony. I have not
+ dared to ask the Pope for anything, because my work does not make sufficient progress
+ to merit any remuneration. The work is too difficult, and indeed it is not my
+ profession. I am wasting my time to no purpose. Heaven help me!" For a year he had
+ been working at the ceiling of the Sixtine chapel.</p>
+ <p>This is something more than a burst of modesty.<a
+ name="page92" id="page92"/>No one had more pride than Michelangelo or
+ Wagner; but both felt the defects of their work like a sharp wound. And although
+ those defects do not prevent their works from being the glory of the human spirit,
+ they are there just the same.</p>
+ <p>I do not want to dwell upon the inherent imperfections of Wagner's dramas; they
+ are really dramatic or epic symphonies, impossible to act, and gaining nothing from
+ representation. This is especially true of <i>Tristan</i>, where the disparity
+ between the storm of sentiment depicted, and the cold convention and enforced
+ timidity of action on the stage, is such that at certain moments&mdash;in the second
+ act, for example&mdash;it pains and shocks one, and seems almost grotesque.</p>
+ <p>But while admitting that <i>Tristan</i> is a symphony that is not suitable for
+ representation, one also recognises its blemishes and, above all, its unevenness. The
+ orchestration in the first act is often rather thin, and the plot lacks solidity.
+ There are gaps and unaccountable holes, and melodious lines left suspended in space.
+ From beginning to end, lyrical bursts of melody are broken by declamations, or, what
+ is worse, by dissertations. Frenzied whirlwinds of passion stop suddenly to give
+ place to recitatives of explanation or argument. And although these recitatives are
+ nearly always a great relief, although these metaphysical reveries have a character
+ of barbarous cunning that one relishes, yet the superior beauty of the movements of
+ pure poetry, emotion, and music is so evident, that this musical and philosophical
+ drama serves to give one <a name="page93"
+ id="page93"/>a distaste for philosophy and drama and everything else
+ that cramps and confines music.</p>
+ <p>But the musical part of <i>Tristan</i> is not free either from the faults of the
+ work as a whole, for it, too, lacks unity. Wagner's music is made up of very diverse
+ styles: one finds in it Italianisms and Germanisms and even Gallicisms of every kind;
+ there are some that are sublime, some that are commonplace; and at times one feels
+ the awkwardness of their union and the imperfections of their form. Then again,
+ perhaps two ideas of equal originality come together and spoil each other by making
+ too strong a contrast. The fine lamentation of King Mark&mdash;that personification
+ of a knight of the Grail&mdash;is treated with such moderation and with so noble a
+ scorn for outward show, that its pure, cold light is entirely lost after the glowing
+ fire of the duet.</p>
+ <p>The work suffers everywhere from a lack of balance. It is an almost inevitable
+ defect, arising from its very grandeur. A mediocre work may quite easily be perfect
+ of its kind; but it is rarely that a work lofty aim attains perfection. A landscape
+ of little dells and smiling meadows is brought more readily into pleasing harmony
+ than a landscape of dazzling Alps, torrents, glaciers, and tempests; for the heights
+ may sometimes overwhelm the picture and spoil the effect. And so it is with certain
+ great pages of <i>Tristan</i>. We may take for example the verses which tell of
+ excruciating expectation&mdash;in the second act, Isolde's expectation on the night
+ filled with desire; and, in the third act,<a name="page94"
+ id="page94"/>Tristan's expectation, as he lies wounded and delirious,
+ waiting for the vessel that brings Isolde and death&mdash;or we may take the Prelude,
+ that expression of eternal desire that is like a restless sea for ever moaning and
+ beating itself upon the shore.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>The quality that touches me most deeply in <i>Tristan</i> is the evidence of
+ honesty and sincerity in a man who was treated by his enemies as a charlatan that
+ used superficial and grossly material means to arrest and amaze the public eye. What
+ drama is more sober or more disdainful of exterior effect than <i>Tristan</i>? Its
+ restraint is almost carried to excess. Wagner rejected any picturesque episode in it
+ that was irrelevant to his subject. The man who carried all Nature in his
+ imagination, who at his will made the storms of the <i>Walk&uuml;re</i> rage, or the
+ soft light of Good Friday shine, would not even depict a bit of the sea round the
+ vessel in the first act. Believe me, that must have been a sacrifice, though he
+ wished it so. It pleased him to enclose this terrible drama within the four walls of
+ a chamber of tragedy. There are hardly any choruses; there is nothing to distract
+ one's attention from the mystery of human souls; there are only two real
+ parts&mdash;those of the lovers; and if there is a third, it belongs to Destiny, into
+ whose hands the victims are delivered. What a fine seriousness there is in this love
+ play. Its passion remains sombre and stern; there is no laughter in it, only a belief
+ which is almost religious, more <a name="page95"
+ id="page95"/>religious perhaps in its sincerity than that of
+ <i>Parsifal</i>.</p>
+ <p>It is a lesson for dramatists to see a man suppressing all frivolous trifling and
+ empty episodes in order to concentrate his subject entirely on the inner life of two
+ living souls. In that Wagner is our master, a better, stronger, and more profitable
+ master to follow, in spite of his mistakes, than all the other literary and dramatic
+ authors of his time.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>I see that criticism has filled a larger place in these notes than I meant it to
+ do. But in spite of that, I love <i>Tristan</i>; for me and for others of my time it
+ has long been an intoxicating draught. And it has never lost anything of its
+ grandeur; the years have left its beauty untouched, and it is for me the highest
+ point of art reached by anyone since Beethoven's death.</p>
+ <p>But as I was listening to it the other evening I could not help thinking: Ah,
+ Wagner, you will one day go too, and join Gluck and Bach and Monteverde and
+ Palestrina and all the great souls whose names still live among men, but whose
+ thoughts are only felt by a handful of the initiated, who try in vain to revive the
+ past. You, also, are already of the past, though you were the steady light of our
+ youth, the strong source of life and death, of desire and renouncement, whence we
+ drew our moral force and our power of resistance against the world. And the world,
+ ever greedy for new sensations, goes on its way amid the unceasing ebb and flow of
+ its <a name="page96" id="page96"/>desires.
+ Already its thoughts have changed, and new musicians are making new songs for the
+ future. But it is the voice of a century of tempest that passes with you.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+ <h2><a name="CAMILLE_SAINT_SAENS" id="CAMILLE_SAINT_SAENS"></a> CAMILLE
+ SAINT-SA&Euml;NS</h2>
+ <a name="page97" id="page97"/>
+ <p>M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns has had the rare honour of becoming a classic during his
+ lifetime. His name, though it was long unrecognised, now commands universal respect,
+ not less by his worth of character than by the perfection of his art. No artist has
+ troubled so little about the public, or been more indifferent to criticism whether
+ popular or expert. As a child he had a sort of physical repulsion for outward
+ success:</p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i5">"De l'applaudissement<br />
+ </span> <span>J'entends encor le bruit qui, chose assez &eacute;trange,<br />
+ </span> <span>Pour ma pudeur d'enfant &eacute;tait comme une fange<br />
+ </span> <span>Dont le flot me venait toucher; je redoutais<br />
+ </span> <span>Son contact, et parfois, malin, je l'&eacute;vitais,<br />
+ </span> <span>Affectant la raideur."<a name="FNanchor_110_110"
+ id="FNanchor_110_110"></a><a href="#Footnote_110_110"
+ class="fnanchor">[110]</a><br />
+ </span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>Later on, he achieved success by a long and painful struggle, in which he had to
+ fight against the kind of stupid criticism that condemned him "to listen to one of
+ Beethoven's symphonies as a penance <a name="page98"
+ id="page98"/>likely to give him the most excruciating torture."<a
+ name="FNanchor_111_111" id="FNanchor_111_111"></a><a href="#Footnote_111_111"
+ class="fnanchor">[111]</a> And yet after this, and after his admission to the
+ Academy, after <i>Henry VIII</i> and the <i>Symphonie avec orgue</i>, he still
+ remained aloof from praise or blame, and judged his triumphs with sad severity:</p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span>"Tu conna&icirc;tras les yeux menteurs, l'hypocrisie<br />
+ </span> <span class="i5">Des serrements de mains,<br />
+ </span> <span>Le masque d'amiti&eacute; cachant la jalousie,<br />
+ </span> <span class="i5">Les p&acirc;les lendemains<br />
+ </span>
+ </div>
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span>"De ces jours de triomphe o&ugrave; le troupeau vulgaire<br />
+ </span> <span class="i5">Qui p&egrave;se au m&ecirc;me poids<br />
+ </span> <span>L'histrion ridicule et le g&eacute;nie aust&egrave;re<br />
+ </span> <span class="i5">Vous mets sur le pavois."<a name="FNanchor_112_112"
+ id="FNanchor_112_112"></a><a href="#Footnote_112_112"
+ class="fnanchor">[112]</a><br />
+ </span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns has now grown old, and his fame has spread abroad, but he has
+ not capitulated. Not many years ago he wrote to a German journalist: "I take very
+ little notice of either praise or censure, not because I have an exalted idea of my
+ own merits (which would be foolish), but because in doing my work, and fulfilling the
+ function of my nature, as an apple-tree grows apples, I have no need to trouble
+ myself with other people's views."<a name="FNanchor_113_113"
+ id="FNanchor_113_113"></a><a href="#Footnote_113_113" class="fnanchor">[113]</a><a name="page99" id="page99"/></p>
+ <p>Such independence is rare at any time; but it is very rare in our day, when the
+ power of public opinion is tyrannical; and it is rarest of all in France, where
+ artists are perhaps more sociable than in other countries. Of all qualities in an
+ artist it is the most precious; for it forms the foundation of his character, and is
+ the guarantee of his conscience and innate strength. So we must not hide it under a
+ bushel.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>The significance of M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns in art is a double one, for one must judge
+ him from the inside as well as the outside of France. He stands for something
+ exceptional in French music, something which was almost unique until just lately:
+ that is, a great classical spirit and a fine breadth of musical culture&mdash;German
+ culture, we must say, since the foundation of all modern art rests on the German
+ classics. French music of the nineteenth century is rich in clever artists,
+ imaginative writers of melody, and skilful dramatists; but it is poor in true
+ musicians, and in good and solid workmanship. Apart from two or three splendid
+ exceptions, our composers have too much the character of gifted amateurs who compose
+ music as a pastime, and regard it, not as a special form of thought, but as a sort of
+ dress for literary ideas. Our musical education is superficial: it may be got for a
+ few years, in a formal way, at a Conservatoire, but it is not within reach of all;
+ the child does not breathe music as, in a way, he breathes the atmosphere of <a name="page100" id="page100"/>literature and
+ oratory; and although nearly everyone in France has an instinctive feeling for
+ beautiful writing, only a very few people care for beautiful music. From this arise
+ the common faults and failings in our music. It has remained a luxurious art; it has
+ not become, like German music, the poetical expression of the people's thought.</p>
+ <p>To bring this about we should need a combination of conditions that are very rare
+ in France; though such conditions went to the making of Camille Saint-Sa&euml;ns. He
+ had not only remarkable natural talent, but came of a family of ardent musicians, who
+ devoted themselves to his education. At five years of age he was nourished on the
+ orchestral score of <i>Don Juan</i>;<a name="FNanchor_114_114"
+ id="FNanchor_114_114"></a><a href="#Footnote_114_114" class="fnanchor">[114]</a> as a
+ little boy</p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span>"De dix ans, d&eacute;licat, fr&ecirc;le, le teint jaunet,<br />
+ </span> <span>Mais confiant, na&iuml;f, plein d'ardeur et de joie,"<a
+ name="FNanchor_115_115" id="FNanchor_115_115"></a><a href="#Footnote_115_115"
+ class="fnanchor">[115]</a><br />
+ </span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>he "measured himself against Beethoven and Mozart" by playing in a public concert;
+ at sixteen years of age he wrote his <i>Premi&egrave;re Symphonie</i>. As he grew
+ older he soaked himself in the music of Bach and H&auml;ndel, and was able to compose
+ at will after the manner of Rossini, Verdi, Schumann, and Wagner.<a
+ name="FNanchor_116_116" id="FNanchor_116_116"></a><a href="#Footnote_116_116"
+ class="fnanchor">[116]</a> He has written excellent music in all styles&mdash;the
+ Grecian style, and that of the sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries. His
+ compositions are of every kind: masses, grand operas, <a
+ name="page101" id="page101"/>light operas, cantatas, symphonies,
+ symphonic poems; music for the orchestra, the organ, the piano, the voice, and
+ chamber music. He is the learned editor of Gluck and Rameau; and is thus not only an
+ artist, but an artist who can talk about his art. He is an unusual figure in
+ France&mdash;one would have thought rather to find his home in Germany.</p>
+ <p>In Germany, however, they make no mistake about him. There, the name of Camille
+ Saint-Sa&euml;ns stands for the French classical spirit, and is thought worthiest to
+ represent us in music from the time of Berlioz until the appearance of the young
+ school of C&eacute;sar Franck&mdash;though Franck himself is as yet little known in
+ Germany. M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns possesses, indeed, some of the best qualities of a
+ French artist, and among them the most important quality of all&mdash;perfect
+ clearness of conception. It is remarkable how little this learned artist is bothered
+ by his learning, and how free he is from all pedantry. Pedantry is the plague of
+ German art, and the greatest men have not escaped it. I am not speaking of Brahms,
+ who was ravaged with it, but of delightful geniuses like Schumann, or of powerful
+ ones like Bach. "This unnatural art wearies one like the sanctimonious salon of some
+ little provincial town; it stifles one, it is enough to kill one."<a
+ name="FNanchor_117_117" id="FNanchor_117_117"></a><a href="#Footnote_117_117"
+ class="fnanchor">[117]</a> "Saint-Sa&euml;ns is not a pedant," wrote Gounod; "he has
+ <a name="page102" id="page102"/>remained too
+ much of a child and become too clever for that." Besides, he has always been too much
+ of a Frenchman.</p>
+ <p>Sometimes Saint-Sa&euml;ns reminds me of one of our eighteenth-century writers.
+ Not a writer of the <i>Encyclop&eacute;die</i>, nor one of Rousseau's camp, but
+ rather of Voltaire's school. He has a clearness of thought, an elegance and precision
+ of expression, and a quality of mind that make his music "not only noble, but very
+ noble, as coming of a fine race and distinguished family."<a name="FNanchor_118_118"
+ id="FNanchor_118_118"></a><a href="#Footnote_118_118" class="fnanchor">[118]</a></p>
+ <p>He has also excellent discernment, of an unemotional kind; and he is "calm in
+ spirit, restrained in imagination, and keeps his self-control even in the midst of
+ the most disturbing emotions."<a name="FNanchor_119_119" id="FNanchor_119_119"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_119_119" class="fnanchor">[119]</a> This discernment is the enemy of
+ anything approaching obscurity of thought or mysticism; and its outcome was that
+ curious book, <i>Probl&egrave;mes et Myst&egrave;res</i>&mdash;a misleading title,
+ for the spirit of reason reigns there and makes an appeal to young people to protect
+ "the light of a menaced world" against "the mists of the North, Scandinavian gods,
+ Indian divinities, Catholic miracles, Lourdes, spiritualism, occultism, and
+ obscurantism."<a name="FNanchor_120_120" id="FNanchor_120_120"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_120_120" class="fnanchor">[120]</a></p>
+ <p>His love and need of liberty is also of the eighteenth century. One may say that
+ liberty is his only passion. "I am passionately fond of liberty," he wrote.<a
+ name="FNanchor_121_121" id="FNanchor_121_121"></a><a href="#Footnote_121_121"
+ class="fnanchor">[121]</a></p>
+ <p><a name="page103" id="page103"/>And he has
+ proved it by the absolute fearlessness of his judgments on art; for not only has he
+ reasoned soundly against Wagner, but dared to criticise the weaknesses of Gluck and
+ Mozart, the errors of Weber and Berlioz, and the accepted opinions about Gounod; and
+ this classicist, who was nourished on Bach, goes so far as to say: "The performance
+ of works by Bach and H&auml;ndel to-day is an idle amusement," and that those who
+ wish to revive their art are like "people who would live in an old mansion that has
+ been uninhabited for centuries."<a name="FNanchor_122_122"
+ id="FNanchor_122_122"></a><a href="#Footnote_122_122" class="fnanchor">[122]</a> He
+ went even further; he criticised his own work and contradicted his own opinions. His
+ love of liberty made him form, at different periods, different opinions of the same
+ work. He thought that people had a right to change their opinions, as sometimes they
+ deceived themselves. It seemed to him better boldly to admit an error than to be the
+ slave of consistency. And this same feeling showed itself in other matters besides
+ art: in ethics, as is shown by some verses which he addressed to a young friend,
+ urging him not to be bound by a too rigid austerity:</p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span>"Je sens qu'une triste chim&egrave;re<br />
+ </span> <span>A toujours assombri ton &acirc;me: la Vertu...."<a
+ name="FNanchor_123_123" id="FNanchor_123_123"></a><a href="#Footnote_123_123"
+ class="fnanchor">[123]</a><br />
+ </span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>and in metaphysics also, where he judges religions, faith, and the Gospels with a
+ quiet freedom of thought, seeking in Nature alone the basis of morals and
+ society.<a name="page104" id="page104"/></p>
+ <p>Here are some of his opinions, taken at random from <i>Probl&egrave;mes et
+ Myst&egrave;res</i>:</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"As science advances, God recedes."</p>
+ <p>"The soul is only a medium for the expression of thought."</p>
+ <p>"The discouragement of work, the weakening of character, the sharing of one's
+ goods under pain of death&mdash;this is the Gospel teaching on the foundation of
+ society."</p>
+ <p>"The Christian virtues are not social virtues."</p>
+ <p>"Nature is without aim: she is an endless circle, and leads us nowhere."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>His thoughts are unfettered and full of love for humanity and a sense of the
+ responsibility of the individual. He called Beethoven "the greatest, the only really
+ great artist," because he upheld the idea of universal brotherhood. His mind is so
+ comprehensive that he has written books on philosophy, on the theatre, on classical
+ painting,<a name="FNanchor_124_124" id="FNanchor_124_124"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_124_124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a> as well as scientific essays,<a
+ name="FNanchor_125_125" id="FNanchor_125_125"></a><a href="#Footnote_125_125"
+ class="fnanchor">[125]</a> volumes of verse, and even plays.<a
+ name="FNanchor_126_126" id="FNanchor_126_126"></a><a href="#Footnote_126_126"
+ class="fnanchor">[126]</a></p>
+ <p>He has been able to take up all sorts of things, I will not say with equal skill,
+ but with discernment and undeniable ability. He shows a type of mind rare among
+ artists and, above all, among musicians. The two principles that he enunciates and
+ himself <a name="page105" id="page105"/>follows
+ out are: "Keep free from all exaggeration" and "Preserve the soundness of your mind's
+ health."<a name="FNanchor_127_127" id="FNanchor_127_127"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_127_127" class="fnanchor">[127]</a> They are certainly not the
+ principles of a Beethoven or a Wagner, and it would be rather difficult to find a
+ noted musician of the last century who had applied them. They tell us, without need
+ of comment, what is distinctive about M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns, and what is defective in
+ him. He is not troubled by any sort of passion. Nothing disturbs the clearness of his
+ reason. "He has no prejudices; he takes no side"<a name="FNanchor_128_128"
+ id="FNanchor_128_128"></a><a href="#Footnote_128_128"
+ class="fnanchor">[128]</a>&mdash;one might add, not even his own, since he is not
+ afraid to change his views&mdash;"he does not pose as a reformer of anything"; he is
+ altogether independent, perhaps almost too much so. He seems sometimes as if he did
+ not know what to do with his liberty. Goethe would have said, I think, that he needed
+ a little more of the devil in him.</p>
+ <p>His most characteristic mental trait seems to be a languid melancholy, which has
+ its source in a rather bitter feeling of the futility of life;<a
+ name="FNanchor_129_129" id="FNanchor_129_129"></a><a href="#Footnote_129_129"
+ class="fnanchor">[129]</a> and this is accompanied by fits of weariness which are not
+ altogether healthy, followed by capricious moods and nervous gaiety, and a freakish
+ liking for burlesque and mimicry. It is his eager, restless spirit that makes him
+ rush about the world writing Breton and Auvergnian rhapsodies, Persian songs,
+ Algerian suites, Portuguese barcarolles, Danish, Russian, or Arabian caprices,
+ souvenirs of Italy, African fan<a name="page106"
+ id="page106"/>tasias, and Egyptian concertos; and, in the same way,
+ he roams through the ages, writing Greek tragedies, dance music of the sixteenth and
+ seventeenth centuries, and preludes and fugues of the eighteenth. But in all these
+ exotic and archaic reflections of times and countries through which his fancy
+ wanders, one recognises the gay, intelligent countenance of a Frenchman on his
+ travels, who idly follows his inclinations, and does not trouble to enter very deeply
+ into the spirit of the people he meets, but gleans all he can, and then reproduces it
+ with a French complexion&mdash;after the manner of Montaigne in Italy, who compared
+ Verona to Poitiers, and Padua to Bordeaux, and who, when he was in Florence, paid
+ much less attention to Michelangelo than to "a very strangely shaped sheep, and an
+ animal the size of a large mastiff, shaped like a cat and striped with black and
+ white, which they called a tiger."</p>
+ <p>From a purely musical point of view there is some resemblance between M.
+ Saint-Sa&euml;ns and Mendelssohn. In both of them we find the same intellectual
+ restraint, the same balance preserved among the heterogeneous elements of their work.
+ These elements are not common to both of them, because the time, the country, and the
+ surroundings in which they lived are not the same; and there is also a great
+ difference in their characters. Mendelssohn is more ingenuous and religious; M.
+ Saint-Sa&euml;ns is more of a dilettante and more sensuous. They are not so much
+ kindred spirits by their science as good company by a common purity of taste, a sense
+ of <a name="page107" id="page107"/>rhythm, and
+ a genius for method, which gave all they wrote a neo-classic character.</p>
+ <p>As for the things that directly influenced M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns, they are so
+ numerous that it would be difficult and rather bold of me to pretend to be able to
+ pick them out. His remarkable capacity for assimilation has often moved him to write
+ in the style of Wagner or Berlioz, of H&auml;ndel or Rameau, of Lulli or Charpentier,
+ or even of some English harpsichord or clavichord player of the sixteenth century,
+ like William Byrd&mdash;whose airs are introduced quite naturally in the music of
+ <i>Henry VIII</i>; but we must remember that these are deliberate imitations, the
+ amusements of a virtuoso, about which M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns never deceives himself. His
+ memory serves him as he pleases, but he is never troubled by it.</p>
+ <p>As far as one can judge, M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns' musical ideas are infused with the
+ spirit of the great classics belonging to the end of the eighteenth century&mdash;far
+ more, whatever people may say, with the spirit of Beethoven, Haydn, and Mozart, than
+ with the spirit of Bach. Schumann's seductiveness also left its mark upon him, and he
+ has felt the influence of Gounod, Bizet, and Wagner. But a stronger influence was
+ that of Berlioz, his friend and master,<a name="FNanchor_130_130"
+ id="FNanchor_130_130"></a><a href="#Footnote_130_130" class="fnanchor">[130]</a> and,
+ above all, that of Liszt. We must stop at this last name.</p>
+ <p>M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns has good reason for liking Liszt, for Liszt was also a lover
+ of freedom, and had shaken off traditions and pedantry, and scorned German <a name="page108" id="page108"/>routine; and he liked
+ him, too, because his music was a reaction from the stiff school of Brahms.<a
+ name="FNanchor_131_131" id="FNanchor_131_131"></a><a href="#Footnote_131_131"
+ class="fnanchor">[131]</a> He was enthusiastic about Liszt's work, and was one of the
+ earliest and most ardent champions of that new music of which Liszt was the leading
+ spirit&mdash;of that "programme" music which Wagner's triumph seemed to have nipped
+ in the bud, but which has suddenly and gloriously burst into life again in the works
+ of Richard Strauss. "Liszt is one of the great composers of our time," wrote M.
+ Saint-Sa&euml;ns; "he has dared more than either Weber, or Mendelssohn, or Schubert,
+ or Schumann. He has created the symphonic poem. He is the deliverer of instrumental
+ music.... He has proclaimed the reign of free music."<a name="FNanchor_132_132"
+ id="FNanchor_132_132"></a><a href="#Footnote_132_132" class="fnanchor">[132]</a> This
+ was not said impulsively in a moment of enthusiasm; M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns has always
+ held this opinion. All his life he has remained faithful to his admiration of
+ Liszt&mdash;since 1858, when he dedicated a <i>Veni Creator</i> to "the Abb&eacute;
+ Liszt," until 1886, when, a few months after Liszt's death, he dedicated his
+ masterpiece, the <i>Symphonic avec orgue</i>, "To the memory of Franz Liszt."<a
+ name="FNanchor_133_133" id="FNanchor_133_133"></a><a href="#Footnote_133_133"
+ class="fnanchor">[133]</a></p>
+ <p>"<a name="page109" id="page109"/>People have
+ not hesitated to scoff at what they call my weakness for Liszt's works. But even if
+ the feelings of affection and gratitude that he inspired in me did come like a prism
+ and interpose themselves between my eyes and his face, I do not see anything greatly
+ to be regretted in it.<a name="FNanchor_134_134" id="FNanchor_134_134"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_134_134" class="fnanchor">[134]</a> I had not yet felt the charm of
+ his personal fascination, I had neither heard nor seen him, and I did not owe him
+ anything at all, when my interest was gripped in reading his first symphonic poems;
+ and when later they pointed the way which was to lead to <i>La Danse macabre</i>,
+ <i>Le Rouet d'Omphale</i>, and other works of the same nature, I am sure that my
+ judgment was not biassed by any prejudice in his favour, and that I alone was
+ responsible for what I did."<a name="FNanchor_135_135" id="FNanchor_135_135"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_135_135" class="fnanchor">[135]</a></p>
+ <p>This influence seems to me to explain some of M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns' work. Not only
+ is this influence evident in his symphonic poems&mdash;some of his best
+ work&mdash;but it is to be found in his suites for orchestra, his fantasias, and his
+ rhapsodies, where the descriptive and narrative element is strong. "Music should
+ charm unaided," said M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns; "but its effect is much finer when we use
+ our imagination and let it flow in some particular channel, thus <a name="page110" id="page110"/>imaging the music. It
+ is then that all the faculties of the soul are brought into play for the same end.
+ What art gains from this is not greater beauty, but a wider field for its
+ scope&mdash;that is, a greater variety of form and a larger liberty."<a
+ name="FNanchor_136_136" id="FNanchor_136_136"></a><a href="#Footnote_136_136"
+ class="fnanchor">[136]</a></p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>And so we find that M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns has taken part in the vigorous attempt of
+ modern German symphony writers to bring into music some of the power of the other
+ arts: poetry, painting, philosophy, romance, drama&mdash;the whole of life. But what
+ a gulf divides them and him! A gulf made up, not only of diversities of style, but of
+ the difference between two races and two worlds. Beside the frenzied outpourings of
+ Richard Strauss, who flounders uncertainly between mud and debris and genius, the
+ Latin art of Saint-Sa&euml;ns rises up calm and ironical. His delicacy of touch, his
+ careful moderation, his happy grace, "which enters the soul by a thousand little
+ paths,"<a name="FNanchor_137_137" id="FNanchor_137_137"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_137_137" class="fnanchor">[137]</a> bring with them the pleasures of
+ beautiful speech and honest thought; and we cannot but feel their charm. Compared
+ with the restless and troubled art of to-day, his music strikes us by its calm, its
+ tranquil harmonies, its velvety modulations, its crystal clearness, its smooth and
+ flowing style, and an elegance that cannot be put into words. Even his classic
+ coldness does us good by its reaction against the exaggerations, sincere as they are,
+ of the new school. At times one feels oneself carried<a
+ name="page111" id="page111"/>back to Mendelssohn, even to Spontini
+ and the school of Gluck. One seems to be travelling in a country that one knows and
+ loves; and yet in M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns' works one does not find any direct resemblance
+ to the works of other composers; for with no one are reminiscences rarer than with
+ this master who carries all the old masters in his mind&mdash;it is his spirit that
+ is akin to theirs. And that is the secret of his personality and his value to us; he
+ brings to our artistic unrest a little of the light and sweetness of other times. His
+ compositions are like fragments of another world.</p>
+ <p>"From time to time," he said, in speaking of <i>Don Giovanni</i>, "in the sacred
+ earth of Hellene we find a fragment, an arm, the debris of a torso, scratched and
+ damaged by the ravages of time; it is only the shadow of the god that the sculptor's
+ chisel once created; but the charm is somehow still there, the sublime style is
+ radiant in spite of everything."<a name="FNanchor_138_138"
+ id="FNanchor_138_138"></a><a href="#Footnote_138_138" class="fnanchor">[138]</a></p>
+ <p>And so with this music. It is sometimes a little pale, a little too restrained;
+ but in a phrase, in a few harmonies, there will shine out a clear vision of the
+ past.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+ <h2><a name="VINCENT_DINDY" id="VINCENT_DINDY"></a> VINCENT D'INDY</h2>
+ <a name="page112" id="page112"/>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"I consider that criticism is useless, I would even say that it is harmful....
+ Criticism generally means the opinion some man or other holds about another
+ person's work. How can that opinion help forward the growth of art? It is
+ interesting to know the ideas, even the erroneous ideas, of geniuses and men of
+ great talent, such as Goethe, Schumann, Wagner, Sainte-Beuve, and Michelet, when
+ they wish to indulge in criticism; but it is of no interest at all to know whether
+ Mr. So-and-so likes, or does not like, such-and-such dramatic or musical work."<a
+ name="FNanchor_139_139" id="FNanchor_139_139"></a><a href="#Footnote_139_139"
+ class="fnanchor">[139]</a></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>So writes M. Vincent d'Indy.</p>
+ <p>After such an expression of opinion one imagines that a critic ought to feel some
+ embarrassment in writing about M. Vincent d'Indy. And I myself ought to be the more
+ concerned in the matter, for in the number of the review where the above was written
+ the only other opinions expressed with equal conviction belonged to the author of
+ this book. There is only one thing to be done&mdash;to copy M. d'Indy's example; for
+ that forsworn enemy of criticism is himself a keen critic.<a
+ name="page113" id="page113"/></p>
+ <p>It is not altogether on M. d'Indy's musical gifts that I want to dwell. It is
+ known that in Europe to-day he is one of the masters of dramatic musical expression,
+ of orchestral colouring, and of the science of style. But that is not the end of his
+ attainments; he has artistic originality, which springs from something deeper still.
+ When an artist has some worth, you will find it not only in his work but in his
+ being. So we will endeavour to explore M. d'Indy's being.</p>
+ <p>M. d'Indy's personality is not a mysterious one. On the contrary, it is open and
+ clear as daylight; and we see this in his musical work, in his artistic activities,
+ and in his writings. To his own writings we may apply the exception of his rule about
+ criticism in favour of a small number of men whose thoughts are interesting even when
+ they are erroneous. It would be a pity indeed not to know M. d'Indy's
+ thoughts&mdash;even the erroneous ones; for they let us catch a glimpse, not only of
+ the ideas of an eminent artist, but of certain surprising characteristics of the
+ thought of our time. M. d'Indy has closely studied the history of his art; but the
+ chief interest of his writings lies rather in their unconscious expression of the
+ spirit of modern art than in what they tell us about the past.</p>
+ <p>M. d'Indy is not a man hedged in by the boundaries of his art; his mind is open
+ and well fertilised. Musicians nowadays are no longer entirely absorbed in their
+ notes, but let their minds go out to other interests. And it is not one of the least
+ interesting phenomena of French music to-day that gives us these learned and
+ thoughtful composers, who are <a name="page114"
+ id="page114"/>conscious of what they create, and bring to their art a
+ keen critical faculty, like that of M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns, M. Dukas, or M. d'Indy. From
+ M. d'Indy we have had scholarly editions of Rameau, Destouches, and Salomon de Rossi.
+ Even in the middle of rehearsals of <i>L'&Eacute;tranger</i> at Brussels he was
+ working at a reconstruction of Monteverde's <i>Orfeo</i>. He has published selections
+ of folk-songs with critical notes, essays on Beethoven's predecessors, a history of
+ Musical Composition, and debates and lectures. This fine intellectual culture is not,
+ however, the most remarkable of M. d'Indy's characteristics, though it may have been
+ the most remarked. Other musicians share this culture with him; and his real
+ distinction lies in his moral and almost religious qualities, and it is this side of
+ him that gives him an unusual interest for us among other contemporary artists.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span>"Maneant in vobis Fides, Spes, Caritas.<br />
+ </span> <span>Tria haec: major autem horum est Caritas.<br />
+ </span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"An artist must have at least Faith, faith in God and faith in his art; for it
+ is Faith that disposes him to <i>learn</i>, and by his learning to raise himself
+ higher and higher on the ladder of Being, up to his goal, which is God.</p>
+ <p>"An artist should practise Hope; for he can expect nothing from the present; he
+ knows that his mission is to <i>serve</i>, and to give his work for the life and
+ teaching of the generations that shall come after him.</p>
+ </div>
+ <a name="page115" id="page115"/>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"An artist should be inspired by a splendid Charity&mdash;'the greatest of
+ these.' To <i>love</i> should be his aim in life; for the moving principle of all
+ creation is divine and charitable Love."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Who speaks like this? Is it the monk Denys in his cell at Mount Athos? Or Cennini,
+ who spread the pious teaching of the Giotteschi? Or one of the old painters of
+ Sienna, who in their profession of faith called themselves "by the grace of God,
+ those who manifest marvellous things to common and illiterate men, by the virtue of
+ the holy faith, and to its glory"?</p>
+ <p>No; it was the director of the <i>Schola Cantorum</i>, addressing the students in
+ an inaugural speech, or giving them a lecture on Composition.<a
+ name="FNanchor_140_140" id="FNanchor_140_140"></a><a href="#Footnote_140_140"
+ class="fnanchor">[140]</a></p>
+ <p>We must consider a little this singular book, where a living science and a Gothic
+ spirit are closely intermingled (I use the word "Gothic" in its best sense; I know it
+ is the highest praise one can give M. d'Indy). This work has not received the
+ attention it deserves. It is a record of the spirit of contemporary art; and if it
+ stands rather apart from other writings, it should not be allowed to pass unnoticed
+ on that account.</p>
+ <p>In this book, Faith is shown to be everything&mdash;the beginning and the end. We
+ learn how it fans the flame of genius, nourishes thought, directs work, <a name="page116" id="page116"/>and governs even the
+ modulations and the style of a musician. There is a passage in it that one would
+ think was of the thirteenth century; it is curious, but not without dignity:</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"One should have an aim in the progressive march of modulations, as one has in
+ the different stages of life. The reason, instincts, and faith that guide a man in
+ the troubles of his life also guide the musician in his choice of modulations. Thus
+ useless and contradictory modulations, an undecided balance between light and
+ shade, produce a painful and confusing impression on the hearer, comparable to that
+ which a poor human being inspires when he is feeble and inconsistent, buffeted
+ between the East and the West in the course of his unhappy life, without an aim and
+ without belief."<a name="FNanchor_141_141" id="FNanchor_141_141"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_141_141" class="fnanchor">[141]</a></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>This book seems to be of the Middle Ages by reason of a sort of scholastic spirit
+ of abstraction and classification.</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"In artistic creation, seven faculties are called into play by the soul: the
+ Imagination, the Affections, the Understanding, the Intelligence, the Memory, the
+ Will, and the Conscience."<a name="FNanchor_142_142" id="FNanchor_142_142"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_142_142" class="fnanchor">[142]</a></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>And again its mediaeval spirit is shown by an extraordinary symbolism, which
+ discovers in every<a name="page117"
+ id="page117"/>thing (as far as I understand it) the imprint of divine
+ mysteries, and the mark of God in Three Persons in such things as the beating of the
+ heart and ternary rhythms&mdash;"an admirable application of the principle of the
+ Unity of the Trinity"!<a name="FNanchor_143_143" id="FNanchor_143_143"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_143_143" class="fnanchor">[143]</a></p>
+ <p>From these remote times comes also M. d'Indy's method of writing history, not by
+ tracing facts back to laws, but by deducing, on the contrary, facts from certain
+ great general ideas, which have once been admitted, but not proved by frequent
+ recurrence, such as: "The origin of art is in religion"<a name="FNanchor_144_144"
+ id="FNanchor_144_144"></a><a href="#Footnote_144_144"
+ class="fnanchor">[144]</a>&mdash;a fact which is anything but certain. From this
+ reasoning it follows that folk-songs are derived from Gregorian chants, and not the
+ Gregorian chants from the folk-songs&mdash;as I would sooner believe. The history of
+ art may thus become a sort of history of the world in moral achievement. One could
+ divide it into two parts: the world before the coming of Pride, and after it.</p>
+ <p>"Subdued by the Christian faith, that formidable enemy of man, Pride, rarely
+ showed itself in the soul of an artist in the Middle Ages. But with the weakening of
+ religious belief, with the spirit of the Reformation applying itself almost at the
+ same time to every branch of human learning, we see Pride reappear, and watch its
+ veritable Renaissance."<a name="FNanchor_145_145" id="FNanchor_145_145"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_145_145" class="fnanchor">[145]</a><a
+ name="page118" id="page118"/></p>
+ <p>Finally, this Gothic spirit shows itself&mdash;in a less original way, it is
+ true&mdash;in M. d'Indy's religious antipathies, which, in spite of the author's
+ goodness of heart and great personal tolerance, constantly break out against the two
+ faiths that are rivals to his own; and to them he attributes all the faults of art
+ and all the vices of humanity. Each has its offence. Protestantism is made
+ responsible for the extremes of individualism;<a name="FNanchor_146_146"
+ id="FNanchor_146_146"></a><a href="#Footnote_146_146" class="fnanchor">[146]</a> and
+ Judaism, for the absurdities of its customs and the weakness of its moral sense.<a
+ name="FNanchor_147_147" id="FNanchor_147_147"></a><a href="#Footnote_147_147"
+ class="fnanchor">[147]</a> I do not know which of the two is the more soundly
+ belaboured; the second has the privilege of being so, not only in writing, but in
+ pictures.<a name="FNanchor_148_148" id="FNanchor_148_148"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_148_148" class="fnanchor">[148]</a> The worst of it is, these
+ antipathies are apt to spoil the fairness of M. d'Indy's artistic judgment. It goes
+ without saying that the Jewish musicians are treated with scant consideration; and
+ even the great Protestant musicians, giants in their art, do not escape rebuke. If
+ Goudimel is mentioned, it is because he was Palestrina's master, and his achievement
+ of "turning the Calvinist psalms into chorales" is dismissed as being of little
+ importance.<a name="FNanchor_149_149" id="FNanchor_149_149"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_149_149" class="fnanchor">[149]</a></p>
+ <p><a name="page119" id="page119"/>
+ H&auml;ndel's oratorios are spoken of as "chilling, and, frankly speaking,
+ tedious."<a name="FNanchor_150_150" id="FNanchor_150_150"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_150_150" class="fnanchor">[150]</a> Bach himself escapes with this
+ qualification: "If he is great, it is not because of, but in spite of the dogmatic
+ and parching spirit of the Reformation."<a name="FNanchor_151_151"
+ id="FNanchor_151_151"></a><a href="#Footnote_151_151" class="fnanchor">[151]</a></p>
+ <p>I will not try to play the part of judge; for a man is sufficiently judged by his
+ own writings. And, after all, it is rather interesting to meet people who are sincere
+ and not afraid to speak their minds. I will admit that I rather enjoy&mdash;a little
+ perversely, perhaps&mdash;some of these extreme opinions, where the writer's
+ personality stands strongly revealed.</p>
+ <p>So the old Gothic spirit still lives among us, and informs the mind of one of our
+ best-known artists, and also, without doubt, the minds of hundreds of those who
+ listen to him and admire him. M. Louis Laloy has shown the persistence of certain
+ forms of plain-song in M. Debussy's <i>Pell&eacute;as</i>; and in a dim sense of
+ far-away kinship he finds the cause of the mysterious charm that such music holds for
+ some of us.<a name="FNanchor_152_152" id="FNanchor_152_152"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_152_152" class="fnanchor">[152]</a> This learned paradox is possible.
+ Why not? The mixtures of race and the vicissitudes of history have given us so full
+ and complex a soul that we may very well find its beginnings there, if it pleases
+ us&mdash;or the beginnings of quite other things. Of beginnings there is no end; the
+ choice is quite <a name="page120" id="page120"/>
+ embarrassing, and I imagine one's inclination has as much to do with the matter as
+ one's temperament.</p>
+ <p>However that may be, M. d'Indy hails from the Middle Ages, and not from antiquity
+ (which does not exist for him<a name="FNanchor_153_153" id="FNanchor_153_153"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_153_153" class="fnanchor">[153]</a>), or from the Renaissance, which
+ he confounds with the Reformation (though the two sisters are enemies) in order to
+ crush it the better.<a name="FNanchor_154_154" id="FNanchor_154_154"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_154_154" class="fnanchor">[154]</a> "Let us take for models," he
+ says, "the fine workers in art of the Middle Ages."<a name="FNanchor_155_155"
+ id="FNanchor_155_155"></a><a href="#Footnote_155_155" class="fnanchor">[155]</a></p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>In this return to the Gothic spirit, in this awakening of faith, there is a
+ name&mdash;a modern one this time&mdash;that they are fond of quoting at the
+ <i>Schola</i>; it is that of C&eacute;sar Franck, under whose direction the little
+ Conservatoire in the Rue Saint-Jacques was placed. And indeed they could quote no
+ better name than that of this simple-hearted man. Nearly all who came into contact
+ with him felt his irresistible charm&mdash;a charm that has perhaps a great deal to
+ do with the influence that his works still have on French music to-day. None has felt
+ Franck's power, both morally and musically, more than M. Vincent d'Indy; and none
+ holds a more profound reverence for the man whose pupil he was for so long.</p>
+ <p><a name="page121" id="page121"/>The first
+ time I saw M. d'Indy was at a concert of the <i>Soci&eacute;t&eacute; nationale</i>,
+ in the Salle Pleyel, in 1888. They were playing several of Franck's works; among
+ others, for the first time, his admirable <i>Th&egrave;me, fugue, et variation</i>,
+ for the harmonium and pianoforte, a composition in which the spirit of Bach is
+ mingled with a quite modern tenderness. Franck was conducting, and M. d'Indy was at
+ the pianoforte. I shall always remember his reverential manner towards the old
+ musician, and how careful he was to follow his directions; one would have said he was
+ a diligent and obedient pupil. It was a touching homage from one who had already
+ proved himself a master by works like <i>Le Chant de la cloche</i>,
+ <i>Wallenstein</i>, <i>La Symphonie sur un th&egrave;me montagnard</i>, and who was
+ perhaps at that time better known and more popular than C&eacute;sar Franck himself.
+ Since then twenty years have passed, and I still see M. d'Indy as I saw him that
+ evening; and, whatever may happen in the future, his memory for me will be always
+ associated with that of the grand old artist, presiding with his fatherly smile over
+ the little gathering of the faithful.</p>
+ <p>Of all the characteristics of Franck's fine moral nature, the most remarkable was
+ his religious faith. It must have astonished the artists of his time, who were even
+ more destitute of such a thing than they are now. It made itself felt in some of his
+ followers, especially in those who were near the master's heart, as M. d'Indy was.
+ The religious thought of the latter reflects in some degree the thought of his
+ master; though the shape of that thought may have undergone unconscious alteration. I
+ do not <a name="page122" id="page122"/>know if
+ Franck altogether fits the conception people have of him to-day. I do not want to
+ introduce personal memories of him here. I knew him well enough to love him, and to
+ catch a glimpse of the beauty and sincerity of his soul; but I did not know him well
+ enough to discover the secrets of his mind. Those who had the happiness of being his
+ intimate friends seem always to represent him as a mystic who shut himself away from
+ the spirit of his time. I hope at some future date one of his friends will publish
+ some of the conversations that he had with him, of which I have heard. But this man
+ who had so strong a faith was also very independent. In his religion he had no
+ doubts: it was the mainspring of his life; though faith with him was much more a
+ matter of feeling than a matter of doctrine. But all was feeling with Franck, and
+ reason made little appeal to him. His religious faith did not disturb his mind, for
+ he did not measure men and their works by its rules; and he would have been incapable
+ of putting together a history of art according to the Bible. This great Catholic had
+ at times a very pagan soul; and he could enjoy without a qualm the musical
+ dilettantism of Renan and the sonorous nihilism of Leconte de Lisle. There were no
+ limits to his vast sympathies. He did not attempt to criticise the thing he
+ loved&mdash;understanding was already in his heart. Perhaps he was right; and perhaps
+ there was more trouble in the depths of his heart than the valiant serenity of its
+ surface would lead us to believe.</p>
+ <p>His faith too.... I know how dangerous it is to <a
+ name="page123" id="page123"/>interpret a musician's feelings by his
+ music; but how can we do otherwise when we are told by Franck's followers that the
+ expression of the soul is the only end and aim of music? Do we find his faith, as
+ expressed through his music always full of peace and calm?<a name="FNanchor_156_156"
+ id="FNanchor_156_156"></a><a href="#Footnote_156_156" class="fnanchor">[156]</a> I
+ ask those who love that music because they find some of their own sadness reflected
+ there. Who has not felt the secret tragedies that some of his musical passages
+ enfold&mdash;those short, characteristically abrupt phrases which seem to rise in
+ supplication to God, and often fall back in sadness and in tears? It is not all light
+ in that soul; but the light that is there does not affect us less because it shines
+ from afar,</p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span>"Dans un &eacute;cartement de nuages, qui laisse<br />
+ </span> <span>Voir au-dessus des mers la c&eacute;leste all&eacute;gresse...."<a
+ name="FNanchor_157_157" id="FNanchor_157_157"></a><a href="#Footnote_157_157"
+ class="fnanchor">[157]</a><br />
+ </span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>And so Franck seems to me to differ from M. d'Indy in that he has not the latter's
+ urgent desire for clearness.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>Clearness is the distinguishing quality of M. d'Indy's mind. There are no shadows
+ about him. His ideas and his art are as clear as the look that gives so much youth to
+ his face. For him to examine, <a name="page124"
+ id="page124"/>to arrange, to classify, to combine, is a necessity. No
+ one is more French in spirit. He has sometimes been taxed with Wagnerism, and it is
+ true that he has felt Wagner's influence very strongly. But even when this influence
+ is most apparent it is only superficial: his true spirit is remote from Wagner's. You
+ may find in <i>Fervaal</i> a few trees like those in <i>Siegfried's</i> forest; but
+ the forest itself is not the same; broad avenues have been cut in it, and daylight
+ fills the caverns of the Niebelungs.</p>
+ <p>This love of clearness is the ruling factor of M. d'Indy's artistic nature. And
+ this is the more remarkable, for his nature is far from being a simple one. By his
+ wide musical education and his constant thirst for knowledge he has acquired a very
+ varied and almost contradictory learning. It must be remembered that M. d'Indy is a
+ musician familiar with the music of other countries and other times; all kinds of
+ musical forms are floating in his mind; and he seems sometimes to hesitate between
+ them. He has arranged these forms into three principal classes, which seem to him to
+ be models of musical art: the decorative art of the singers of plain-song, the
+ architectural art of Palestrina and his followers, and the expressive art of the
+ great Italians of the seventeenth century.<a name="FNanchor_158_158"
+ id="FNanchor_158_158"></a><a href="#Footnote_158_158" class="fnanchor">[158]</a> But
+ in doing this is not his eclecticism trying to reconcile arts that are naturally
+ disunited? Again, we must remember that M. d'Indy has had direct or indirect contact
+ with some of the greatest musical personalities of our time: with Wagner, Liszt,
+ Brahms, and C&eacute;sar Franck.</p>
+ <p><a name="page125" id="page125"/>And he has
+ been readily attracted by them; for he is not one of those egotistic geniuses whose
+ thoughts are fixed on his own interests, nor has he one of those carnivorous minds
+ that sees nothing, looks for nothing, and relishes nothing, unless it may be
+ afterwards useful to it. His sympathies are readily with others, he is happy in
+ giving homage to their greatness, and quick to appreciate their charm. He speaks
+ somewhere of the "irresistible need of transformation" that every artist feels.<a
+ name="FNanchor_159_159" id="FNanchor_159_159"></a><a href="#Footnote_159_159"
+ class="fnanchor">[159]</a> But in order to escape being overwhelmed by conflicting
+ elements and interests, one should have great force of feeling or will, in order to
+ be able to eliminate what is not necessary, and choose out and transform what is. M.
+ d'Indy eliminates hardly anything; he makes use of it. In his music he exercises the
+ qualities of an army general: understanding of his purpose and the patience to attain
+ it, a perfect knowledge of the means at his disposal, the spirit of order, and
+ command over his work and himself. Despite the variety of the materials he employs,
+ the whole is always clear. One might almost reproach him with being too clear; he
+ seems to simplify too much.</p>
+ <p>Nothing helps one to grasp the essence of M. d'Indy's personality more than his
+ last dramatic work. His personality shows itself plainly in all his compositions, but
+ nowhere is it more evident than in <i>L'&Eacute;tranger</i>.<a
+ name="FNanchor_160_160" id="FNanchor_160_160"></a><a href="#Footnote_160_160"
+ class="fnanchor">[160]</a><a name="page126"
+ id="page126"/></p>
+ <p>The scene of <i>L'&Eacute;tranger</i> is laid in France, by the sea, whose
+ murmuring calm we hear in a symphonic introduction. The fishermen are coming back to
+ port; the fishing has been bad. But one among them, "a man about forty years old,
+ with a sad and dignified air," has been more fortunate than the others. The fishermen
+ envy him, and vaguely suspect him of sorcery. He tries to enter into friendly
+ conversation with them, and offers his catch to a poor family. But in vain; his
+ advances are repulsed and his generosity is eyed with suspicion. He is a
+ stranger&mdash;the Stranger.<a name="FNanchor_161_161" id="FNanchor_161_161"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_161_161" class="fnanchor">[161]</a> Evening falls, and the angelus
+ rings. Some work-girls come trooping out of their workshop, singing a merry
+ folk-song.<a name="FNanchor_162_162" id="FNanchor_162_162"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_162_162" class="fnanchor">[162]</a> One of the young girls, Vita,
+ goes up to the Stranger and speaks to him, for she alone, of all the village, is his
+ friend. The two feel themselves drawn together by a secret sympathy. Vita confides
+ artlessly in the unknown man; they love each other though they do not admit it. The
+ Stranger tries to repress his feelings; for Vita is young and already affianced, and
+ he thinks that he has no right to claim her. But Vita, offended by his coldness,
+ <a name="page127" id="page127"/>seeks to wound
+ him, and succeeds. In the end he betrays himself. "Yes, he loves her, and she knew it
+ well. But now that he has told her so, he will never see her again; and he bids her
+ good-bye."</p>
+ <p>That is the first act. Up to this point we seem to be witnessing a very human and
+ realistic drama&mdash;the ordinary story of the man who tries to do good and receives
+ ingratitude, and the sad tragedy of old age that comes to a heart still young and
+ unable to resign itself to growing old. But the music puts us on our guard. We had
+ heard its religious tone when the Stranger was speaking, and it seemed to us that we
+ recognised a liturgical melody in the principal theme. What secret is being hidden
+ from us? Are we not in France? Yet, in spite of the folk-song and a passing breath of
+ the sea, the atmosphere of the Church and C&eacute;sar Franck is evident. Who is this
+ Stranger?</p>
+ <p>He tells us in the second act.</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"My name? I have none. I am He who dreams; I am He who loves. I have passed
+ through many countries, and sailed on many seas, loving the poor and needy,
+ dreaming of the happiness of the brotherhood of man."</p>
+ <p>"Where have I seen you?&mdash;for I know you."</p>
+ <p>"Where? you ask. But everywhere: under the warm sun of the East, by the white
+ oceans of the Pole.... I have found you everywhere, for you are Beauty itself, you
+ are immortal Love!"</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>The music is not without a certain nobility, and <a
+ name="page128" id="page128"/>bears the imprint of the calm, strong
+ spirit of belief. But I was sorry that the story was only about a mere entity when I
+ had been getting interested in a man. I can never understand the attraction of this
+ kind of symbolism. Unless it is allied to sublime powers of creation in metaphysics
+ or morals&mdash;such as that possessed by a Goethe or an Ibsen&mdash;I do not see
+ what such symbolism can add to life, though I see very well what it takes away from
+ it. But it is, after all, a matter of taste; and, anyway, there is nothing in this
+ story to astonish us greatly. This transition from realism to symbolism is something
+ in opera with which we have grown only too familiar since the time of Wagner.</p>
+ <p>But the story does not stop there; for we leave symbolic abstractions to enter a
+ still more extraordinary domain, which is removed even farther still from
+ realities.</p>
+ <p>There had been some talk at the beginning of an emerald that sparkled in the
+ Stranger's cap; and this emerald now takes its turn in the action of the piece. "It
+ had sparkled formerly in the bows of the boat that carried the body of Lazarus, the
+ friend of our Master, Jesus; and the boat had safely reached the port of the
+ Phoceans&mdash;without a helm or sails or oars. For by this miraculous stone a clean
+ and upright heart could command the sea and the winds." But now that the Stranger has
+ done amiss, by falling a victim to passion, its power is gone; so he gives it to
+ Vita.</p>
+ <p>Then follows a real scene in fairyland. Vita stands before the sea and invokes it
+ in an incan<a name="page129" id="page129"/>
+ tation full of weird and beautiful vocal music: "O sea! Sinister sea with your angry
+ charm, gentle sea with your kiss of death, hear me!" And the sea replies in a song.
+ Voices mingle with the orchestra in a symphony of increasing anger. Vita swears she
+ will give herself to no one but the Stranger. She lifts the emerald above her head,
+ and it shines with a lurid light. "'Receive, O sea, as a token of my oath, the sacred
+ stone, the holy emerald! Then may its power be no longer invoked, and none may know
+ again its protecting virtue. Jealous sea, take back your own, the last offering of a
+ betrothed!' With an impressive gesture she throws the emerald into the waves, and a
+ dark green light suddenly shines out against the black sky. This supernatural light
+ slowly spreads over the water until it reaches the horizon, and the sea begins to
+ roll in great billows." Then the sea takes up its song in an angrier tone; the
+ orchestra thunders, and the storm bursts.</p>
+ <p>The boats put hurriedly back to land, and one of them seems likely to be dashed to
+ pieces on the shore. The whole village turns out to watch the disaster; but the men
+ refuse to risk their lives in aid of the shipwrecked crew. Then the Stranger gets
+ into a boat, and Vita jumps in after him. The squall redoubles in violence. A wave of
+ enormous height breaks on the jetty, flooding the scene with a dazzling green light.
+ The crowd recoil in fear. There is a silence; and an old fisherman takes off his
+ woollen cap and intones the <i>De Profundis</i>. The villagers take up the
+ chant....<a name="page130" id="page130"/></p>
+ <p>One may see by this short account what a heterogeneous work it is. Two or three
+ quite different worlds are brought into it: the realism of the bourgeois characters
+ of Vita's mother and lover is mixed up with symbolisms of Christianity, represented
+ by the Stranger, and with the fairy-tale of the magic emerald and the voices of the
+ ocean. This complexity, which is evident enough in the poem, is even more evident in
+ the music, where a union of different arts and different ideas is attempted. We get
+ the art of the folk-song, religious art, the art of Wagner, the art of Franck, as
+ well as a note of familiar realism (which is something akin to the Italian
+ <i>op&eacute;ra-bouffe</i>) and descriptions of sensation that are quite personal. As
+ there are only two short acts, the rapidity of the action only serves to accentuate
+ this impression. The changes are very abrupt: we are hurried from a world of human
+ beings to a world of abstract ideas, and then taken from an atmosphere of religion to
+ a land of fairies. The work is, however, clear enough from a musical point of view.
+ The more complex the elements that M. d'Indy gathers round him the more anxious he is
+ to bring them into harmony. It is a difficult task, and is only possible when the
+ different elements are reduced to their simplest expression and brought down to their
+ fundamental qualities&mdash;thus depriving them of the spice of their individuality.
+ M. d'Indy puts different styles and ideas on the anvil, and then forges them
+ vigorously. It is natural that here and there we should see the mark of the hammer,
+ the imprint of his determination; but it is only by <a
+ name="page131" id="page131"/>his determination that he welded the
+ work into a solid whole.</p>
+ <p>Perhaps it is determination that brings unity now and then into M. d'Indy's
+ spirit. With reference to this, I will dwell upon one point only, since it is
+ curious, and seems to me to be of general artistic interest. M. d'Indy writes his own
+ poems for his "<i>actions musicales</i>"&mdash;Wagner's example, it seems, has been
+ catching. We have seen how the harmony of a work may suffer through the dual gifts of
+ its author; though he may have thought to perfect his composition by writing both
+ words and music. But an artist's poetical and musical gifts are not necessarily of
+ the same order. A man has not always the same kind of talent in other arts that he
+ has in the art which he has made his own&mdash;I am speaking not only of his
+ technical skill, but of his temperament as well. Delacroix was of the Romantic school
+ in painting, but in literature his style was Classic. We have all known artists who
+ were revolutionaries in their own sphere, but conservative and behind the times in
+ their opinions about other branches of art. The double gift of poetry and music is in
+ M. d'Indy up to a certain point. But is his reason always in agreement with his
+ heart?<a name="FNanchor_163_163" id="FNanchor_163_163"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_163_163" class="fnanchor">[163]</a></p>
+ <p><a name="page132" id="page132"/>Of course
+ his nature is too dignified to let the quarrel be shown openly. His heart obeys the
+ commands of his reason, or compromises with it, and by seeming respectful of
+ authority saves appearances. His reason, represented here by the poet, likes simple,
+ realistic, and relevant action, together with moral or even religious teaching. His
+ heart, represented by the musician, is romantic; and if he followed it altogether he
+ would wander off to any subject that enabled him to indulge in his love of the
+ picturesque, such as the descriptive symphony, or even the old form of opera.</p>
+ <p>For myself, I am in sympathy with his heart; and I find his heart is in the right,
+ and his reason in the wrong. There is nothing that M. d'Indy has made more his own
+ than the art of painting landscapes in music. There is one page in <i>Fervaal</i> at
+ the beginning of Act II which calls up misty mountain tops covered with pine forests;
+ there is another page in <i>L'&Eacute;tranger</i> where one sees strange lights
+ glimmering on the sea while a storm is brooding.<a name="FNanchor_164_164"
+ id="FNanchor_164_164"></a><a href="#Footnote_164_164" class="fnanchor">[164]</a> I
+ should like to see M. d'Indy give himself up freely, in spite of all theories, to
+ this descriptive lyricism, in which he so excels; or I wish at least he would seek
+ inspiration in a subject where both his religious beliefs and his imagination could
+ find satisfaction: a subject such as one of the beautiful episodes of the Golden
+ Legend, or the one which <i>L'&Eacute;tranger</i> itself recalls&mdash;the romantic
+ voyage of the Magdalen in Provence. But it is foolish to wish an artist to <a name="page133" id="page133"/>do anything but the
+ thing he likes; he is the best judge of what pleases him.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>In this sketchy portrait I must not forget one of the finest of this composer's
+ gifts&mdash;his talent as a teacher of music. Everything has fitted M. d'Indy for
+ this part. By his knowledge and his precise, orderly mind he must be a perfect
+ teacher of composition. If I submit some question of harmony or melodic phrasing to
+ his analysis, the result is the essence of clear, logical reasoning; and if the
+ reasoning is a little dry and simplifies the thing almost too much, it is still very
+ illuminating and from the hand of a master of French prose. And in this I find him
+ exercising the same consistent instinct of good sense and sincerity, the same art of
+ development, the same seventeenth and eighteenth century principles of classic
+ rhetoric that he applies to his music. In truth, M. d'Indy could write a musical
+ <i>Discourse on Style</i>, if he wished.</p>
+ <p>But, above all, he is gifted with the moral qualities of a teacher&mdash;the
+ vocation for teaching, first of all. He has a firm belief in the absolute duty of
+ giving instruction in art, and, what is rarer still, in the efficacious virtue of
+ that teaching. He readily shares Tolstoy's scorn, which he sometimes quotes, of the
+ foolishness of art for art's sake.</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"At the bottom of art is this essential condition&mdash;teaching. The aim of art
+ is neither gain nor glory; the true aim of art is to teach, to <a name="page134" id="page134"/>elevate gradually
+ the spirit of humanity; in a word, to serve in the highest
+ sense&mdash;'<i>dienen</i>' as Wagner says by the mouth of the repentant Kundry, in
+ the third act of Parsifal."<a name="FNanchor_165_165" id="FNanchor_165_165"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_165_165" class="fnanchor">[165]</a></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>There is in this a mixture of Christian humility and aristocratic pride. M. d'Indy
+ has a sincere desire for the welfare of humanity, and he loves the people; but he
+ treats them with an affectionate kindness, at once protective and tolerant; he
+ regards them as children that must be led.<a name="FNanchor_166_166"
+ id="FNanchor_166_166"></a><a href="#Footnote_166_166" class="fnanchor">[166]</a></p>
+ <p>The popular art that he extols is not an art belonging to the people, but that of
+ an aristocracy interested in the people. He wishes to enlighten them, to mould them,
+ to direct them, by means of art. Art is the source of life; it is the spirit of
+ progress; it gives the most precious of possessions to the soul&mdash;liberty. And no
+ one enjoys this liberty more than the artist. In a lecture to the <i>Schola</i> he
+ said:</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"What makes the name of 'artist' so splendid is that the artist is
+ free&mdash;absolutely free. Look about you, and tell me if from this point of view
+ there is any career finer than that of an artist who is conscious of his mission?
+ The Army? The Law? The University? Politics?"</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>And then follows a rather cold appreciation of these different careers.<a name="page135" id="page135"/></p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"There is no need to mention the excessive bureaucracy and officialism which is
+ the crying evil of this country. We find everywhere submission to rules and
+ servitude to the State. But what government, pope, emperor, or president could
+ oblige an artist to think and write against his will? Liberty&mdash;that is the
+ true wealth and the most precious inheritance of the artist, the liberty to think,
+ and the liberty that no one has the power to take away from us&mdash;that of doing
+ our work according to the dictates of our conscience."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Who does not feel the infectious warmth and beauty of these spirited words? How
+ this force of enthusiasm and sincerity must grip all young and eager hearts. "There
+ are two qualities," says M. d'Indy, on the last page of <i>Cours de Composition</i>,
+ "which a master should try to encourage and develop in the spirit of the pupil, for
+ without them science is useless; these qualities are an unselfish love of art and
+ enthusiasm for good work." And these two virtues radiate from M. d'Indy's personality
+ as they do from his writings; that is his power.</p>
+ <p>But the best of his teaching lies in his life. One can never speak too highly of
+ his disinterested devotion for the good of art. As if it were not enough to put all
+ his might into his own creations, M. d'Indy gives his time and the results of his
+ study unsparingly to others. Franck gave lessons in order to be able to live; M.
+ d'Indy gives them for the pleasure of instructing, and to serve his art and aid <a name="page136" id="page136"/>artists. He directs
+ schools, and accepts and almost seeks out the most thankless, though the most
+ necessary, kinds of teaching. Or he will apply himself devoutly to the study of the
+ past and the resuscitation of some old master. And he seems to take so much pleasure
+ in training young minds to appreciate music, or in repairing the injustices of
+ history to some fine but forgotten musician, that he almost forgets about himself. To
+ what work or to what worker, worthy of interest, or seeming to be so, has he ever
+ refused his advice and help? I have known his kindness personally, and I shall always
+ be sincerely grateful for it.</p>
+ <p>His devotion and his faith have not been in vain. The name of M. d'Indy will be
+ associated in history, not only with fine works, but with great works: with the
+ <i>Soci&eacute;t&eacute; Nationale de Musique</i>, of which he is president; with the
+ <i>Schola Cantorum</i>, which he founded with Charles Bordes, and which he directs;
+ with the young French school of music, a group of skilful artists and innovators, to
+ whom he is a kind of elder brother, giving them encouragement by his example and
+ helping them through the first hard years of struggle; and, lastly, with an awakening
+ of music in Europe, with a movement which, after the death of Wagner and Franck,
+ attracted the interest of the world by its revival of the art of the Middle Ages and
+ the Renaissance. M. d'Indy has been the chief representative of all this artistic
+ evolution in France. By his deeds, by his example, and by his spirit, he was among
+ the first to stir up interest in the musical education of France to-day.<a name="page137" id="page137"/>He has done more for
+ the advancement of our music than the entire official teaching of the Conservatoires
+ A day will come when, by the force of things and in spite of all resistance, such a
+ man will take the place that belongs to him at the head of the organisation of music
+ in France.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>I have tried to unearth M. d'Indy's strongest characteristics, and I think I have
+ found them in his faith and in his activity, I am only too aware of the pitfalls that
+ have beset me in this attempt; it is always difficult to criticise a man's
+ personality, and it is most difficult when he is alive and still in the midst of his
+ development. Every man is a mystery, not only to others, but to himself. There is
+ something very presumptuous about pretending to know anyone who does not quite know
+ himself. And yet one cannot live without forming opinions; it is a necessity of life.
+ The people we see and know (or say we know), our friends, and those we love, are
+ never what we think them. Often they are not at all like the portrait we conjure up;
+ for we walk among the phantoms of our hearts. But still one must go on having
+ opinions, and go on constructing and creating things, if we do not want to become
+ impotent through inertia. Error is better than doubt, provided we err in good faith;
+ and the main thing is to speak out the thing that one really feels and believes. I
+ hope M. d'Indy will forgive me if I have gone far wrong, and that he will see in
+ these pages a sincere effort to understand him and a keen <a
+ name="page138" id="page138"/>sympathy with himself, and even with his
+ ideas, though I do not always share them. But I have always thought that in life a
+ man's opinions go for very little, and that the only thing that matters is the man
+ himself. Freedom of spirit is the greatest happiness one can know; one must be sorry
+ for those who have not got it. And there is a secret pleasure in rendering homage to
+ another's splendid creed, even though it is one that we do not ourselves profess.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+ <a name="page139" id="page139"/>
+ <h2><a name="RICHARD_STRAUSS" id="RICHARD_STRAUSS"></a>RICHARD STRAUSS</h2>
+ <p>The composer of <i>Heldenleben</i> is no longer unknown to Parisians. Every year
+ at Colonne's or Chevillard's we see his tall, thin silhouette reappear in the
+ conductor's desk. There he is with his abrupt and imperious gestures, his wan and
+ anxious face, his wonderfully clear eyes, restless and penetrating at the same time,
+ his mouth shaped like a child's, a moustache so fair that it is nearly white, and
+ curly hair growing like a crown above his high round forehead.</p>
+ <p>I should like to try to sketch here the strange and arresting personality of the
+ man who in Germany is considered the inheritor of Wagner's genius&mdash;the man who
+ has had the audacity to write, after Beethoven, an Heroic Symphony, and to imagine
+ himself the hero.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>Richard Strauss is thirty-four years old.<a name="FNanchor_167_167"
+ id="FNanchor_167_167"></a><a href="#Footnote_167_167" class="fnanchor">[167]</a> He
+ was born in Munich on 11 June, 1864. His father, a well-known virtuoso, was first
+ horn in the Royal orchestra, and his mother was a daughter of the brewer Pschorr. He
+ was brought up among musical surroundings. At four years old he played the piano, and
+ at six he composed little dances,<a name="page140"
+ id="page140"/><i>Lieder</i>, sonatas, and even overtures for the
+ orchestra. Perhaps this extreme artistic precocity has had something to do with the
+ feverish character of his talents, by keeping his nerves in a state of tension and
+ unduly exciting his mind. At school he composed choruses for some of Sophocles'
+ tragedies. In 1881, Hermann Levi had one of the young collegian's symphonies
+ performed by his orchestra. At the University he spent his time in writing
+ instrumental music. Then B&uuml;low and Radecke made him play in Berlin; and
+ B&uuml;low, who became very fond of him, had him brought to Meiningen as
+ <i>Musikdirector</i>. From 1886 to 1889 he held the same post at the
+ <i>Hoftheater</i> in Munich. From 1889 to 1894 he was <i>Kapellmeister</i> at the
+ <i>Hoftheater</i> in Weimar. He returned to Munich in 1894 as
+ <i>Hofkapellmeister</i>, and in 1897 succeeded Hermann Levi. Finally, he left Munich
+ for Berlin, where at present he conducts the orchestra of the Royal Opera.</p>
+ <p>Two things should be particularly noted in his life: the influence of Alexander
+ Ritter&mdash;to whom he has shown much gratitude&mdash;and his travels in the south
+ of Europe. He made Ritter's acquaintance in 1885. This musician was a nephew of
+ Wagner's, and died some years ago. His music is practically unknown in France, though
+ he wrote two well-known operas, <i>Fauler Hans</i> and <i>Wem die Krone</i>? and was
+ the first composer, according to Strauss, to introduce Wagnerian methods into the
+ <i>Lied</i>. He is often discussed in B&uuml;low's and Liszt's letters. "Before I met
+ him," says Strauss, "I had been brought up on strictly classical lines; I had lived
+ <a name="page141" id="page141"/>entirely on
+ Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven, and had just been studying Mendelssohn, Chopin,
+ Schumann, and Brahms. It is to Ritter alone I am indebted for my knowledge of Liszt
+ and Wagner; it was he who showed me the importance of the writings and works of these
+ two masters in the history of art. It was he who by years of lessons and kindly
+ counsel made me a musician of the future (<i>Zukunftsmusiker</i>), and set my feet on
+ a road where now I can walk unaided and alone. It was he also who initiated me in
+ Schopenhauer's philosophy."</p>
+ <p>The second influence, that of the South, dates from April, 1886, and seems to have
+ left an indelible impression upon Strauss. He visited Rome and Naples for the first
+ time, and came back with a symphonic fantasia called <i>Aus Italien</i>. In the
+ spring of 1892, after a sharp attack of pneumonia, he travelled for a year and a half
+ in Greece, Egypt, and Sicily. The tranquillity of these favoured countries filled him
+ with never-ending regret. The North has depressed him since then, "the eternal grey
+ of the North and its phantom shadows without a sun."<a name="FNanchor_168_168"
+ id="FNanchor_168_168"></a><a href="#Footnote_168_168" class="fnanchor">[168]</a> When
+ I saw him at Charlottenburg, one chilly April day, he told me with a sigh that he
+ could compose nothing in winter, and that he longed for the warmth and light of
+ Italy. His music is infected by that longing; and it makes one feel how his spirit
+ suffers in the gloom of Germany, and ever yearns for the colours, the laughter, and
+ the joy of the South.</p>
+ <p><a name="page142" id="page142"/>Like the
+ musician that Nietzsche dreamed of,<a name="FNanchor_169_169"
+ id="FNanchor_169_169"></a><a href="#Footnote_169_169" class="fnanchor">[169]</a> he
+ seems "to hear ringing in his ears the prelude of a deeper, stronger music, perhaps a
+ more wayward and mysterious music; a music that is super-German, which, unlike other
+ music, would not die away, nor pale, nor grow dull beside the blue and wanton sea and
+ the clear Mediterranean sky; a music super-European, which would hold its own even by
+ the dark sunsets of the desert; a music whose soul is akin to the palm trees; a music
+ that knows how to live and move among great beasts of prey, beautiful and solitary; a
+ music whose supreme charm is its ignorance of good and evil. Only from time to time
+ perhaps there would flit over it the longing of the sailor for home, golden shadows,
+ and gentle weaknesses; and towards it would come flying from afar the thousand tints
+ of the setting of a moral world that men no longer understood; and to these belated
+ fugitives it would extend its hospitality and sympathy." But it is always the North,
+ the melancholy of the North, and "all the sadness of mankind," mental anguish, the
+ thought of death, and the tyranny of life, that come and weigh down afresh his spirit
+ hungering for light, and force it into feverish speculation and bitter argument.
+ Perhaps it is better so.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>Richard Strauss is both a poet and a musician. These two natures live together in
+ him, and each <a name="page143" id="page143"/>
+ strives to get the better of the other. The balance is not always well maintained;
+ but when he does succeed in keeping it by sheer force of will the union of these two
+ talents, directed to the same end, produces an effect more powerful than any known
+ since Wagner's time. Both natures have their source in a mind filled with heroic
+ thoughts&mdash;a rarer possession, I consider, than a talent for either music or
+ poetry. There are other great musicians in Europe; but Strauss is something more than
+ a great musician, for he is able to create a hero.</p>
+ <p>When one talks of heroes one is thinking of drama. Dramatic art is everywhere in
+ Strauss's music, even in works that seem least adapted to it, such as his
+ <i>Lieder</i> and compositions of pure music. It is most evident in his symphonic
+ poems, which are the most important part of his work. These poems are: <i>Wanderers
+ Sturmlied</i> (1885), <i>Aus Italien</i> (1886), <i>Macbeth</i> (1887), <i>Don
+ Juan</i> (1888), <i>Tod und Verkl&auml;rung</i> (1889), <i>Guntram</i> (1892-93),
+ <i>Till Eulenspiegel</i> (1894), <i>Also sprach Zarathustra</i> (1895), <i>Don
+ Quixote</i> (1897), and <i>Heldenleben</i> (1898).<a name="FNanchor_170_170"
+ id="FNanchor_170_170"></a><a href="#Footnote_170_170" class="fnanchor">[170]</a></p>
+ <p>I shall not say much about the four first works, where the mind and manner of the
+ artist is taking shape. The <i>Wanderers Sturmlied</i> (the song of a traveller
+ during a storm, op. 14) is a vocal sextette with an orchestral accompaniment, whose
+ subject is taken from a poem of Goethe's. It was written before Strauss met Ritter,
+ and its construction is <a name="page144"
+ id="page144"/>after the manner of Brahms, and shows a rather affected
+ thought and style. <i>Aus Italien</i> (op. 16) is an exuberant picture of impressions
+ of his tour in Italy, of the ruins at Rome, the seashore at Sorrento, and the life of
+ the Italian people. <i>Macbeth</i> (op. 23) gives us a rather undistinguished series
+ of musical interpretations of poetical subjects. <i>Don Juan</i> (op. 20) is much
+ finer, and translates Lenau's poem into music with bombastic vigour, showing us the
+ hero who dreams of grasping all the joy of the world, and how he fails, and dies
+ after he has lost faith in everything.</p>
+ <p><i>Tod und Verkl&auml;rung</i> ("Death and Transfiguration," op. 24<a
+ name="FNanchor_171_171" id="FNanchor_171_171"></a><a href="#Footnote_171_171"
+ class="fnanchor">[171]</a>) marks considerable progress in Strauss's thought and
+ style. It is still one of the most stirring of Strauss's works, and the one that is
+ conceived with the most perfect unity. It was inspired by a poem of Alexander
+ Ritter's, and I will give you an idea of its subject.</p>
+ <p>In a wretched room, lit only by a nightlight, a sick man lies in bed. Death draws
+ near him in the midst of awe-inspiring silence. The unhappy man seems to wander in
+ his mind at times, and to find comfort in past memories. His life passes before his
+ eyes: his innocent childhood, his happy youth, the struggles of middle age, and his
+ efforts to attain the splendid goal of his desires, which always eludes him. He had
+ been striving all his life for this goal, and at last thought it was within reach,
+ when Death, in a voice of thunder, cries, suddenly, "Stop!" And <a name="page145" id="page145"/>even now in his agony
+ he struggles desperately, being set upon realising his dream; but the hand of Death
+ is crushing life out of his body, and night is creeping on. Then resounds in the
+ heavens the promise of that happiness which he had vainly sought for on
+ earth&mdash;Redemption and Transfiguration.</p>
+ <p>Richard Strauss's friends protested vigorously against this orthodox ending; and
+ Seidl,<a name="FNanchor_171a_171a" id="FNanchor_171a_171a"></a><a href="#Footnote_171a_171a"
+ class="fnanchor">[171a]</a>
+ Jorisenne,<a name="FNanchor_171b_171b" id="FNanchor_171b_171b"></a><a href="#Footnote_171b_171b"
+ class="fnanchor">[171b]</a> and Wilhelm Mauke<a name="FNanchor_171c_171c" id="FNanchor_171c_171c"></a><a href="#Footnote_171c_171c" class="fnanchor">[171c]</a>
+ pretended that the subject was something
+ loftier, that it was the eternal struggle of the soul against its lower self and its
+ deliverance by means of art. I shall not enter into that discussion, though I think
+ that such a cold and commonplace symbolism is much less interesting than the struggle
+ with death, which one feels in every note of the composition. It is a classical work,
+ comparatively speaking; broad and majestic and almost like Beethoven in style. The
+ realism of the subject in the hallucinations of the dying man, the shiverings of
+ fever, the throbbing of the veins, and the despairing agony, is transfigured by the
+ purity of the form in which it is cast. It is realism after the manner of the
+ symphony in C minor, where Beethoven argues with Destiny. If all suggestion of a
+ programme is taken away, the symphony still remains intelligible and impressive by
+ its harmonious expression of feeling.</p>
+ <p><a name="page146" id="page146"/>Many German
+ musicians think that Strauss has reached the highest point of his work in <i>Tod und
+ Verkl&auml;rung</i>. But I am far from agreeing with them, and believe myself that
+ his art has developed enormously as the result of it. It is true it is the summit of
+ one period of his life, containing the essence of all that is best in it; but
+ <i>Heldenleben</i> marks the second period, and is its corner-stone. How the force
+ and fulness of his feeling has grown since that first period! But he has never
+ re-found the delicate and melodious purity of soul and youthful grace of his earlier
+ work, which still shines out in <i>Guntram</i>, and is then effaced.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>Strauss has directed Wagner's dramas at Weimar since 1889. While breathing their
+ atmosphere he turned his attention to the theatre, and wrote the libretto of his
+ opera <i>Guntram</i>. Illness interrupted his work, and he was in Egypt when he took
+ it up again. The music of the first act was written between December, 1892, and
+ February, 1893, while travelling between Cairo and Luxor; the second act was finished
+ in June, 1893, in Sicily; and the third act early in September, 1893, in Bavaria.
+ There is, however, no trace of an oriental atmosphere in this music. We find rather
+ the melodies of Italy, the reflection of a mellow light, and a resigned calm. I feel
+ in it the languid mind of the convalescent, almost the heart of a young girl whose
+ tears are ready to flow, though she is smiling a little at her own sad dreams. It
+ seems to me that Strauss must have a secret affection for this work, which <a name="page147" id="page147"/>owes its inspiration
+ to the undefinable impressions of convalescence. His fever fell asleep in it, and
+ certain passages are full of the caressing touch of nature, and recall Berlioz's
+ <i>Les Troyens</i>. But too often the music is superficial and conventional, and the
+ tyranny of Wagner makes itself felt&mdash;a rare enough occurrence in Strauss's other
+ works. The poem is interesting; Strauss has put much of himself into it, and one is
+ conscious of the crisis that unsettled his broad-minded but often self-satisfied and
+ inconsistent ideas.</p>
+ <p>Strauss had been reading an historical study of an order of
+ <i>Minnes&auml;nger</i> and mystics, which was founded in Austria in the Middle Ages
+ to fight against the corruption of art, and to save souls by the beauty of song. They
+ called themselves <i>Streiter der Liebe</i> ("Warriors of Love"). Strauss, who was
+ imbued at that time with neo-Christian ideas and the influence of Wagner and Tolstoy,
+ was carried away by the subject, and took Guntram from the <i>Streiter der Liebe</i>,
+ and made him his hero.</p>
+ <p>The action takes place in the thirteenth century, in Germany. The first act gives
+ us a glade near a little lake. The country people are in revolt against the nobles,
+ and have just been repulsed. Guntram and his master Friedhold distribute alms among
+ them, and the band of defeated men then take flight into the woods. Left alone,
+ Guntram begins to muse on the delights of springtime and the innocent awakening of
+ Nature. But the thought of the misery that its beauty hides weighs upon him. He
+ thinks of men's evil doing, of human suffering, and <a
+ name="page148" id="page148"/>of civil war. He gives thanks to Christ
+ for having led him to this unhappy country, kisses the cross, and decides to go to
+ the court of the tyrant who is the cause of all the trouble, and make known to him
+ the Divine revelation. At that moment Freihild appears. She is the wife of Duke
+ Robert, who is the cruellest of all the nobles, and she is horrified by all that is
+ happening around her; life seems hateful to her, and she wishes to drown herself. But
+ Guntram prevents her; and the pity that her beauty and trouble had at first aroused
+ changes unconsciously into love when he recognises her as the beloved princess and
+ sole benefactress of the unhappy people. He tells her that God has sent him to her
+ for her salvation. Then he goes to the castle, where he believes himself to be sent
+ on the double mission of saving the people&mdash;and Freihild.</p>
+ <p>In the second act, the princes celebrate their victory in the Duke's castle. After
+ some pompous talk on the part of the official <i>Minnes&auml;nger</i>, Guntram is
+ invited to sing. Discouraged beforehand by the wickedness of his audience, and
+ feeling that he can sing to no purpose, he hesitates and is on the point of leaving
+ them. But Freihild's sadness holds him back, and for her sake he sings. His song is
+ at first calm and measured, and expresses the melancholy that fills him in the midst
+ of a feast which celebrates triumphant power. He then loses himself in dreams, and
+ sees the gentle figure of Peace moving among the company. He describes her lovingly
+ and with youthful tenderness, which approaches ecstasy as he draws a picture of the
+ <a name="page149" id="page149"/>ideal life of
+ humanity made free. Then he paints War and Death, and the disorder and darkness that
+ they spread over the world. He addresses himself directly to the Prince; he shows him
+ his duty, and how the love of his people would be his recompense; he threatens him
+ with the hate of the unhappy who are driven to despair; and, finally, he urges the
+ nobles to rebuild the towns, to liberate their prisoners, and to come to the aid of
+ their subjects. His song is ended amid the profound emotion of his audience. Duke
+ Robert, feeling the danger of these outspoken words, orders his men to seize the
+ singer; but the vassals side with Guntram. At this juncture news is brought that the
+ peasants have renewed the attack. Robert calls his men to arms, but Guntram, who
+ feels that he will be supported by those around him, orders Robert's arrest. The Duke
+ draws his sword, but Guntram kills him. Then a sudden change comes over Guntram's
+ spirit, which is explained in the third act. In the scene that follows he speaks no
+ word, his sword falls from his hand, and he lets his enemies again assume their
+ authority over the crowd; he allows himself to be bound and taken to prison, while
+ the band of nobles noisily disperses to fight against the rebels. But Freihild is
+ full of an unaffected and almost savage joy at her deliverance by Guntram's sword.
+ Love for Guntram fills her heart, and her one desire is to save him.</p>
+ <p>The third act takes place in the prison of the ch&acirc;teau; and it is a
+ surprising, uncertain, and very curious act. It is not a logical result of the action
+ <a name="page150" id="page150"/>that has
+ preceded it. One feels a sudden commotion in the poet's ideas, a crisis of feeling
+ which disturbed him even as he wrote, and a difficulty which he did not succeed in
+ solving. The new light towards which he was beginning to move appears very clearly.
+ Strauss was too advanced in the composition of his work to escape the neo-Christian
+ renouncement which had to finish the drama; he could only have avoided that by
+ completely remodelling his characters. So Guntram rejects Freihild's love. He sees he
+ has fallen, even as the others, under the curse of sin. He had preached charity to
+ others when he himself was full of egoism; he had killed Robert rather to satisfy his
+ instinctive and animal jealousy than to deliver the people from a tyrant. So he
+ renounces his desires, and expiates the sin of being alive by retirement from the
+ world. But the interest of the act does not lie in this anticipated
+ <i>d&eacute;nouement</i>, which since <i>Parsifal</i> has become rather common; it
+ lies in another scene, which has evidently been inserted at the last moment, and
+ which is uncomfortably out of tune with the action, though in a singularly grand way.
+ This scene gives us a dialogue between Guntram and his former companion, Friedhold.<a
+ name="FNanchor_172_172" id="FNanchor_172_172"></a><a href="#Footnote_172_172"
+ class="fnanchor">[172]</a></p>
+ <p><a name="page151" id="page151"/>Friedhold
+ had initiated him in former days, and he now comes to reproach him for his crime, and
+ to bring him before the Order, who will judge him. In the original version of the
+ poem Guntram complies, and sacrifices his passion to his vow. But while Strauss had
+ been travelling in the East he had conceived a sudden horror for this Christian
+ annihilation of will, and Guntram revolts along with him, and refuses to submit to
+ the rules of his Order. He breaks his lute&mdash;a symbol of false hope in the
+ redemption of humanity through faith&mdash;and rouses himself from the glorious
+ dreams in which he used to believe, for he sees they are shadows that are scattered
+ by the light of real life. He does not abjure his former vows; but he is not the same
+ man he was when he made them. While his experience was immature he was able to
+ believe that a man ought to submit himself to rules, and that life should be governed
+ by laws. A single hour has enlightened him. Now he is free and alone&mdash;alone with
+ his spirit. "I alone can lessen my suffering; I alone can expiate my crime. Through
+ myself alone God speaks to me; to me alone God speaks. <i>Ewig einsam</i>." It is the
+ proud awakening of individualism, the powerful pessimism of the Super-man. Such an
+ expression of feeling gives the character of action to renouncement and even to
+ negation itself, for it is a strong affirmation of the will.</p>
+ <p>I have dwelt rather at length on this drama on account of the real value of its
+ thought and, above all, on account of what one may call its autobiographical
+ interest. It was at this time that Strauss's mind began to take more definite form.
+ His further experience will develop that form still more, but without making any
+ important change in it.</p>
+ <p><i>Guntram</i> was the cause of bitter disappointment to its author. He did not
+ succeed in getting it pro<a name="page152"
+ id="page152"/>duced at Munich, for the orchestra and singers declared
+ that the music could not be performed. It is even said that they got an eminent
+ critic to draw up a formal document, which they sent to Strauss, certifying that
+ <i>Guntram</i> was not meant to be sung. The chief difficulty was the length of the
+ principal part, which took up by itself, in its musings and discourses, the
+ equivalent of an act and a half. Some of its monologues, like the song in the second
+ act, last half an hour on end. Nevertheless, <i>Guntram</i> was performed at Weimar
+ on 16 May, 1894. A little while afterwards Strauss married the singer who played
+ Freihild, Pauline de Ahna, who had also created Elizabeth in <i>Tannh&auml;user</i>
+ at Bayreuth, and who has since devoted herself to the interpretation of her husband's
+ <i>Lieder</i>.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>But the rancour of his failure at the theatre still remained with Strauss, and he
+ turned his attention again to the symphonic poem, in which he showed more and more
+ marked dramatic tendencies, and a soul which grew daily prouder and more scornful.
+ You should hear him speak in cold disdain of the theatre-going public&mdash;"that
+ collection of bankers and tradespeople and miserable seekers after pleasure"&mdash;to
+ know the sore that this triumphant artist hides. For not only was the theatre long
+ closed to him, but, by an additional irony, he was obliged to conduct musical rubbish
+ at the opera in Berlin, on account of the poor taste in music&mdash;really of Royal
+ origin&mdash;that prevailed there.<a name="page153"
+ id="page153"/></p>
+ <p>The first great symphony of this new period was <i>Till Eulenspiegel's lustige
+ Streiche, nach alter Schelmenweise, in Rondeauform</i> ("Till Eulenspiegel's Merry
+ Pranks, according to an old legend, in rondeau form"), op. 28.<a
+ name="FNanchor_173_173" id="FNanchor_173_173"></a><a href="#Footnote_173_173"
+ class="fnanchor">[173]</a> Here his disdain is as yet only expressed by witty
+ bantering, which scoffs at the world's conventions. This figure of Till, this devil
+ of a joker, the legendary hero of Germany and Flanders, is little known with us in
+ France. And so Strauss's music loses much of its point, for it claims to recall a
+ series of adventures which we know nothing about&mdash;Till crossing the market place
+ and smacking his whip at the good women there; Till in priestly attire delivering a
+ homely sermon; Till making love to a young woman who rebuffs him; Till making a fool
+ of the pedants; Till tried and hung. Strauss's liking to present, by musical
+ pictures, sometimes a character, sometimes a dialogue, or a situation, or a
+ landscape, or an idea&mdash;that is to say, the most volatile and varied impressions
+ of his capricious spirit&mdash;is very marked here. It is true that he falls back on
+ several popular subjects, whose meaning would be very easily grasped in Germany; and
+ that he develops them, not quite in the strict form of a rondeau, as he pretends, but
+ still with a certain method, so that apart from a few frolics, which are
+ unintelligible without a programme, the whole has real musical unity. This symphony,
+ which is a great favourite in Germany, seems to me less original than some of his
+ other compositions. It sounds rather <a name="page154"
+ id="page154"/>like a refined piece of Mendelssohn's, with curious
+ harmonies and very complicated instrumentation.</p>
+ <p>There is much more grandeur and originality in his <i>Also sprach Zarathustra,
+ Tondichtung frei, nach Nietzsche</i> ("Thus spake Zarathustra, a free Tone-poem,
+ after Nietzsche"), op. 30.<a name="FNanchor_174_174" id="FNanchor_174_174"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_174_174" class="fnanchor">[174]</a> Its sentiments are more broadly
+ human, and the programme that Strauss has followed never loses itself in picturesque
+ or anecdotic details, but is planned on expressive and noble lines. Strauss protests
+ his own liberty in the face of Nietzsche's. He wishes to represent the different
+ stages of development that a free spirit passes through in order to arrive at that of
+ Super-man. These ideas are purely personal, and are not part of some system of
+ philosophy. The sub-titles of the work are: <i>Von den Hinterweltern</i> ("Of
+ Religious Ideas"), <i>Von der grossen Sehnsucht</i> ("Of Supreme Aspiration"), <i>Von
+ den Freuden und Leidenschaften</i> ("Of Joys and Passions"), <i>Das Grablied</i>
+ ("The Grave Song"), <i>Von der Wissenschaft</i> ("Of Knowledge"), <i>Der
+ Genesende</i> ("The Convalescent"&mdash;the soul delivered of its desires), <i>Das
+ Tanzlied</i> ("Dancing Song"), <i>Nachtlied</i> ("Night Song"). We are shown a man
+ who, worn out by trying to solve the riddle of the universe, seeks refuge in
+ religion. Then he revolts against ascetic ideas, and gives way madly to his passions.
+ But he is quickly sated and disgusted and, weary to death, he tries science, but
+ rejects it again, and succeeds in ridding himself of the uneasiness its knowledge
+ <a name="page155" id="page155"/>brings by
+ laughter&mdash;the master of the universe&mdash;and the merry dance, that dance of
+ the universe where all the human sentiments enter hand-in-hand&mdash;religious
+ beliefs, unsatisfied desires, passions, disgust, and joy. "Lift up your hearts on
+ high, my brothers! Higher still! And mind you don't forget your legs! I have
+ canonised laughter. You super-men, learn to laugh!"<a name="FNanchor_175_175"
+ id="FNanchor_175_175"></a><a href="#Footnote_175_175" class="fnanchor">[175]</a> And
+ the dance dies away and is lost in ethereal regions, and Zarathustra is lost to sight
+ while dancing in distant worlds. But if he has solved the riddle of the universe for
+ himself, he has not solved it for other men; and so, in contrast to the confident
+ knowledge which fills the music, we get the sad note of interrogation at the end.</p>
+ <p>There are few subjects that offer richer material for musical expression. Strauss
+ has treated it with power and dexterity; he has preserved unity in this chaos of
+ passions, by contrasting the <i>Sehnsucht</i> of man with the impassive strength of
+ Nature. As for the boldness of his conceptions, I need hardly remind those who heard
+ the poem at the Cirque d'&eacute;t&eacute; of the intricate "Fugue of Knowledge," the
+ trills of the wood wind and the trumpets that voice Zarathustra's laugh, the dance of
+ the universe, and the audacity of the conclusion which, in the key of B major,
+ finishes up with a note of interrogation, in C natural, repeated three times.</p>
+ <p>I am far from thinking that the symphony is without a fault. The themes are of
+ unequal value: some are quite commonplace; and, in a general way, <a name="page156" id="page156"/>the working up of the
+ composition is superior to its underlying thought. I shall come back later on to
+ certain faults in Strauss's music; here I only want to consider the overflowing life
+ and feverish joy that set these worlds spinning.</p>
+ <p><i>Zarathustra</i> shows the progress of scornful individualism in
+ Strauss&mdash;"the spirit that hates the dogs of the populace and all that abortive
+ and gloomy breed; the spirit of wild laughter that dances like a tempest as gaily on
+ marshes and sadness as it does in fields."<a name="FNanchor_176_176"
+ id="FNanchor_176_176"></a><a href="#Footnote_176_176" class="fnanchor">[176]</a> That
+ spirit laughs at itself and at its idealism in the <i>Don Quixote</i> of 1897,
+ <i>fantastische Variationen uber ein Thema ritterlichen Charakters</i> ("Don Quixote,
+ fantastic variations on a theme of knightly character"), op. 35; and that symphony
+ marks, I think, the extreme point to which programme music may be carried. In no
+ other work does Strauss give better proof of his prodigious cleverness, intelligence,
+ and wit; and I say sincerely that there is not a work where so much force is expended
+ with so great a loss for the sake of a game and a musical joke which lasts forty-five
+ minutes, and has given the author, the executants, and the public a good deal of
+ tiring work. These symphonic poems are most difficult to play on account of the
+ complexity, the independence, and the fantastic caprices of the different parts.
+ Judge for yourself what the author expects to get out of the music by these few
+ extracts from the programme:&mdash;</p>
+ <p><a name="page157" id="page157"/>The
+ introduction represents Don Quixote buried in books of chivalrous romance; and we
+ have to see in the music, as we do in little Flemish and Dutch pictures, not only Don
+ Quixote's features, but the words of the books he reads. Sometimes it is the story of
+ a knight who is righting a giant, sometimes the adventures of a knight-errant who has
+ dedicated himself to the services of a lady, sometimes it is a nobleman who has given
+ his life in fulfilment of a vow to atone for his sins. Don Quixote's mind becomes
+ confused (and our own with it) over all these stories; he is quite distracted. He
+ leaves home in company with his squire. The two figures are drawn with great spirit;
+ the one is an old Spaniard, stiff, languishing, distrustful, a bit of a poet, rather
+ undecided in his opinions but obstinate when his mind is once made up; the other is a
+ fat, jovial peasant, a cunning fellow, given to repeating himself in a waggish way
+ and quoting droll proverbs&mdash;translated in the music by short-winded phrases that
+ always return to the point they started from. The adventures begin. Here are the
+ windmills (trills from the violins and wood wind), and the bleating army of the grand
+ emperor, Alifanfaron (tremolos from the wood wind); and here, in the third variation,
+ is a dialogue between the knight and his squire, from which we are to guess that
+ Sancho questions his master on the advantages of a chivalrous life, for they seem to
+ him doubtful. Don Quixote talks to him of glory and honour; but Sancho has no thought
+ for it. In reply to these grand words he urges the superiority of sure profits, fat
+ meals, and sounding money.<a name="page158"
+ id="page158"/>Then the adventures begin again. The two companions fly
+ through the air on wooden horses; and the illusion of this giddy voyage is given by
+ chromatic passages on the flutes, harps, kettledrums, and a "windmachine," while "the
+ tremolo of the double basses on the key-note shows that the horses have never left
+ the earth."<a name="FNanchor_177_177" id="FNanchor_177_177"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_177_177" class="fnanchor">[177]</a></p>
+ <p>But I must stop. I have said enough to show the fun the author is indulging in.
+ When one hears the work one cannot help admiring the composer's technical knowledge,
+ skill in orchestration, and sense of humour. And one is all the more surprised that
+ he confines himself to the illustration of texts<a name="FNanchor_178_178"
+ id="FNanchor_178_178"></a><a href="#Footnote_178_178" class="fnanchor">[178]</a> when
+ he is so capable of creating comic and dramatic matter without it. Although <i>Don
+ Quixote</i> is a marvel of skill and a very wonderful work, in which Strauss has
+ developed a suppler and richer style, it marks, to my mind, a progress in his
+ technique and a backward step in his mind, for he seems to have adopted the decadent
+ conceptions of an art suited to playthings and trinkets to please a frivolous and
+ affected society.</p>
+ <p>In <i>Heldenleben</i> ("The Life of a Hero"), op. 40,<a name="FNanchor_179_179"
+ id="FNanchor_179_179"></a><a href="#Footnote_179_179" class="fnanchor">[179]</a> he
+ recovers himself, and with a stroke of his wings reaches the summits. Here there is
+ no foreign text for the music to study or illustrate or transcribe. Instead, there is
+ lofty passion and an heroic will <a name="page159"
+ id="page159"/>gradually developing itself and breaking down all
+ obstacles. Without doubt Strauss had a programme in his mind, but he said to me
+ himself: "You have no need to read it. It is enough to know that the hero is there
+ fighting against his enemies." I do not know how far that is true, or if parts of the
+ symphony would not be rather obscure to anyone who followed it without the text; but
+ this speech seems to prove that he has understood the dangers of the literary
+ symphony, and that he is striving for pure music.</p>
+ <p><i>Heldenleben</i> is divided into six chapters: The Hero, The Hero's Adversaries,
+ The Hero's Companion, The Field of Battle, The Peaceful Labours of the Hero, The
+ Hero's Retirement from the World, and the Achievement of His Ideal. It is an
+ extraordinary work, drunken with heroism, colossal, half barbaric, trivial, and
+ sublime. An Homeric hero struggles among the sneers of a stupid crowd, a herd of
+ brawling and hobbling ninnies. A violin solo, in a sort of concerto, describes the
+ seductions, the coquetry, and the degraded wickedness of woman. Then strident
+ trumpet-blasts sound the attack; and it is beyond me to give an idea of the terrible
+ charge of cavalry that follows, which makes the earth tremble and our hearts leap;
+ nor can I describe how an iron determination leads to the storming of towns, and all
+ the tumultuous din and uproar of battle&mdash;the most splendid battle that has ever
+ been painted in music. At its first performance in Germany I saw people tremble as
+ they listened to it, and some rose up suddenly and made violent <a name="page160" id="page160"/>gestures quite
+ unconsciously. I myself had a strange feeling of giddiness, as if an ocean had been
+ upheaved, and I thought that for the first time for thirty years Germany had found a
+ poet of Victory.</p>
+ <p><i>Heldenleben</i> would be in every way one of the masterpieces of musical
+ composition if a literary error had not suddenly cut short the soaring flight of its
+ most impassioned pages, at the supreme point of interest in the movement, in order to
+ follow the programme; though, besides this, a certain coldness, perhaps weariness,
+ creeps in towards the end. The victorious hero perceives that he has conquered in
+ vain: the baseness and stupidity of men have remained unaltered. He stifles his
+ anger, and scornfully accepts the situation. Then he seeks refuge in the peace of
+ Nature. The creative force within him flows out in imaginative works; and here
+ Richard Strauss, with a daring warranted only by his genius, represents these works
+ by reminiscences of his own compositions, and <i>Don Juan, Macbeth, Tod und
+ Verkl&auml;rung, Till, Zarathustra, Don Quixote, Guntram</i>, and even his
+ <i>Lieder</i>, associate themselves with the hero whose story he is telling. At times
+ a storm will remind this hero of his combats; but he also remembers his moments of
+ love and happiness, and his soul is quieted. Then the music unfolds itself serenely,
+ and rises with calm strength to the closing chord of triumph, which is placed like a
+ crown of glory on the hero's head.</p>
+ <p>There is no doubt that Beethoven's ideas have often inspired, stimulated, and
+ guided Strauss's own ideas. One feels an indescribable reflection of <a name="page161" id="page161"/>the first
+ <i>Heroic</i> and of the <i>Ode to Joy</i> in the key of the first part (E flat); and
+ the last part recalls, even more forcibly, certain of Beethoven's <i>Lieder</i>. But
+ the heroes of the two composers are very different: Beethoven's hero is more
+ classical and more rebellious; and Strauss's hero is more concerned with the exterior
+ world and his enemies, his conquests are achieved with greater difficulty, and his
+ triumph is wilder in consequence. If that good Oulibicheff pretends to see the
+ burning of Moscow in a discord in the first <i>Heroic</i>, what would he find here?
+ What scenes of burning towns, what battlefields! Besides that there is cutting scorn
+ and a mischievous laughter in <i>Heldenleben</i> that is never heard in Beethoven.
+ There is, in fact, little kindness in Strauss's work; it is the work of a disdainful
+ hero.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>In considering Strauss's music as a whole, one is at first struck by the diversity
+ of his style. The North and the South mingle; and in his melodies one feels the
+ attraction of the sun. Something Italian had crept into <i>Tristan</i>; but how much
+ more of Italy there is in the work of this disciple of Nietzsche. The phrases are
+ often Italian and their harmonies ultra-Germanic. Perhaps one of the greatest charms
+ of Strauss's art is that we are able to watch the rent in the dark clouds of German
+ polyphony, and see shining through it the smiling line of an Italian coast and the
+ gay dancers on its shore. This is not merely a vague analogy. It <a name="page162" id="page162"/>would be easy, if
+ idle, to notice unmistakable reminiscences of France and Italy even in Strauss's most
+ advanced works, such as <i>Zarathustra</i> and <i>Heldenleben</i>. Mendelssohn,
+ Gounod, Wagner, Rossini, and Mascagni elbow one another strangely. But these
+ disparate elements have a softer outline when the work is taken as a whole, for they
+ have been absorbed and controlled by the composer's imagination.</p>
+ <p>His orchestra is not less composite. It is not a compact and serried mass like
+ Wagner's Macedonian phalanxes; it is parcelled out and as divided as possible. Each
+ part aims at independence and works as it thinks best, without apparently troubling
+ about the other parts. Sometimes it seems, as it did when reading Berlioz, that the
+ execution must result in incoherence, and weaken the effect. But somehow the result
+ is very satisfying. "Now doesn't that sound well?" said Strauss to me with a smile,
+ just after he had finished conducting <i>Heldenleben</i>.<a name="FNanchor_180_180"
+ id="FNanchor_180_180"></a><a href="#Footnote_180_180" class="fnanchor">[180]</a></p>
+ <p>But it is especially in Strauss's subjects that caprice and a disordered
+ imagination, the enemy of all reason, seem to reign. We have seen that these <a name="page163" id="page163"/>poems try to express
+ in turn, or even simultaneously, literary texts, pictures, anecdotes, philosophical
+ ideas, and the personal sentiments of the composer. What unity is there in the
+ adventures of Don Quixote or Till Eulenspiegel? And yet unity is there, not in the
+ subjects, but in the mind that deals with them. And these descriptive symphonies with
+ their very diffuse literary life are vindicated by their musical life, which is much
+ more logical and concentrated. The caprices of the poet are held in rein by the
+ musician. The whimsical Till disports himself "after the old form of rondeau," and
+ the folly of Don Quixote is told in "ten variations on a chivalrous theme, with an
+ introduction and finale." In this way, Strauss's art, one of the most literary and
+ descriptive in existence, is strongly distinguished from others of the same kind by
+ the solidarity of its musical fabric, in which one feels the true musician&mdash;a
+ musician brought up on the great masters, and a classic in spite of everything.</p>
+ <p>And so throughout that music a strong unity is felt among the unruly and often
+ incongruous elements. It is the reflection, so it seems to me, of the soul of the
+ composer. Its unity is not a matter of what he feels, but a matter of what he wishes.
+ His emotion is much less interesting to him than his will, and it is less intense,
+ and often quite devoid of any personal character. His restlessness seems to come from
+ Schumann, his religious feeling from Mendelssohn, his voluptuousness from Gounod or
+ the Italian masters, his passion from<a name="page164"
+ id="page164"/>Wagner.<a name="FNanchor_181_181"
+ id="FNanchor_181_181"></a><a href="#Footnote_181_181" class="fnanchor">[181]</a> But
+ his will is heroic, dominating, eager, and powerful to a sublime degree. And that is
+ why Richard Strauss is noble and, at present, quite unique. One feels in him a force
+ that has dominion over men.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>It is through this heroic side that he may be considered as an inheritor of some
+ of Beethoven's and Wagner's thought. It is this heroic side which makes him a
+ poet&mdash;one of the greatest perhaps in modern Germany, who sees herself reflected
+ in him and in his hero. Let us consider this hero.</p>
+ <p>He is an idealist with unbounded faith in the power of the mind and the liberating
+ virtue of art. This idealism is at first religious, as in <i>Tod und
+ Verkl&auml;rung</i>, and tender and compassionate as a woman, and full of youthful
+ illusions, as in <i>Guntram</i>. Then it becomes vexed and indignant with the
+ baseness of the world and the difficulties it encounters. Its scorn increases, and
+ becomes sarcastic <i>(Till Eulenspiegel)</i>; it is exasperated with years of
+ conflict, and, in increasing bitterness, develops into a contemptuous heroism. How
+ Strauss's laugh whips and stings us in <i>Zarathustra</i>! How his will bruises and
+ cuts us in <i>Heldenleben</i>! Now that he has proved his power by victory, his pride
+ knows no limit; he is elated and is unable to see that his lofty visions have become
+ realities. But the people <a name="page165"
+ id="page165"/>whose spirit he reflects see it. There are germs of
+ morbidity in Germany to-day, a frenzy of pride, a belief in self, and a scorn for
+ others that recalls France in the seventeenth century. "<i>Dem Deutschen geh&ouml;rt
+ die Welt</i>" ("Germany possesses the world") calmly say the prints displayed in the
+ shop windows in Berlin. But when one arrives at this point the mind becomes
+ delirious. All genius is raving mad if it comes to that; but Beethoven's madness
+ concentrated itself in himself, and imagined things for his own enjoyment. The genius
+ of many contemporary German artists is an aggressive thing, and is characterised by
+ its destructive antagonism. The idealist who "possesses the world" is liable to
+ dizziness. He was made to rule over an interior world. The splendour of the exterior
+ images that he is called upon to govern dazzles him; and, like Caesar, he goes
+ astray. Germany had hardly attained the position of empire of the world when she
+ found Nietzsche's voice and that of the deluded artists of the <i>Deutsches
+ Theater</i> and the <i>Secession</i>. Now there is the grandiose music of Richard
+ Strauss.</p>
+ <p>What is all this fury leading to? What does this heroism aspire to? This force of
+ will, bitter and strained, grows faint when it has reached its goal, or even before
+ that. It does not know what to do with its victory. It disdains it, does not believe
+ in it, or grows tired of it.<a name="FNanchor_182_182" id="FNanchor_182_182"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_182_182" class="fnanchor">[182]</a></p>
+ <p>Like Michelangelo's <i>Victory</i>, it has set its knee on <a name="page166" id="page166"/>the captive's back,
+ and seems ready to despatch him. But suddenly it stops, hesitates, and looks about
+ with uncertain eyes, and its expression is one of languid disgust, as though
+ weariness had seized it.</p>
+ <p>And this is how the work of Richard Strauss appears to me up to the present.
+ Guntram kills Duke Robert, and immediately lets fall his sword. The frenzied laugh of
+ Zarathustra ends in an avowal of discouraged impotence. The delirious passion of Don
+ Juan dies away in nothingness. Don Quixote when dying forswears his illusions. Even
+ the Hero himself admits the futility of his work, and seeks oblivion in an
+ indifferent Nature. Nietzsche, speaking of the artists of our time, laughs at "those
+ Tantaluses of the will, rebels and enemies of laws, who come, broken in spirit, and
+ fall at the foot of the cross of Christ." Whether it is for the sake of the Cross or
+ Nothingness, these heroes renounce their victories in disgust and despair, or with a
+ resignation that is sadder still. It was not thus that Beethoven overcame his
+ sorrows. Sad adagios make their lament in the middle of his symphonies, but a note of
+ joy and triumph is always sounded at the end. His work is the triumph of a conquered
+ hero; that of Strauss is the defeat of a conquering hero. This irresoluteness of the
+ will can be still more clearly seen in contemporary German literature, and in
+ particular in the author of <i>Die versunkene Glocke</i>. But it is more striking in
+ Strauss, because he is more heroic. And so we get all this display of superhuman
+ will, and the end is only "My desire is gone!"</p>
+ <p><a name="page167" id="page167"/>In this lies
+ the undying worm of German thought&mdash;I am speaking of the thought of the choice
+ few who enlighten the present and anticipate the future. I see an heroic people,
+ intoxicated by its triumphs, by its great riches, by its numbers, by its force, which
+ clasps the world in its great arms and subjugates it, and then stops, fatigued by its
+ conquest, and asks: "Why have I conquered?"</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+ <a name="page168" id="page168"/>
+ <h2><a name="HUGO_WOLF" id="HUGO_WOLF"></a>HUGO WOLF</h2>
+ <p>The more one learns of the history of great artists, the more one is struck by the
+ immense amount of sadness their lives enclose. Not only are they subjected to the
+ trials and disappointments of ordinary life&mdash;which affect them more cruelly
+ through their greater sensitiveness&mdash;but their surroundings are like a desert,
+ because they are twenty, thirty, fifty, or even hundreds of years in advance of their
+ contemporaries; and they are often condemned to despairing efforts, not to conquer
+ the world, but to live.</p>
+ <p>These highly-strung natures are rarely able to keep up this incessant struggle for
+ very long; and the finest genius may have to reckon with illness and misery and even
+ premature death. And yet there were people like Mozart and Schumann and Weber who
+ were happy in spite of everything, because they had been able to keep their soul's
+ health and the joy of creation until the end; and though their bodies were worn out
+ with fatigue and privation, a light was kept burning which sent its rays far into the
+ darkness of their night. There are worse destinies; and Beethoven, though he was
+ poor, shut up within himself, and deceived in his affections, was far from being the
+ most unhappy of men. In his case, he possessed nothing but himself; <a name="page169" id="page169"/>but he possessed
+ himself truly, and reigned over the world that was within him; and no other empire
+ could ever be compared with that of his vast imagination, which stretched like a
+ great expanse of sky, where tempests raged. Until his last day the old Prometheus in
+ him, though fettered by a miserable body, preserved his iron force unbroken. When
+ dying during a storm, his last gesture was one of revolt; and in his agony he raised
+ himself on his bed and shook his fist at the sky. And so he fell, struck down by a
+ single blow in the thick of the fight.</p>
+ <p>But what shall be said of those who die little by little, who outlive themselves,
+ and watch the slow decay of their souls?</p>
+ <p>Such was the fate of Hugo Wolf, whose tragic destiny has assured him a place apart
+ in the hell of great musicians.<a name="FNanchor_183_183"
+ id="FNanchor_183_183"></a><a href="#Footnote_183_183" class="fnanchor">[183]</a></p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>He was born at Windischgratz in Styria, 13 March, 1860. He was the fourth son of a
+ currier&mdash;a currier-musician, like old Veit Bach, the baker-musician, and Haydn's
+ father, the wheelwright-musician. Philipp Wolf played the violin, the guitar, and the
+ piano, and used to have little quintet parties at his <a
+ name="page170" id="page170"/>house, in which he played the first
+ violin, Hugo the second violin, Hugo's brother the violoncello, an uncle the horn,
+ and a friend the tenor violin. The musical taste of the country was not properly
+ German. Wolf was a Catholic; and his taste was not formed, like that of most German
+ musicians, by books of chorales. Besides that, in Styria they were fond of playing
+ the old Italian operas of Rossini, Bellini, and Donizetti. Later on, Wolf used to
+ like to think that he had a few drops of Latin blood in his veins; and all his life
+ he had a predilection for the great French musicians.</p>
+ <p>His term of apprenticeship was not marked by anything brilliant. He went from one
+ school to another without being kept long anywhere. And yet he was not a worthless
+ lad; but he was always very reserved, little caring to be intimate with others, and
+ passionately devoted to music. His father naturally did not want him to take up music
+ as a profession; and he had the same struggles that Berlioz had. Finally he succeeded
+ in getting permission from his family to go to Vienna, and he entered the
+ Conservatoire there in 1875. But he was not any the happier for it, and at the end of
+ two years he was sent away for being unruly.</p>
+ <p>What was to be done? His family was ruined, for a fire had demolished their little
+ possessions. He felt the silent reproaches of his father already weighing upon
+ him&mdash;for he loved his father dearly, and remembered the sacrifices he had made
+ for him. He did not wish to return to his own province; indeed he could not
+ return&mdash;that would have been <a name="page171"
+ id="page171"/>death. It was necessary that this boy of seventeen
+ should find some means of earning a livelihood and be able to instruct himself at the
+ same time. After his expulsion from the Conservatoire he attended no other school; he
+ taught himself. And he taught himself wonderfully; but at what a cost! The suffering
+ he went through from that time until he was thirty, the enormous amount of energy he
+ had to expend in order to live and cultivate the fine spirit of poetry that was
+ within him&mdash;all this effort and toil was, without doubt, the cause of his
+ unhappy death. He had a burning thirst for knowledge and a fever for work which made
+ him sometimes forget the necessity for eating and drinking.</p>
+ <p>He had a great admiration for Goethe, and was infatuated by Heinrich von Kleist,
+ whom he rather resembles both in his gifts and in his life; he was an enthusiast
+ about Grillparzer and Hebbel at a time when they were but little appreciated; and he
+ was one of the first Germans to discover the worth of M&ouml;rike, whom, later on, he
+ made popular in Germany. Besides this, he read English and French writers. He liked
+ Rabelais, and was very partial to Claude Tillier, the French novelist of the
+ provinces, whose <i>Oncle Benjamin</i> has given pleasure to so many German
+ provincial families, by bringing before them, as Wolf said, the vision of their own
+ little world, and helping them by his own jovial good humour to bear their troubles
+ with a smiling face. And so little Wolf, with hardly enough to eat, found the means
+ of learning both French and English, <a name="page172"
+ id="page172"/>in order better to appreciate the thoughts of foreign
+ artists.</p>
+ <p>In music he learned a great deal from his friend Schalk,<a name="FNanchor_184_184"
+ id="FNanchor_184_184"></a><a href="#Footnote_184_184" class="fnanchor">[184]</a> a
+ professor at the Vienna Conservatoire; but, like Berlioz, he got most of his
+ education from the libraries, and spent months in reading the scores of the great
+ masters. Not having a piano, he used to carry Beethoven's sonatas to the Prater Park
+ in Vienna and study them on a bench in the open air. He soaked himself in the
+ classics&mdash;in Bach and Beethoven, and the German masters of the
+ <i>Lied</i>&mdash;Schubert and Schumann. He was one of the young Germans who was
+ passionately fond of Berlioz; and it is due to Wolf that France was afterwards
+ honoured in the possession of this great artist, whom French critics, whether of the
+ school of Meyerbeer, Wagner, Franck, or Debussy, have never understood. He was also
+ early a friend of old Anton Bruckner, whose music we do not know in France, neither
+ his eight symphonies, nor his <i>Te Deum</i>, nor his masses, nor his cantatas, nor
+ anything else of his fertile work. Bruckner had a sweet and modest character, and an
+ endearing, if rather childish, personality. He was rather crushed all his life by the
+ Brahms party; but, like Franck in France, he gathered round him new and original
+ talent to fight the academic art of his time.</p>
+ <p>But of all these influences, the strongest was that of Wagner. Wagner came to
+ Vienna in 1875 to <a name="page173"
+ id="page173"/>conduct <i>Tannh&auml;user</i> and <i>Lohengrin</i>.
+ There was then among the younger people a fever of enthusiasm similar to that which
+ <i>Werther</i> had caused a century before. Wolf saw Wagner. He tells us about it in
+ his letters to his parents. I will quote his own words, and though they make one
+ smile, one loves the impulsive devotion of his youth; and they make one feel, too,
+ that a man who inspires such an affection, and who can do so much good by a little
+ sympathy, is to blame when he does not befriend others&mdash;above all if he has
+ suffered, like Wagner, from loneliness and the want of a helping hand. You must
+ remember that this letter was written by a boy of fifteen.</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"I have been to&mdash;guess whom?... to the master, Richard Wagner! Now I will
+ tell you all about it, just as it happened. I will copy the words down exactly as I
+ wrote them in my note-book.</p>
+ <p>"On Thursday, 9 December, at half-past ten, I saw Richard Wagner for the second
+ time at the Hotel Imperial, where I stayed for half an hour on the staircase,
+ awaiting his arrival (I knew that on that day he would conduct the last rehearsal
+ of his <i>Lohengrin</i>). At last the master came down from the second floor, and I
+ bowed to him very respectfully while he was yet some distance from me. He thanked
+ me in a very friendly way. As he neared the door I sprang forward and opened it for
+ him, upon which he looked fixedly at me for a few seconds, and then went on his way
+ to <a name="page174" id="page174"/>the
+ rehearsal at the Opera. I ran as fast as I could, and arrived at the Opera sooner
+ than Richard Wagner did in his cab. I bowed to him again, and I wanted to open the
+ door of his cab for him; but as I could not get it open, the coachman jumped down
+ from his seat and did it for me. Wagner said something to the coachman&mdash;I
+ think it was about me. I wanted to follow him into the theatre, but they would not
+ let me pass.</p>
+ <p>"I often used to wait for him at the Hotel Imperial; and on this occasion I made
+ the acquaintance of the manager of the hotel, who promised that he would interest
+ himself on my behalf. Who was more delighted than I when he told me that on the
+ following Saturday afternoon, 11 December, I was to come and find him, so that he
+ could introduce me to Mme. Cosima's maid and Richard Wagner's valet! I arrived at
+ the appointed hour. The visit to the lady's maid was very short. I was advised to
+ come the following day, Sunday, 12 December, at two o'clock. I arrived at the right
+ hour, but found the maid and the valet and the manager still at table.... Then I
+ went with the maid to the master's rooms, where I waited for about a quarter of an
+ hour until he came. At last Wagner appeared in company with Cosima and Goldmark. I
+ bowed to Cosima very respectfully, but she evidently did not think it worth while
+ to honour me with a single glance. Wagner was going into his room without paying
+ any attention to me, when the maid said to him in a beseeching voice: 'Ah,<a name="page175" id="page175"/>Herr Wagner, it is
+ a young musician who wishes to speak to you; he has been waiting for you a long
+ time.'</p>
+ <p>"He then came out of his room, looked at me, and said: 'I have seen you before,
+ I think. You are....'</p>
+ <p>"Probably he wanted to say, 'You are a fool.'</p>
+ <p>"He went in front of me and opened the door of the reception-room, which was
+ furnished in a truly royal style. In the middle of the room was a couch covered in
+ velvet and silk. Wagner himself was wrapped in a long velvet mantle bordered with
+ fur.</p>
+ <p>"When I was inside the room he asked me what I wanted."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Here Hugo Wolf, to excite the curiosity of his parents, broke off his story and
+ put "To be continued in my next." In his next letter he continues:</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"I said to him: 'Highly honoured master, for a long time I have wanted to hear
+ an opinion on my compositions, and it would be....'</p>
+ <p>"Here the master interrupted me and said: 'My dear child, I cannot give you an
+ opinion of your compositions; I have far too little time; I can't even get my own
+ letters written. I understand nothing at all about music <i>(Ich verstehe gar
+ nichts von der Musik</i>).'</p>
+ <p>"I asked the master whether I should ever be able really to do anything, and he
+ said to me: 'When I was your age and composing music, no <a
+ name="page176" id="page176"/>one could tell me then whether I
+ should ever do anything great. You could at most play me your compositions on the
+ piano; but I have no time to hear them. When you are older, and when you have
+ composed bigger works, and if by chance I return to Vienna, you shall show me what
+ you have done. But that is no use now; I cannot give you an opinion of them
+ yet.'</p>
+ <p>"When I told the master that I took the classics as models, he said: 'Good,
+ good. One can't be original at first.' And he laughed, and then said, 'I wish you,
+ dear friend, much happiness in your career. Go on working steadily, and if I come
+ back to Vienna, show me your compositions.'</p>
+ <p>"Upon that I left the master, profoundly moved and impressed."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Wolf and Wagner did not see each other again. But Wolf fought unceasingly on
+ Wagner's behalf. He went several times to Bayreuth, though he had no personal
+ intercourse with the Wagner family; but he met Liszt, who, with his usual goodness,
+ wrote him a kind letter about a composition that he had sent him, and showed him what
+ alterations to make in it.</p>
+ <p>Mottl and the composer, Adalbert de Goldschmidt, were the first friends to aid him
+ in his years of misery, by finding him some music pupils. He taught music to little
+ children of seven and eight years old; but he was a poor teacher, and found giving
+ lessons was a martyrdom. The money he earned hardly served to feed him, and he only
+ ate <a name="page177" id="page177"/>once a
+ day&mdash;Heaven knows how. To comfort himself he read Hebbel's Life; and for a time
+ he thought of going to America. In 1881 Goldschmidt got him the post of second
+ <i>Kapellmeister</i> at the Salzburg theatre. It was his business to rehearse the
+ choruses for the operettas of Strauss and Mill&ouml;cker. He did his work
+ conscientiously, but in deadly weariness; and he lacked the necessary power of making
+ his authority felt. He did not stay long in this post, and came back to Vienna.</p>
+ <p>Since 1875 he had been writing music: <i>Lieder</i>, sonatas, symphonies,
+ quartets, etc., and already his <i>Lieder</i> held the most important place. He also
+ composed in 1883 a symphonic poem on the <i>Penthesilea</i> of his friend Kleist.</p>
+ <p>In 1884 he succeeded in getting a post as musical critic. But on what a paper! It
+ was the <i>Salonblatt</i>&mdash;a mundane journal filled with articles on sport and
+ fashion news. One would have said that this little barbarian was put there for a
+ wager. His articles from 1884 to 1887 are full of life and humour. He upholds the
+ great classic masters in them: Gluck, Mozart, Beethoven, and&mdash;Wagner; he defends
+ Berlioz; he scourges the modern Italians, whose success at Vienna was simply
+ scandalous; he breaks lances for Bruckner, and begins a bold campaign against Brahms.
+ It was not that he disliked or had any prejudice against Brahms; he took a delight in
+ some of his works, especially his chamber music, but he found fault with his
+ symphonies and was shocked by the carelessness of the declamation in his
+ <i>Lieder</i> and, in general, could not bear his want <a
+ name="page178" id="page178"/>of originality and power, and found him
+ lacking in joy and fulness of life. Above all, he struck at him as being the head of
+ a party that was spitefully opposed to Wagner and Bruckner and all innovators. For
+ all that was retrograde in music in Vienna, and all that was the enemy of liberty and
+ progress in art and criticism, was giving Brahms its detestable support by gathering
+ itself about him and spreading his fame abroad; and though Brahms was really far
+ above his party as an artist and a man, he had not the courage to break away from
+ it.</p>
+ <p>Brahms read Wolf's articles, but his attacks did not seem to stir his apathy. The
+ "Brahmines," however, never forgave Wolf. One of his bitterest enemies was Hans von
+ B&uuml;low, who found anti-Brahmism "the blasphemy against the Holy Ghost&mdash;which
+ shall not be forgiven."<a name="FNanchor_185_185" id="FNanchor_185_185"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_185_185" class="fnanchor">[185]</a> Some years later, when Wolf
+ succeeded in getting his own compositions played, he had to submit to criticisms like
+ that of Max Kalbeck, one of the leaders of "Brahmism" at Vienna:</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"Herr Wolf has lately, as a reporter, raised an irresistible laugh in musical
+ circles. So someone suggested he had better devote himself to composition. The last
+ products of his muse show that this well-meant advice was bad. He ought to go back
+ to reporting."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>An orchestral society in Vienna gave Wolf's <i>Penthesilea</i> a trial reading;
+ and it was rehearsed, <a name="page179"
+ id="page179"/>in disregard of all good taste, amid shouts of
+ laughter. When it was finished, the conductor said: "Gentlemen, I ask your pardon for
+ having allowed this piece to be played to the end; but I wanted to know what manner
+ of man it is that dares to write such things about the master, Brahms."</p>
+ <p>Wolf got a little respite from his miseries by going to stay a few weeks in his
+ own country with his brother-in-law, Strasser, an inspector of taxes.<a
+ name="FNanchor_186_186" id="FNanchor_186_186"></a><a href="#Footnote_186_186"
+ class="fnanchor">[186]</a> He took with him his books, his poets, and began to set
+ them to music.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>He was now twenty-seven years old, and had as yet published nothing. The years of
+ 1887 and 1888 were the most critical ones of his life. In 1887 he lost his father
+ whom he loved so much, and that loss, like so many of his other misfortunes, gave
+ fresh impulse to his energies. The same year, a generous friend called Eckstein
+ published his first collection of <i>Lieder</i>. Wolf up to that time had been
+ smothered, but this publication stirred the life in him, and was the means of
+ unloosing his genius. Settled at Perchtoldsdorf, near Vienna, in February, 1888, in
+ absolute peace, he wrote in three months fifty-three <i>Lieder</i> to the words of
+ Eduard M&ouml;rike, the pastor-poet of Swabia, who died in 1875, and who,
+ misunderstood and laughed at during his lifetime, is now covered with honour, and
+ univer<a name="page180" id="page180"/>sally
+ popular in Germany. Wolf composed his songs in a state of exalted joy and almost
+ fright at the sudden discovery of his creative power.</p>
+ <p>In a letter to Dr. Heinrich Werner, he says:</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"It is now seven o'clock in the evening, and I am so happy&mdash;oh, happier
+ than the happiest of kings. Another new <i>Lied</i>! If you could hear what is
+ going on in my heart!... the devil would carry you away with pleasure!...</p>
+ <p>"Another two new <i>Lieder</i>! There is one that sounds so horribly strange
+ that it frightens me. There is nothing like it in existence. Heaven help the
+ unfortunate people who will one day hear it!...</p>
+ <p>"If you could only hear the last <i>Lied</i> I have just composed you would only
+ have one desire left&mdash;to die.... Your happy, happy Wolf."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>He had hardly finished the <i>M&ouml;rike-Lieder</i> when he began a series of
+ <i>Lieder</i> on poems of Goethe. In three months (December, 1888, to February, 1889)
+ he had written all the <i>Goethe-Liederbuch</i>&mdash;fifty-one <i>Lieder</i>, some
+ of which are, like <i>Prometheus</i>, big dramatic scenes.</p>
+ <p>The same year, while still at Perchtoldsdorf, after having published a volume of
+ Eichendorff <i>Lieder</i>, he became absorbed in a new cycle&mdash;the
+ <i>Spanisches-Liederbuch</i>, on Spanish poems translated by Heyse. He wrote these
+ forty-four songs in the same ecstasy of gladness:</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"What I write now, I write for the future.... Since Schubert and<a name="page181" id="page181"/>Schumann there has
+ been nothing like it!"</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>In 1890, two months after he had finished the <i>Spanisches-Liederbuch</i>, he
+ composed another cycle of <i>Lieder</i> on poems called <i>Alten Weisen</i>, by the
+ great Swiss writer Gottfried Keller. And lastly, in the same year, he began his
+ <i>Italienisches-Liederbuch</i>, on Italian poems, translated by Geibel and
+ Heyse.</p>
+ <p>And then&mdash;then there was silence.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>The history of Wolf is one of the most extraordinary in the history of art, and
+ gives one a better glimpse of the mysteries of genius than most histories do.</p>
+ <p>Let us make a little <i>r&eacute;sum&eacute;</i>. Wolf at twenty-eight years old
+ had written practically nothing. From 1888 to 1890 he wrote, one after another, in a
+ kind of fever, fifty-three M&ouml;rike <i>Lieder</i>, fifty-one Goethe <i>Lieder</i>,
+ forty-four Spanish <i>Lieder</i>, seventeen Eichendorff <i>Lieder</i>, a dozen Keller
+ <i>Lieder</i>, and the first Italian <i>Lieder</i>&mdash;that is about two hundred
+ <i>Lieder</i>, each one having its own admirable individuality.</p>
+ <p>And then the music stops. The spring has dried up. Wolf in great anguish wrote
+ despairing letters to his friends. To Oskar Grohe, on 2 May, 1891, he wrote:</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"I have given up all idea of composing. Heaven knows how things will finish.
+ Pray for my poor soul."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p><a name="page182" id="page182"/>And to
+ Wette, on 13 August, 1891, he says:</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"For the last four months I have been suffering from a sort of mental
+ consumption, which makes me very seriously think of quitting this world for
+ ever.... Only those who truly live should live at all. I have been for some time
+ like one who is dead. I only wish it were an apparent death; but I am really dead
+ and buried; though the power to control my body gives me a seeming life. It is my
+ inmost, my only desire, that the flesh may quickly follow the spirit that has
+ already passed. For the last fifteen days I have been living at Traunkirchen, the
+ pearl of Traunsee.... All the comforts that a man could wish for are here to make
+ my life happy&mdash;peace, solitude, beautiful scenery, invigorating air, and
+ everything that could suit the tastes of a hermit like myself.<a
+ name="FNanchor_187_187" id="FNanchor_187_187"></a><a href="#Footnote_187_187"
+ class="fnanchor">[187]</a> And yet&mdash;and yet, my friend, I am the most
+ miserable creature on earth. Everything around me breathes peace and happiness,
+ everything throbs with life and fulfils its functions.... I alone, oh God!... I
+ alone live like a beast that is deaf and senseless. Even reading hardly serves to
+ distract me now, though I bury myself in books in my despair. As for composition,
+ that is finished; I can no longer bring to mind the meaning of a harmony or a
+ melody, and I almost begin to doubt if the compositions that bear my name are
+ really mine. Good God! what <a name="page183"
+ id="page183"/>is the use of all this fame? What is the good of
+ these great aims if misery is all that lies at the end of it?...</p>
+ <p>"<i>Heaven gives a man complete genius or no genius at all. Hell has given me
+ everything by halves</i>.</p>
+ <p>"O unhappy man, how true, how true it is! In the flower of your life you went to
+ hell; into the evil jaws of destiny you threw the delusive present and yourself
+ with it. O Kleist!"</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Suddenly, at D&ouml;bling, on 29 November, 1891, the stream of Wolf's genius
+ flowed again, and he wrote fifteen Italian <i>Lieder</i>, sometimes several in one
+ day. In December it stopped again; and this time for five years. These Italian
+ melodies show, however, no trace of any effort, nor a greater tension of mind than is
+ shown in his preceding works. On the contrary, they have the air of being the
+ simplest and most natural work that Wolf ever did. But the matter is of no real
+ consequence, for when Wolf's genius was not stirring within him he was useless. He
+ wished to write thirty-three Italian <i>Lieder</i>, but he had to stop after the
+ twenty-second, and in 1891 he published one volume only of the
+ <i>Italienisches-Liederbuch</i>. The second volume was completed in a month, five
+ years later, in 1896.</p>
+ <p>One may imagine the tortures that this solitary man suffered. His only happiness
+ was in creation, and he saw his life cease, without any apparent cause, for years
+ together, and his genius come and go, and return for an instant, and then go
+ again.<a name="page184" id="page184"/>Each time
+ he must have anxiously wondered if it had gone for ever, or how long it would be
+ before it came back again. In letters to Kaufmann on 6 August, 1891, and 26 April,
+ 1893, he says:</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"You ask me for news of my opera.<a name="FNanchor_188_188"
+ id="FNanchor_188_188"></a><a href="#Footnote_188_188" class="fnanchor">[188]</a>
+ Good Heavens! I should be content if I could write the tiniest little
+ <i>Liedchen</i>. And an opera, now?... I firmly believe that it is all over with
+ me.... I could as well speak Chinese as compose anything. It is horrible.... What I
+ suffer from this inaction I cannot tell you. I should like to hang myself."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>To Hugo Faisst he wrote on 21 June, 1894:</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"You ask me the cause of my great depression of spirit, and would pour balm on
+ my wounds. Ah yes, if you only could! But no herb grows that could cure my
+ sickness; only a god could help me. If you can give me back my inspirations, and
+ wake up the familiar spirit that is asleep in me, and let him possess me anew, I
+ will call you a god and raise altars to your name. My cry is to gods and not to
+ men; the gods alone are fit to pronounce my fate. But however it may end, even if
+ the worst comes, I will bear it&mdash;yes, even if no ray of sunshine lightens my
+ life again.... And with that we will, once for all, turn the page and have done
+ with this dark chapter of my life."</p>
+ </div>
+ <a name="page185" id="page185"/>
+ <p>This letter&mdash;and it is not the only one&mdash;recalls the melancholy stoicism
+ of Beethoven's letters, and shows us sorrows that even the unhappy Beethoven did not
+ know. And yet how can we tell? Perhaps Beethoven, too, suffered similar anguish in
+ the sad days that followed 1815, before the last sonatas, the <i>Missa Solemnis</i>,
+ and the Ninth Symphony had awaked to life in him.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>In March, 1895, Wolf lived once more, and in three months had written the piano
+ score of <i>Corregidor</i>. For many years he had been attracted towards the stage,
+ and especially towards light opera. Enthusiast though he was for Wagner's work, he
+ had declared openly that it was time for musicians to free themselves from the
+ Wagnerian <i>Musik-Drama</i>. He knew his own gifts, and did not aspire to take
+ Wagner's place. When one of his friends offered him a subject for an opera, taken
+ from a legend about Buddha, he declined it, saying that the world did not yet
+ understand the meaning of Buddha's doctrines, and that he had no wish to give
+ humanity a fresh headache. In a letter to Grohe, on 28 June, 1890, he says:</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"Wagner has, by and through his art, accomplished such a mighty work of
+ liberation that we may rejoice to think that it is quite useless for us to storm
+ the skies, since he has conquered them for us. It is much wiser to seek out a
+ pleasant nook in this lovely heaven. I want to find a little <a name="page186" id="page186"/>place there for
+ myself, not in a desert with water and locusts and wild honey, but in a merry
+ company of primitive beings, among the tinkling of guitars, the sighs of love, the
+ moonlight, and such-like&mdash;in short, in a quite ordinary
+ <i>op&eacute;ra-comique</i>, without any rescuing spectre of Schopenhauerian
+ philosophy in the background."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>After having sought the libretto of an opera from the whole world, from poets
+ ancient and modern,<a name="FNanchor_189_189" id="FNanchor_189_189"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_189_189" class="fnanchor">[189]</a> and after having tried to write
+ one himself, he finally took that of Madame Rosa Mayreder, an adaptation of a Spanish
+ novelette of Don Pedro de Alarc&oacute;n. This was <i>Corregidor</i>, which, after
+ having been refused by other theatres, was played in June, 1896, at Mannheim. The
+ work was not a success in spite of its musical qualities, and the poorness of the
+ libretto helped on its failure.</p>
+ <p>But the main thing was that Wolf's creative genius had returned. In April, 1896,
+ he wrote straight away the twenty-two songs of the second volume of the
+ <i>Italienisches-Liederbuch</i>. At Christmas his friend M&uuml;ller sent him some of
+ Michelangelo's poems, translated into German by Walter Robert-Tornow; and Wolf,
+ deeply moved by their beauty, decided at once to devote a whole volume of
+ <i>Lieder</i> to them. In 1897 he composed the first three melodies. At the same time
+ he was also working at a new opera,<a name="page187"
+ id="page187"/><i>Manuel Venegas</i>, a poem by Moritz Hoernes,
+ written after the style of Alarc&oacute;n. He seemed full of strength and happiness
+ and confidence in his renewed health. M&uuml;ller was speaking to him of the
+ premature death of Schubert, and Wolf replied, "A man is not taken away before he has
+ said all he has to say."</p>
+ <p>He worked furiously, "like a steam-engine," as he said, and was so absorbed in the
+ composition of <i>Manuel Venegas</i> (September, 1897) that he went without rest, and
+ had hardly time to take necessary food. In a fortnight he had written fifty pages of
+ the pianoforte score, as well as the <i>motifs</i> for the whole work, and the music
+ of half the first act.</p>
+ <p>Then madness came. On 20 September he was seized while he was working at the great
+ recitative of Manuel Venegas in the first act.</p>
+ <p>He was taken to Dr. Svetlin's private hospital in Vienna, and remained there until
+ January, 1898. Happily he had devoted friends who took care of him and made up for
+ the indifference of the public; for what he had earned himself would not have enabled
+ him even to die in peace. When Schott, the publisher, sent him in October, 1895, his
+ royalties for the editions of his <i>Lieder</i> of M&ouml;rike, Goethe, Eichendorff,
+ Keller, Spanish poetry, and the first volume of Italian poetry, their total for five
+ years came to eighty-six marks and thirty-five pfennigs! And Schott calmly added that
+ he had not expected so good a result. So it was Wolf's friends, and especially Hugo
+ Faisst, who not only saved him from misery by their unobtrusive and often secret
+ <a name="page188" id="page188"/>generosity, but
+ spared him the horror of destitution in his last misfortunes.</p>
+ <p>He recovered his reason, and was sent in February, 1898, for a voyage to Trieste
+ and Venetia to complete his cure and prevent him from thinking of work. The
+ precaution was unnecessary; for he says in a letter to Hugo Faisst, written in the
+ same month:</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"There is no need for you to trouble yourself or fear that I shall overdo
+ things. A real distaste for work has taken possession of me, and I believe I shall
+ never write another note. My unfinished opera has no more interest for me, and
+ music altogether is hateful. You see what my kind friends have done for me! I
+ cannot think how I shall be able to exist in this state.... Ah, happy Swabians! one
+ may well envy you. Greet your beautiful country for me, and be warmly greeted
+ yourself by your unhappy and worn-out friend, Hugo Wolf."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>When he returned to Vienna, however, he seemed to be a little better, and had
+ apparently regained his health and cheerfulness. But to his own astonishment he had
+ become, as he says in a letter to Faisst, a quiet, sedate, and silent man, who wished
+ more and more to be alone. He did not compose anything fresh, but revised his
+ Michelangelo <i>Lieder</i>, and had them published. He made plans for the winter, and
+ rejoiced in the thought of passing it in the country near Gmunden, "in perfect quiet,
+ undis<a name="page189" id="page189"/>turbed,
+ and living only for art." In his last letter to Faisst, 17 September, 1898, he
+ says:</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"I am quite well again now, and have no more need of any cures. You would need
+ them more than I."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Then came a fresh seizure of madness, and this time all was finished.</p>
+ <p>In the autumn of 1898 Wolf was taken to an asylum at Vienna. At first he was able
+ to receive a few visits and to enjoy a little music by playing duets with the
+ director of the establishment, who was himself a musician and a great admirer of
+ Wolf's works. He was even able in the spring to take a few walks out of doors with
+ his friends and an attendant. But he was beginning not to recognise things or people
+ or even himself. "Yes," he would say, sighing, "if only I were Hugo Wolf!" From the
+ middle of 1899 his malady grew rapidly worse, and general paralysis followed. At the
+ beginning of 1900 his speech was affected, and, finally, in August, 1901, all his
+ body. At the beginning of 1902 all hope was given up by the doctors; but his heart
+ was still sound, and the unhappy man dragged out his life for another year. He died
+ on 16 February, 1903, of peripneumonia.</p>
+ <p>He was given a magnificent funeral, which was attended by all the people who had
+ done nothing for him while he was alive. The Austrian State, the town of Vienna, his
+ native town Windischgratz, the Conservatoire that had expelled him, the<a name="page190" id="page190"/><i>Gesellschaft der
+ Musikfreunde</i> who had been so long unfriendly to his works, the Opera that had
+ been closed to him, the singers that had scorned him, the critics that had scoffed at
+ him&mdash;they were all there. They sang one of his saddest melodies,
+ <i>Resignation</i>, a setting of a poem of Eichendorff's, and a chorale by his old
+ friend Bruckner, who had died several years before him. His faithful friends, Faisst
+ at the head of them, took care to have a monument erected to his memory near those of
+ Beethoven and Schubert.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>Such was his life, cut short at thirty-seven years of age&mdash;for one cannot
+ count the five years of complete madness. There are not many examples in the art
+ world of so terrible a fate. Nietzsche's misfortune is nowhere beside this, for
+ Nietzsche's madness was, to a certain extent, productive, and caused his genius to
+ flash out in a way that it never would have done if his mind had been balanced and
+ his health perfect. Wolf's madness meant prostration. But one may see how, even in
+ the space of thirty-seven years, his life was strangely parcelled out. For he did not
+ really begin his creative work until he was twenty-seven years old; and as from 1890
+ to 1895 he was condemned to five years' silence, the sum total of his real life, his
+ productive life, is only four or five years. But in those few years he got more out
+ of life than the greater part of artists do in a long career, and in his work he left
+ the imprint of a person<a name="page191"
+ id="page191"/>ality that no one could forget after once having known
+ it.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>Wolf's work consists chiefly, as we have already seen, of <i>Lieder</i>, and these
+ <i>Lieder</i> are characterised by the application to lyrical music of principles
+ established by Wagner in the domain of drama. That does not mean he imitated Wagner.
+ One finds here and there in Wolf's music Wagnerian forms, just as elsewhere there are
+ evident reminiscences of Berlioz. It is the inevitable mark of his time, and each
+ great artist in his turn contributes his share to the enrichment of the language that
+ belongs to us all. But the real Wagnerism of Wolf is not made up of these unconscious
+ resemblances; it lies in his determination to make poetry the inspiration of music.
+ "To show, above all," he wrote to Humperdinck in 1890, "that poetry is the true
+ source of my music."</p>
+ <p>When a man is both a poet and a musician, like Wagner, it is natural that his
+ poetry and music should harmonise perfectly. But when it is a matter of translating
+ the soul of other poets into music, special gifts of mental subtlety and an abounding
+ sympathy are needed. These gifts were possessed by Wolf in a very high degree. No
+ musician has more keenly savoured and appreciated the poets. "He was," said one of
+ his critics, G. K&uuml;hl, "Germany's greatest psychologist in music since Mozart."
+ There was nothing laboured about his psychology. Wolf was incapable of setting to
+ <a name="page192" id="page192"/>music poetry
+ that he did not really love. He used to have the poetry he wished to translate read
+ over to him several times, or in the evening he would read it aloud to himself. If he
+ felt very stirred by it he lived apart with it, and thought about it, and soaked
+ himself in its atmosphere; then he went to sleep, and the next morning he was able to
+ write the <i>Lied</i> straight away. But some poems seemed to sleep in him for years,
+ and then would suddenly awake in him in a musical form. On these occasions he would
+ cry out with happiness. "Do you know?" he wrote to M&uuml;ller, "I simply shouted
+ with joy." M&uuml;ller said he was like an old hen after it had laid an egg.</p>
+ <p>Wolf never chose commonplace poems for his music&mdash;which is more than can be
+ said of Schubert or Schumann. He did not use anything written by contemporary poets,
+ although he was in sympathy with some of them, such as Liliencron, who hoped very
+ much to be translated into music by him. But he could not do it; he could not use
+ anything in the work of a great poet unless he became so intimate with it that it
+ seemed to be a part of him.</p>
+ <p>What strikes one also in the <i>Lieder</i> is the importance of the pianoforte
+ accompaniment and its independence of the voice. Sometimes the voice and the
+ pianoforte express the contrast that so often exists between the words and the
+ thought of the poem; at other times they express two personalities, as in his setting
+ of Goethe's <i>Prometheus</i>, where the accompaniment represents Zeus sending out
+ his thunderbolts, and the voice interprets<a name="page193"
+ id="page193"/>Titan; or again, he may depict, as in the setting of
+ Eichendorff's <i>Serenade</i>, a student in love in the accompaniment, while the song
+ is the voice of an old man who is listening to it and thinking of his youth. But in
+ whatever he is describing, the pianoforte and the voice have always their own
+ individuality. You cannot take anything away from his <i>Lieder</i> without spoiling
+ the whole; and it is especially so with his instrumental passages, which give us the
+ beginning and end of his emotion, and which circle round it and sum it up. The
+ musical form, following closely the poetic form, is extremely varied. It may
+ sometimes express a fugitive thought, a brief record of a poetic impression or some
+ little action, or it may be a great epic or dramatic picture. M&uuml;ller remarks
+ that Wolf put more into a poem than the poet himself&mdash;as in the
+ <i>Italienisches-Liederbuch</i>. It is the worst reproach they can make about him,
+ and it is not an ordinary one. Wolf excelled especially in setting poems which
+ accorded with his own tragic fate, as if he had some presentiment of it. No one has
+ better expressed the anguish of a troubled and despairing soul, such as we find in
+ the old harp-player in <i>Wilhelm Meister</i>, or the splendid nihility of certain
+ poems of Michelangelo.</p>
+ <p>Of all his collections of <i>Lieder</i>, the 53 <i>Gedichte von Eduard
+ M&ouml;rike, komponiert f&uuml;r eine Singstimme und Klavier</i> (1888), the first
+ published, is the most popular. It gained many friends for Wolf, not so much among
+ artists (who are always in the minority) as among those critics who are the best and
+ most disinterested of all&mdash;the homely, honest people who <a name="page194" id="page194"/>do not make a
+ profession of art, but enjoy it as their spiritual daily bread. There are a number of
+ these people in Germany, whose hard lives are beautified by their love of music. Wolf
+ found these friends in all parts, but he found most of them in Swabia. At Stuttgart,
+ at Mannheim, at Darmstadt, and in the country round about these towns he became very
+ popular&mdash;the only popular musician since Schubert and Schumann. All classes of
+ society unite in loving him. "His <i>Lieder</i>," says Herr Decsey, "are on the
+ pianos of even the poorest houses, by the side of Schubert's <i>Lieder</i>."
+ Stuttgart became for Wolf, as he said himself, a second home. He owes this
+ popularity, which is without parallel in Swabia, to the people's passionate love of
+ <i>Lieder</i> and, above all, of the poetry of M&ouml;rike, the Swabian pastor, who
+ lives again in Wolf's songs. Wolf has set to music a quarter of M&ouml;rike's poems,
+ he has brought M&ouml;rike into his own, and given him one of the first places among
+ German poets. Such was really his intention, and he said so when he had a portrait of
+ M&ouml;rike put on the title-page of the songs. Whether the reading of his poetry
+ acted as a balm to Wolf's unquiet spirit, or whether he became conscious of his
+ genius for the first time when he expressed this poetry in music, I do not know; but
+ he felt deep gratitude towards it, and wished to show it by beginning the first
+ volume with that fine and rather Beethoven-like song, <i>Der Genesende an die
+ Hoffnung</i> ("The Convalescent's Ode to Hope").</p>
+ <p>The fifty-one <i>Lieder</i> of the <i>Goethe-Liederbuch</i> (1888-89) were
+ composed in groups of <i>Lieder</i>: the<a name="page195"
+ id="page195"/><i>Wilhelm Meister Lieder</i>, the <i>Divan (Suleika)
+ Lieder</i>, etc. Wolf even tried to identify himself with the poet's line of thought;
+ and in this we often find him in rivalry with Schubert. He avoided using the poems in
+ which he thought Schubert had exactly conveyed the poet's meaning, as in
+ <i>Geheimes</i> and <i>An Schwager Kronos</i>; but he told M&uuml;ller that there
+ were times when Schubert did not understand Goethe at all, because he concerned
+ himself with translating their general lyrical thought rather than with showing the
+ real nature of Goethe's characters. The peculiar interest of Wolf's <i>Lieder</i> is
+ that he gives each poetic figure its individual character. The Harpist and Mignon are
+ traced with marvellous insight and restraint; and in some passages Wolf shows that he
+ has re-discovered Goethe's art of presenting a whole world of sadness in a single
+ word. The serenity of a great soul soars over the chaos of passions.</p>
+ <p>The <i>Spanisches-Liederbuch nach Heyse und Geibel</i> (1889-90) had already
+ inspired Schumann, Brahms, Cornelius, and others. But none had tried to give it its
+ rough and sensual character. M&uuml;ller shows how Schumann, especially, robbed the
+ poems of their true nature. Not only did he invest them with his own sentimentalism,
+ but he calmly arranged poems of the most marked individual character to be sung by
+ four voices, which makes them quite absurd; and, worse than this, he changed the
+ words and their sense when they stood in his way. Wolf, on the contrary, steeped
+ himself in this melancholy and voluptuous world, and would not let anything <a name="page196" id="page196"/>draw him from it; and
+ out of it he produced, as he himself said proudly, some masterpieces. The ten
+ religious songs that come at the beginning of the collection suggest the delusions of
+ mysticism, and weep tears of blood; they are distressing to the ear and mind alike,
+ for they are the passionate expression of a faith that puts itself on the rack. By
+ the side of them one finds smiling visions of the Holy Family, which recall Murillo.
+ The thirty-four folk-songs are brilliant, restless, whimsical, and wonderfully varied
+ in form. Each represents a different subject, a personality drawn with incisive
+ strokes, and the whole collection overflows with life. It is said that the
+ <i>Spanisches-Liederbuch</i> is to Wolf's work what <i>Tristan</i> is to Wagner's
+ work.</p>
+ <p>The <i>Italienisches-Liederbuch</i> (1890-96) is quite different. The character of
+ the songs is very restrained, and Wolf's genius here approached a classic clearness
+ of form. He was always seeking to simplify his musical language, and said that if he
+ wrote anything more, he wished it to be like Mozart's writings. These <i>Lieder</i>
+ contain nothing that is not absolutely essential to their subject; so the melodies
+ are very short, and are dramatic rather than lyrical. Wolf gave them an important
+ place in his work: "I consider them," he wrote to Kaufmann, "the most original and
+ perfect of my compositions."</p>
+ <p>As for the <i>Michelangelo Gedichten</i> (1897), they were interrupted by the
+ outbreak of his malady, and he had only time to write four, of which he suppressed
+ one. Their associations are pathetic when one remembers the tragic time at which they
+ were com<a name="page197" id="page197"/>posed;
+ and, by a sort of prophetic instinct, they exhale heaviness of spirit and mournful
+ pride. The second melody is perhaps more beautiful than anything else Wolf wrote; it
+ is truly his death-song:</p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span><i>Alles endet, was entstehet.<br />
+ </i></span> Alles, alles rings vergehet.<a name="FNanchor_190_190"
+ id="FNanchor_190_190"></a><a href="#Footnote_190_190"
+ class="fnanchor">[190]</a><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>And it is a dead man that sings:</p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span><i>Menschen waren wir ja auch,<br />
+ </i></span> Froh und traurig, so wie Ihr.<br />
+ <span>Und nun sind wir leblos hier,<br />
+ </span> <span>Sind nur Erde, wie Ihr sehet.
+<a name="FNanchor_191_191"
+ id="FNanchor_191_191"></a><a href="#Footnote_191_191"
+ class="fnanchor">[191]</a></span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>At the moment he was writing this song, in the short respite he had from his
+ illness, he himself was nearly a dead man.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>As soon as Wolf was really dead his genius was recognised all over Germany. His
+ sufferings pro<a name="page198" id="page198"/>
+ voked an almost excessive reaction in his favour. <i>Hugo-Wolf-Vereine</i> were
+ founded everywhere; and to-day we have publications, collections of letters,
+ souvenirs, and biographies in abundance. It is a case of who can cry loudest that he
+ always understood the genius of the unhappy artist, and work himself into the
+ greatest fury against his traducers. A little later, and monuments and statues will
+ spring up all over.</p>
+ <p>I doubt if Wolf with his rough, sincere nature would have found much consolation
+ in this tardy homage if he could have foreseen it. He would have said to his
+ posthumous admirers: "You are hypocrites. It is not for me that you raise those
+ statues; it is for yourselves. It is that you may make speeches, form committees, and
+ delude yourselves and others that you were my friends. Where were you when I had need
+ of you? You let me die. Do not play a comedy round my grave. Look rather around you,
+ and see if there are not other Wolfs who are struggling against your hostility or
+ your indifference. As for me, I have come safe to port."</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+ <a name="page199" id="page199"/>
+ <h2><a name="DON_LORENZO_PEROSI" id="DON_LORENZO_PEROSI"></a>DON LORENZO PEROSI</h2>
+ <p>The winter that held Italian thought in its cold clasp is over, and great trees
+ that seemed to be asleep are putting out new life in the sun. Yesterday it was poetry
+ that awaked, and to-day it is music&mdash;the sweet music of Italy, calm in its
+ passion and sadness, and artless in its knowledge. Are we really witnessing the
+ return of its spring? Is it the incoming of some great tide of melody, which will
+ wash away the gloom and doubt of our life to-day? As I was reading the oratorios of
+ this young priest of Piedmont, I thought I heard, far away, the song of the children
+ of old Greece: "The swallow has come, has come, bringing the gay seasons and glad
+ years.</p>
+ <p>"&#904;&#945;&#961; &#7972;&#948;&#951;" I welcome the coming of Don Lorenzo
+ Perosi with great hope.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>The abb&eacute; Perosi, the precentor of St. Mark's chapel at Venice and the
+ director of the Sistine chapel, is twenty-six years old.<a name="FNanchor_192_192"
+ id="FNanchor_192_192"></a><a href="#Footnote_192_192" class="fnanchor">[192]</a> He
+ is short in stature and of youthful appearance, with a head a little too big for his
+ body, and open and regular features lighted up by intelligent black eyes, his only
+ peculiarity being a projecting underlip. <a name="page200"
+ id="page200"/>He is simple-hearted and modest, and has a friendly
+ warmth of affection. When he is conducting the orchestra his striking silhouette, his
+ slow and awkward gestures in expressive passages, and his na&iuml;ve movements of
+ passion at dramatic moments, bring to mind one of Fra Angelico's monks.</p>
+ <p>For the last eighteen months Don Perosi has been working at a cycle of twelve
+ oratorios descriptive of the life of Christ. In this short time he has finished four:
+ <i>The Passion</i>, <i>The Transfiguration</i>, <i>The Resurrection of Lazarus</i>,
+ <i>The Resurrection of Christ</i>. Now he is at work on the fifth&mdash;<i>The
+ Nativity</i>.</p>
+ <p>These compositions alone place him in the front rank of contemporary musicians.
+ They abound in faults; but their qualities are so rare, and his soul shines so
+ clearly through them, and such fine sincerity breathes in them, that I have not the
+ courage to dwell on their weaknesses. So I shall content myself with remarking, in
+ passing, that the orchestration is inadequate and awkward, and that the young
+ musician should strive to make it fuller and more delicate; and though he shows great
+ ease in composition, he is often too impetuous, and should resist this tendency; and
+ that, lastly, there are sometimes traces of bad taste in the music and reminiscences
+ of the classics&mdash;all of which are the sins of youth, which age will certainly
+ cure.</p>
+ <p>Each of the oratorios is really a descriptive mass, which from beginning to end
+ traces out one dominating thought. Don Perosi said to me: "The mistake of artists
+ to-day is that they attach themselves too much to details and neglect the whole. They
+ <a name="page201" id="page201"/>begin by
+ carving ornaments, and forget that the most important thing is the unity of their
+ work, its plan and general outline. The outline must first of all be beautiful."</p>
+ <p>In his own musical architecture one finds well-marked airs, numerous recitatives,
+ Gregorian or Palestrinian choruses, chorales with developments and variations in the
+ old style, and intervening symphonies of some importance.</p>
+ <p>The whole work is to be preceded by a grand prelude, very carefully worked out, to
+ which Don Perosi attaches particular worth. He wishes, he says, that his building
+ shall have a beautiful door elaborately carved after the fashion of the artists of
+ the Renaissance and Gothic times. And so he means to compose the prelude after the
+ rest of the oratorio is finished, when he is able to think about it in undisturbed
+ peace. He wishes to concentrate a moral atmosphere in it, the very essence of the
+ soul and passions of his sacred drama. He also confided to me that of all he has yet
+ composed there is nothing he likes better than the introductions to <i>The
+ Transfiguration</i> and <i>The Resurrection of Christ</i>.</p>
+ <p>The dramatic tendency of these oratorios is very marked, and it is chiefly on that
+ account that they have conquered Italy. In spite of some passages which have strayed
+ a little in the direction of opera, or even melodrama, the music shows great depth of
+ feeling. The figures of the women especially are drawn with delicacy; and in the
+ second part of <i>Lazarus</i>, Mary's air, "Lord, if Thou hadst been here, my brother
+ had not died," recalls something <a name="page202"
+ id="page202"/>of Gluck's <i>Orfeo</i> in its heart-broken sadness.
+ And again, in the same oratorio, when Jesus gives the order to raise the stone from
+ the tomb, Martha's speech, "Domine, jam foetet," is very expressive of her sadness,
+ fear, and shame, and human horror. I should like to quote one more passage, the most
+ moving of all, which is found in the <i>Resurrection of Christ</i>, when Mary
+ Magdalene is beside the tomb of Christ; here, in her speech with the angels, in her
+ touching lamentation, and in the words of the Evangelist, "And when she had thus
+ said, she turned herself back, and saw Jesus standing, and knew not that it was
+ Jesus," we hear a melody filled with tenderness, and seem to see Christ's eyes
+ shining as they rest on Mary before she has recognised Him.</p>
+ <p>It is not, however, Perosi's dramatic genius that strikes me in his work; it is
+ rather his peculiar mournfulness, which is indescribable, his gift of pure poetry,
+ and the richness of his flowing melody. However deep the religious feeling in the
+ music may be, the music itself is often stronger still, and breaks in upon the drama
+ that it may express itself freely. Take, for instance, the fine symphonic passage
+ that follows the arrival of Jesus and His friends at Martha and Mary's house, after
+ the death of their brother (p. 12 <i>et seq.</i> of <i>Lazarus</i>). It is true the
+ orchestra expresses regrets and sighs, the excesses of sorrow mingled with words of
+ consolation and faith, in a sort of languishing funeral march that is feminine and
+ Christian in character. This, according to the composer, is a picture he has painted
+ of the persons in the drama before he makes <a name="page203"
+ id="page203"/>them speak. But, in spite of himself, the result is a
+ flood of pure music, and his soul sings its own song of joy and sadness. Sometimes
+ his spirit, in its na&iuml;ve and delicate charm, recalls that of Mozart; but his
+ musical visions are always dominated and directed by a religious strength like that
+ of Bach. Even the portions where the dramatic feeling is strongest are really little
+ symphonies, such as the music that describes the miracle in <i>The
+ Transfiguration</i>, and the illness of Lazarus. In the latter great depth of
+ suffering is expressed; indeed, sadness could not have been carried farther even by
+ Bach, and the same serenity of mind runs through its despair.</p>
+ <p>But what joy there is when these deeds of faith have been performed&mdash;when
+ Jesus has cured the possessed man, or when Lazarus has opened his eyes to the light.
+ The heart of the multitude overflows perhaps in rather childish thanksgiving; and at
+ first it seemed to me expressed in a commonplace way. But did not the joy of all
+ great artists so express itself?&mdash;the joy of Beethoven, Mozart, and Bach, who,
+ when once they had thrown their cares aside, knew how to amuse themselves like the
+ rest of the populace. And the simple phrase at the beginning soon assumes fuller
+ proportions, the harmonies gain in richness, a glowing ardour fills the music, and a
+ chorale blends with the dances in triumphant majesty.</p>
+ <p>All these works are radiant with a happy ease of expression. <i>The Passion</i>
+ was finished in September, 1897, <i>The Transfiguration</i> in February, 1898.<a name="page204" id="page204"/><i>Lazarus</i> in
+ June, 1898, and <i>The Resurrection of Christ</i> in November, 1898. Such an output
+ of work takes us back to eighteenth-century musicians.</p>
+ <p>But this is not the only resemblance between the young musician and his
+ predecessors. Much of their soul has passed into his. His style is made up of all
+ styles, and ranges from the Gregorian chant to the most modern modulations. All
+ available materials are used in this work. This is an Italian characteristic. Gabriel
+ d'Annunzio threw into his melting-pot the Renaissance, the Italian painters, music,
+ the writers of the North, Tolstoy, Dosto&iuml;evsky, Maeterlinck, and our French
+ writers, and out of it he drew his wonderful poems. So Don Perosi, in his
+ compositions, welds together the Gregorian chant, the musical style of the
+ contrapuntists of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, Palestrina, Roland,
+ Gabrieli, Carissimi, Sch&uuml;tz, Bach, H&auml;ndel, Gounod, Wagner&mdash;I was going
+ to say C&eacute;sar Franck, but Don Perosi told me that he hardly knew this composer
+ at all, though his style bears some resemblance to Franck's.</p>
+ <p>Time does not exist for Don Perosi. When he courteously wished to praise French
+ musicians, the first name he chose&mdash;as if it were that of a
+ contemporary&mdash;was that of Josquin, and then that of Roland de Lassus, who seems
+ to him so great and profound a musician that he admires him most of all. And Don
+ Perosi's universality of style is a trait that is Catholic as well as Italian. He
+ expresses his mind quite clearly on the subject. "Great artists formerly," he says,
+ "were more <a name="page205" id="page205"/>
+ eclectic than ourselves, and less fettered by their nationalities. Josquin's school
+ has peopled all Europe. Roland has lived in Flanders, in Italy, and in Germany. With
+ them the same style expressed the same thought everywhere. We must do as they did. We
+ must try to recreate a universal art in which the resources of all countries and all
+ times are blended."</p>
+ <p>As a matter of fact, I do not think this is quite correct. I rather doubt if
+ Josquin and Roland were eclectic at all; for they did not really combine the styles
+ of different countries, but thrust upon other countries the style that the
+ Franco-Flemish school had just created, a style which they themselves were enriching
+ daily. But Don Perosi's idea deserves our appreciation, and one must praise his
+ endeavour to create a universal style. It would be a good thing for music if
+ eclecticism, thus understood, could bring back some of the equilibrium that has been
+ lost since Wagner's death; it would be a benefit to the human spirit, which might
+ then find in the unity of art a powerful means of bringing about the unity of mind.
+ Our aim should be to efface the differences of race in art, so that it may become a
+ tongue common to all peoples, where the most opposite ideas may be reconciled. We
+ should all join in working to build the cathedral of European art. And the place of
+ the director of the Sistine chapel among the first builders is very plain.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <a name="page206" id="page206"/>
+ <p>Don Perosi sat down to the piano and played me the <i>Te Deum</i> of <i>The
+ Nativity</i>, which he had written the day before. He played very sweetly, with
+ youthful gaiety, and sang the choral parts in an undertone. Every now and then he
+ would look at me, not for praise, but to see if we were sharing the same thoughts. He
+ would look me well in the face with his quiet eyes, then turn back to his score, and
+ then look at me again. And I felt a comforting calm radiating from him and his music,
+ from its happy harmony and the full and rhythmic serenity of its spirit. And how
+ pleasant it was after the tempests and convulsions of art in these later days. Can we
+ not tear ourselves away from that romantic suffering in music which was begun by
+ Beethoven? After a century of battles, of revolutions, and of political and social
+ strife, whose pain has found its reflection in art, let us begin to build a new city
+ of art, where men may gather together in brotherly love for the same ideal. However
+ Utopian that hope may sound now, let us think of it as a symptom of new directions of
+ thought, and let us hope that Don Perosi may be one of those who will bring into
+ music that divine peace, that peace which Beethoven craved for in despair at the end
+ of his <i>Missa Solemnis</i>, that joy that he sang about but never knew.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+ <a name="page207" id="page207"/>
+ <h2><a name="FRENCH_AND_GERMAN_MUSIC" id="FRENCH_AND_GERMAN_MUSIC"></a>FRENCH AND
+ GERMAN MUSIC</h2>
+ <p>In May, 1905, the first musical festival of Alsace-Lorraine took place at
+ Strasburg. It was an important artistic event, and meant the bringing together of two
+ civilisations that for centuries had been at variance on the soil of Alsace, more
+ anxious for dispute than for mutual understanding.</p>
+ <p>The official programme of the <i>f&ecirc;tes musicales</i> laid stress on the
+ reconciliatory purpose of its organisers, and I quote these words from the programme
+ book, drawn up by Dr. Max Bendiner, of Strasburg:</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"Music may achieve the highest of all missions: she may be a bond between
+ nations, races, and states, who are strangers to one another in many ways; she may
+ unite what is disunited, and bring peace to what is hostile.... No country is more
+ suited for her friendly aid than Alsace-Lorraine, that old meeting-place of people,
+ where from time immemorial the North and South have exchanged their material and
+ their spiritual wealth; and no place is readier to welcome her than Strasburg, an
+ old town built by the Romans, which has remained to this day a centre of spiritual
+ life. All great intellectual currents have left their mark on the people of
+ Alsace-Lorraine; and so they have been destined to play the part <a name="page208" id="page208"/>of mediator between
+ different times and different peoples; and the East and the West, the past and the
+ present, meet here and join hands. In such festivals as this, it is not a matter of
+ gaining aesthetic victories; it is a matter of bringing together all that is great
+ and noble and eternal in the art of different times and different nations."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>It was a splendid ambition for Alsace&mdash;the eternal field of battle&mdash;to
+ wish to inaugurate these European Olympian games. But in spite of good intentions,
+ this meeting of nations resulted in a fight, on musical ground, between two
+ civilisations and two arts&mdash;French art and German art. For these two arts
+ represent to-day all that is truly alive in European music.</p>
+ <p>Such jousts are very stirring, and may be of great service to all combatants. But,
+ unhappily, France was very indifferent in the matter. It was the duty of our
+ musicians and critics to attend an international encounter like this, and to see that
+ the conditions of the combat were fair. By that I mean our art should be represented
+ as it ought to be, so that we may learn something from the result. But the French
+ public does nothing at such a time; it remains absorbed in its concerts at Paris,
+ where everyone knows everyone else so well that they are not able and do not dare to
+ criticise freely. And so our art is withering away in an atmosphere of coteries,
+ instead of seeking the open air and enjoying a vigorous fight with foreign art. For
+ the majority of our critics would rather deny the existence of <a name="page209" id="page209"/>foreign art than try
+ to understand it. Never have I regretted their indifference more than I did at the
+ Strasburg festival, where, in spite of the unfavourable conditions in which French
+ art was represented through our own carelessness, I realised what its force might
+ have been if we had been interested spectators in the fight.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>Perfect eclecticism had been exercised in the making up of the programme. One
+ found mixed together the names of Mozart, Wagner, and Brahms; C&eacute;sar Franck and
+ Gustave Charpentier; Richard Strauss and Mahler. There were French singers like
+ Cazeneuve and Daraux, and French and Italian virtuosi like Henri Marteau and
+ Ferruccio Busoni, together with German, Austrian, and Scandinavian artists. The
+ orchestra (the <i>Strassb&uuml;rger St&auml;dtische Orchester</i>) and the choir,
+ which was formed of different <i>Chorvereine</i> of Strasburg, were conducted by
+ Richard Strauss, Gustav Mahler, and Camille Chevillard. But the names of these famous
+ <i>Kapellmeister</i> must not let us forget the man who was really the soul of the
+ concerts&mdash;Professor Ernst M&uuml;nch, of Strasburg, an Alsatian, who conducted
+ all the rehearsals, and who effaced himself at the last moment, and left all the
+ honours to the conductors of foreign orchestras. Professor M&uuml;nch, who is also
+ organist at Saint-Guillaume, has done more than anyone else for music in Strasburg,
+ and has trained excellent choirs (the "<i>Choeurs de Saint-Guillaume</i>") there, and
+ organised splendid <a name="page210"
+ id="page210"/>concerts of Bach's music with the aid of another
+ Alsatian, Albert Schweitzer, whose name is well known to musical historians. The
+ latter is director of the clerical college of St. Thomas (<i>Thomasstift</i>), a
+ pastor, an organist, a professor at the University of Strasburg, and the author of
+ interesting works on theology and philosophy. Besides this he has written a now
+ famous book, <i>Jean-Sebastien Bach</i>, which is doubly remarkable: first, because
+ it is written in French (though it was published in Leipzig by a professor of the
+ University of Strasburg), and secondly, because it shows an harmonious blend of the
+ French and German spirit, and gives fresh life to the study of Bach and the old
+ classic art. It was very interesting to me to make the acquaintance of these people,
+ born on Alsatian soil, and representing the best Alsatian culture and all that was
+ finest in the two civilisations.</p>
+ <p>The programme for the three days' festival was as follows:</p>
+ <p>Saturday, May 20th.</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p><i>Oberon Overture</i>: Weber (conducted by Richard Strauss).</p>
+ <p><i>Les B&eacute;atitudes</i>: C&eacute;sar Franck (conducted by Camille
+ Chevillard).</p>
+ <p><i>Impressions d'ltalie</i>: Gustav Charpentier (conducted by Camille
+ Chevillard).</p>
+ <p>Three songs by Jean Sibelius, Hugo Wolf, Armas J&auml;rnefelt (sung by Mme.
+ J&auml;rnefelt).</p>
+ <p>The last scene from <i>Die Meistersinger</i>: Wagner (conducted by Richard
+ Strauss).</p>
+ </div>
+ <a name="page211" id="page211"/>
+ <p>Sunday, May 21st.</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p><i>Cinqui&egrave;me Symphonie</i>: Gustav Mahler (conducted by Gustav
+ Mahler).</p>
+ <p><i>Rhapsodie</i>, for contralto, choir, and orchestra: Johannes Brahms
+ (conducted by Ernst M&uuml;nch).</p>
+ <p><i>Strasburg Concerto in G major</i>, for violin (played by Henri Marteau;
+ conducted by Richard Strauss).</p>
+ <p><i>Sinfonia domestica</i>: Richard Strauss (conducted by Richard Strauss).</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>Monday, May 22nd.</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p><i>Coriolan Overture</i>: Beethoven (conducted by Gustav Mahler).</p>
+ <p><i>Concerto in G major</i>, for piano: Beethoven (played by Ferruccio
+ Busoni).</p>
+ <p><i>Lieder: An die enfernie Geliebte</i>: Beethoven (sung by Ludwig Hess).</p>
+ <p><i>Choral Symphony</i>: Beethoven (conducted by Gustav Mahler).</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>M. Chevillard alone represented our French musicians at the festival; and they
+ could have made no better choice of a conductor. But Germany had delegated her two
+ greatest composers, Strauss and Mahler, to come to conduct their newest compositions.
+ And I think it would not have been too much to set up one of our own foremost
+ composers to combat the glory which these two enjoy in their own country.</p>
+ <p>M. Chevillard had been asked to conduct, not one of the works of our recent
+ masters, like Debussy or<a name="page212"
+ id="page212"/>Dukas, whose style he renders to perfection, but
+ Franck's <i>Les B&eacute;atitudes</i>, a work whose spirit he does not, to my mind,
+ quite understand. The mystic tenderness of Franck escapes him, and he brings out only
+ what is dramatic. And so that performance of <i>Les B&eacute;atitudes</i>, though in
+ many respects fine, left an imperfect idea of Franck's genius.</p>
+ <p>But what seemed inconceivable, and what justly annoyed M. Chevillard, was that the
+ whole of <i>Les B&eacute;atitudes</i> was not given, but only a section of them. And
+ on this subject I shall take the liberty of recommending that French artists who are
+ guests at similar festivals should not in future agree to a programme with their eyes
+ shut, but have their own wishes considered, or refuse their help. If French musicians
+ are to be given a place in German <i>Musikfeste</i>, French people must be allowed to
+ choose the works that are to represent them. And, above all, a French conductor must
+ not be brought from Paris, and find on his arrival a mutilated score and an arbitrary
+ choice of a few fragments that are not even whole in themselves. For they played five
+ out of the eight <i>B&eacute;atitudes</i>, and cuts had been made in the third and
+ eighth <i>B&eacute;atitudes</i>. That showed a want of respect for art, for works
+ should be given as they are, or not at all.</p>
+ <p>And it would have been more seemly if in this three-day festival the organisers
+ had had the courteousness to devote the first day to French music, and had set aside
+ one whole concert for it. But, without doubt, they had carefully sand<a name="page213" id="page213"/>wiched the French
+ works in between German works to weaken their effect, and lessen the probable (and
+ actual) enthusiasm with which French music would be received in the presence of the
+ Statthalter of Alsace-Lorraine by a section of the Alsatian public. In addition to
+ this, and by a choice that neither myself nor anyone else in Strasburg could believe
+ was dictated by musical reasons, the German work chosen to end the evening was the
+ final scene from <i>Die Meistersinger</i>, with its ringing couplet from Hans Sachs,
+ in which he denounces foreign insincerity and foreign frivolity (<i>W&auml;lschen
+ Dunst mit w&auml;lschen Tand</i>). This lack of courtesy&mdash;though the words were
+ really nonsense when this very concert was given to show that foreign art could not
+ be ignored&mdash;would not be worth while raking up if it did not further serve to
+ show how regrettable is the indifference of French artists who take part in these
+ festivals. And this mistake would never have occurred if they had taken care to
+ acquaint themselves with the programme beforehand and put their veto upon it.</p>
+ <p>I have mentioned this little incident partly because my views were shared by many
+ Alsatians in the audience, who expressed their annoyance to me afterwards. But,
+ putting it aside, our French artists ought not to have consented to let our music be
+ represented by a mutilated score of <i>Les B&eacute;atitudes</i> and by Charpentier's
+ <i>Impressions d'Italie</i>, for the latter, though a brilliantly clever work, is not
+ of the first rank, and was too easily crushed by one of Wagner's most stupendous
+ compositions.<a name="page214" id="page214"/>If
+ people wish to institute a joust between French and German art, let it be a fair one,
+ I repeat; let Wagner be matched with Berlioz, and Strauss with Debussy, and Mahler
+ with Dukas or Magnard.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>Such were the conditions of the combat; and they were, whether intentionally or
+ not, unfavourable to France. And yet to the eyes of an impartial observer the result
+ was full of hope and encouragement for us.</p>
+ <p>I have never bothered myself in art with questions of nationality. I have not even
+ concealed my preference for German music; and I consider, even to-day, that Richard
+ Strauss is the foremost musical composer in Europe. Having said this, I am freer to
+ speak of the strange impression that I had at the Strasburg festival&mdash;an
+ impression of the change that is coming over music, and the way that French art is
+ silently setting about taking the place of German art.</p>
+ <p>"<i>W&auml;lschen Dunst und w&auml;lschen Tand</i>...." How that reproachful
+ speech seems to be misplaced when one is listening to the honest thought expressed in
+ C&eacute;sar Franck's music. In <i>Les B&eacute;atitudes</i>, nothing, or next to
+ nothing, was done for art's sake. It is the soul speaking to the soul. As Beethoven
+ wrote, at the end of his mass in D, "<i>Vom Herzen ... zu Herzen</i>!" ("It comes
+ from the heart to go to the heart"). I know no one but Franck in the last century,
+ unless it is Beethoven, who has possessed in so high a degree the virtue of being
+ himself and speaking <a name="page215"
+ id="page215"/>only the truth without thought of his public. Never
+ before has religious faith been expressed with such sincerity. Franck is the only
+ musician besides Bach who has really <i>seen</i> the Christ, and who can make other
+ people see him too. I would even venture to say that his Christ is simpler than
+ Bach's; for Bach's thoughts are often led away by the interest of developing his
+ subject, by certain habits of composition, and by repetitions and clever devices,
+ which weaken his strength. In Franck's music we get Christ's speech itself, unadorned
+ and in all its living force. And in the wonderful harmony between the music and the
+ sacred words we hear the voice of the world's conscience. I once heard someone say to
+ Mme. Cosima Wagner that certain passages in <i>Parsifal</i>, particularly the chorus
+ "<i>Durch Mitleid wissend</i>," had a quality that was truly religious and the force
+ of a revelation. But I find a greater force and a more truly Christian spirit in
+ <i>Les B&eacute;atitudes</i>.</p>
+ <p>And here is an astonishing thing. At this German musical festival it was a
+ Frenchman who represented not only serious music moulded in a classical form, but a
+ religious spirit and the spirit of the Gospels. The characters of two nations have
+ been reversed. The Germans have so changed that they are only able to appreciate this
+ seriousness and religious faith with difficulty. I watched the audience on this
+ occasion; they listened politely, a little astonished and bored, as if to say, "What
+ business has this Frenchman with depth and piety of soul?"<a
+ name="page216" id="page216"/></p>
+ <p>"There is no doubt," said Henri Lichtenberger, who sat by me at the concert, "our
+ music is beginning to bore the Germans."</p>
+ <p>It was only the other day that German music enjoyed the privilege of boring us in
+ France.</p>
+ <p>And so, to make up for the austere grandeur of <i>Les B&eacute;atitudes</i> they
+ had it immediately followed by Gustave Charpentier's <i>Impressions d'Italie</i>. You
+ should have seen the relief of the audience. At last they were to have some French
+ music&mdash;as Germans understand it. Charpentier is, of all living French musicians,
+ the most liked in Germany; he is indeed the only one who is popular with artists and
+ the general public alike. Shall I say that the sincere pleasure they take in his
+ orchestration and the gay life of his subjects is enhanced a little by a slight
+ disdain for French frivolity&mdash;<i>w&auml;lschen Tand</i>?</p>
+ <p>"Now listen to that," said Richard Strauss to me during the third movement of
+ <i>Impressions d'Italie</i>; "that is the true music of Montmartre, the utterance of
+ fine words ... Liberty!... Love!... which no one believes."</p>
+ <p>And on the whole he found the music quite charming, and, without doubt, in the
+ depths of his heart approved of this Frenchman according to conventional notions that
+ are current in Germany alone. Strauss is really very fond of Charpentier, and was his
+ patron in Berlin; and I remember how he showed childish delight in <i>Louise</i> when
+ it was first performed in Paris.</p>
+ <p>But Strauss, and most other Germans, are quite on the wrong track when they try to
+ persuade <a name="page217" id="page217"/>
+ themselves that this amusing French frivolity is still the exclusive property of
+ France. They really love it because it has become German; and they are quite
+ unconscious of the fact. The German artists of other times did not find much pleasure
+ in frivolity; but I could have easily shown Strauss his liking for it by taking
+ examples from his own works. The Germans of to-day have but little in common with the
+ Germans of yesterday.</p>
+ <p>I am not speaking of the general public only, The German public of to-day are
+ devotees of Brahms and Wagner, and everything of theirs seems good to them; they have
+ no discrimination, and, while they applaud Wagner and encore Brahms, they are, in
+ their hearts, not only frivolous, but sentimental and gross. The most striking thing
+ about this public is their cult of power since Wagner's death. When listening to the
+ end of <i>Die Meistersinger</i> I felt how the haughty music of the great march
+ reflected the spirit of this military nation of shop-keepers, bursting with rude
+ health and complacent pride.</p>
+ <p>The most remarkable thing of all is that German artists are gradually losing the
+ power of understanding their own splendid classics and, in particular, Beethoven.
+ Strauss, who is very shrewd and knows exactly his own limitations, does not willingly
+ enter Beethoven's domain, though he feels his spirit in a much more living way than
+ any of the other German <i>Kapellmeister</i>. At the Strasburg festival he contented
+ himself with conducting, besides his own symphony, the <i>Oberon Overture</i> and a
+ Mozart <a name="page218" id="page218"/>
+ concerto. These performances were interesting; a personality like his is so curious
+ that it is quite amusing to find it coming out in the works he conducts. But how
+ Mozart's features took on an offhand and impatient air; and how the rhythms were
+ accentuated at the expense of the melodic grace. In this case, however, Strauss was
+ dealing with a concerto, where a certain liberty of interpretation is allowed. But
+ Mahler, who was less discreet, ventured upon conducting the whole of the Beethoven
+ concert. And what can be said of that evening? I will not speak of the <i>Concerto
+ for pianoforte, in G major</i>, which Busoni played with a brilliant and superficial
+ execution that took away all breadth from the work; it is enough to note that his
+ interpretation was enthusiastically received by the public. German artists were not
+ responsible for that performance; but they were responsible for that fine cycle of
+ <i>Lieder, An die entfernte Geliebte</i>, which was bellowed by a Berlin tenor at the
+ top of his voice, and for the <i>Choral Symphony</i>, which was, for me, an
+ unspeakable performance. I could never have believed that a German orchestra
+ conducted by the chief <i>Kapellmeister</i> of Austria could have committed such
+ misdeeds. The time was incredible: the scherzo had no life in it; the adagio was
+ taken in hot haste without leaving a moment for dreams; and there were pauses in the
+ finale which destroyed the development of the theme and broke the thread of its
+ thought. The different parts of the orchestra fell over one another, and the whole
+ was uncertain and lacking in balance. I once <a name="page219"
+ id="page219"/>severely criticised the neo-classic stiffness of
+ Weingartner; but I should have appreciated his healthy equilibrium and his effort to
+ be exact after hearing this neurasthenic rendering of Beethoven. No; we can no longer
+ hear Beethoven and Mozart in Germany to-day, we can only hear Mahler and Strauss.
+ Well, let it be so. We will resign ourselves. The past is past. Let us leave
+ Beethoven and Mozart, and speak of Mahler and Strauss.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>Gustav Mahler is forty-six years old.<a name="FNanchor_193_193"
+ id="FNanchor_193_193"></a><a href="#Footnote_193_193" class="fnanchor">[193]</a> He
+ is a kind of legendary type of German musician, rather like Schubert, and half-way
+ between a school-master and a clergyman. He has a long, clean-shaven face, a pointed
+ skull covered with untidy hair, a bald forehead, a prominent nose, eyes that blink
+ behind his glasses, a large mouth and thin lips, hollow cheeks, a rather tired and
+ sarcastic expression, and a general air of asceticism. He is excessively nervous, and
+ silhouette caricatures of him, representing him as a cat in convulsions in the
+ conductor's desk, are very popular in Germany.</p>
+ <p>He was born at Kalischt in Bohemia, and became a pupil of Anton Bruckner at
+ Vienna, and afterwards <i>Hofoperndirecktor</i> ("Director of the Opera") there. I
+ hope one day to study this artist's work in greater detail, for he is second only to
+ Strauss as a composer in Germany, and the principal musician of South Germany.</p>
+ <p>His most important work is a suite of sym<a name="page220"
+ id="page220"/>phonies; and it was the fifth symphony of this suite
+ that he conducted at the Strasburg festival. The first symphony, called <i>Titan</i>,
+ was composed in 1894. The construction of the whole is on a massive and gigantic
+ scale; and the melodies on which these works are built up are like rough-hewn blocks
+ of not very good quality, but imposing by reason of their size, and by the obstinate
+ repetition of their rhythmic design, which is maintained as if it were an obsession.
+ This heaping-up of music both crude and learned in style, with harmonies that are
+ sometimes clumsy and sometimes delicate, is worth considering on account of its bulk.
+ The orchestration is heavy and noisy; and the brass dominates and roughly gilds the
+ rather sombre colouring of the great edifice. The underlying idea of the composition
+ is neo-classic, and rather spongy and diffuse. Its harmonic structure is composite:
+ we get the style of Bach, Schubert, and Mendelssohn fighting that of Wagner and
+ Bruckner; and, by a decided liking for canon form, it even recalls some of Franck's
+ work. The whole is like a showy and expensive collection of bric-&agrave;-brac.</p>
+ <p>The chief characteristic of these symphonies is, generally speaking, the use of
+ choral singing with the orchestra. "When I conceive a great musical painting (<i>ein
+ grosses musikalisches Gem&auml;lde</i>)," says Mahler, "there always comes a moment
+ when I feel forced to employ speech (<i>das Wort</i>) as an aid to the realisation of
+ my musical conception."</p>
+ <p>Mahler has got some striking effects from this combination of voices and
+ instruments, and he did <a name="page221"
+ id="page221"/>well to seek inspiration in this direction from
+ Beethoven and Liszt. It is incredible that the nineteenth century should have put
+ this combination to so little use; for I think the gain may be poetical as well as
+ musical.</p>
+ <p>In the <i>Second Symphony in C minor</i>, the first three parts are purely
+ instrumental; but in the fourth part the voice of a contralto is heard singing these
+ sad and simple words:</p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span>"<i>Der Mensch liegt in gr&ouml;sster Noth!</i><br />
+ </span> <span><i>Der Mensch liegt in gr&ouml;sster Pein!</i><br />
+ </span> <span><i>Je lieber m&ouml;cht ich im Himmel sein</i>!"<a
+ name="FNanchor_194_194" id="FNanchor_194_194"></a><a href="#Footnote_194_194"
+ class="fnanchor">[194]</a><br />
+ </span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>The soul strives to reach God with the passionate cry:</p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span>"<i>Ich bin von Gott und will wieder zu Gott</i>."<a
+ name="FNanchor_195_195" id="FNanchor_195_195"></a><a href="#Footnote_195_195"
+ class="fnanchor">[195]</a><br />
+ </span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>Then there is a symphonic episode (<i>Der Rufer in der W&uuml;ste</i>), and we
+ hear "the voice of one crying in the wilderness" in fierce and anguished tones. There
+ is an apocalyptic finale where the choir sing Klopstock's beautiful ode on the
+ promise of the Resurrection:</p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span>"<i>Aufersteh'n, ja, aufersteh'n wirst du, mein Staub, nach</i><br />
+ </span> <span><i>kurzer Ruh</i>!"<a name="FNanchor_196_196"
+ id="FNanchor_196_196"></a><a href="#Footnote_196_196"
+ class="fnanchor">[196]</a><br />
+ </span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>The law is proclaimed with:</p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span>"<i>Was entstanden ist, dass mus vergehen,</i><br />
+ </span> <span><i>Was vergangen, auferstehen</i>!"<a name="FNanchor_197_197"
+ id="FNanchor_197_197"></a><a href="#Footnote_197_197"
+ class="fnanchor">[197]</a><br />
+ </span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p><a name="page222" id="page222"/>And all the
+ orchestra, the choirs, and the organ, join in the hymn of Eternal Life.</p>
+ <p>In the <i>Third Symphony</i>, known as <i>Ein Sommermorgentraum</i> ("A Summer
+ Morning's Dream"), the first and the last parts are for the orchestra alone; the
+ fourth part contains some of the best of Mahler's music, and is an admirable setting
+ of Nietzsche's words:</p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span>"<i>O Mensch! O Mensch! Gib Acht! gib Acht!</i><br />
+ </span> <span class="poem"><i>Was spricht die tiefe Mitternacht</i>?"<a
+ name="FNanchor_198_198" id="FNanchor_198_198"></a><a href="#Footnote_198_198"
+ class="fnanchor">[198]</a><br />
+ </span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <p>The fifth part is a gay and stirring chorus founded on a popular legend.</p>
+ <p>In the <i>Fourth Symphony in G major</i>, the last part alone is sung, and is of
+ an almost humorous character, being a sort of childish description of the joys of
+ Paradise.</p>
+ <p>In spite of appearances, Mahler refuses to connect these choral symphonies with
+ programme-music. Without doubt he is right, if he means that his music has its own
+ value outside any sort of programme; but there is no doubt that it is always the
+ expression of a definite <i>Stimmung</i>, of a conscious mood; and the fact is,
+ whether he likes it or not, that <i>Stimmung</i> gives an interest to his music far
+ beyond that of the music itself. His personality seems to me far more interesting
+ than his art.</p>
+ <p>This is often the case with artists in Germany; Hugo Wolf is another example of
+ it. Mahler's <a name="page223" id="page223"/>
+ case is really rather curious. When one studies his works one feels convinced that he
+ is one of those rare types in modern Germany&mdash;an egoist who feels with
+ sincerity. Perhaps his emotions and his ideas do not succeed in expressing themselves
+ in a really sincere and personal way; for they reach us through a cloud of
+ reminiscences and an atmosphere of classicism. I cannot help thinking that Mahler's
+ position as director of the Opera, and his consequent saturation in the music that
+ his calling condemns him to study, is the cause of this. There is nothing more fatal
+ to a creative spirit than too much reading, above all when it does not read of its
+ own free will, but is forced to absorb an excessive amount of nourishment, the larger
+ part of which is indigestible. In vain may Mahler try to defend the sanctuary of his
+ mind; it is violated by foreign ideas coming from all parts, and instead of being
+ able to drive them away, his conscience, as conductor of the orchestra, obliges him
+ to receive them and almost embrace them. With his feverish activity, and burdened as
+ he is with heavy tasks, he works unceasingly and has no time to dream. Mahler will
+ only be Mahler when he is able to leave his administrative work, shut up his scores,
+ retire within himself, and wait patiently until he has become himself again&mdash;if
+ it is not too late.</p>
+ <p>His <i>Fifth Symphony</i>, which he conducted at Strasburg, convinced me, more
+ than all his other works, of the urgent necessity of adopting this course. In this
+ composition he has not allowed <a name="page224"
+ id="page224"/>himself the use of the choruses, which were one of the
+ chief attractions of his preceding symphonies. He wished to prove that he could write
+ pure music, and to make his claim surer he refused to have any explanation of his
+ composition published in the concert programme, as the other composers in the
+ festival had done; he wished it, therefore, to be judged from a strictly musical
+ point of view. It was a dangerous ordeal for him.</p>
+ <p>Though I wished very much to admire the work of a composer whom I held in such
+ esteem, I felt it did not come out very well from the test. To begin with, this
+ symphony is excessively long&mdash;it lasts an hour and a half&mdash;though there is
+ no apparent justification for its proportions. It aims at being colossal, and mainly
+ achieves emptiness. The <i>motifs</i> are more than familiar. After a funeral march
+ of commonplace character and boisterous movement, where Beethoven seems to be taking
+ lessons from Mendelssohn, there comes a scherzo, or rather a Viennese waltz, where
+ Chabrier gives old Bach a helping hand. The adagietto has a rather sweet
+ sentimentality. The rondo at the end is presented rather like an idea of Franck's,
+ and is the best part of the composition; it is carried out in a spirit of mad
+ intoxication and a chorale rises up from it with crashing joy; but the effect of the
+ whole is lost in repetitions that choke it and make it heavy. Through all the work
+ runs a mixture of pedantic stiffness and incoherence; it moves along in a desultory
+ way, and suffers from abrupt checks in the course of its development and from
+ super<a name="page225" id="page225"/>fluous
+ ideas that break in for no reason at all, with the result that the whole hangs
+ fire.</p>
+ <p>Above all, I fear Mahler has been sadly hypnotised by ideas about
+ power&mdash;ideas that are getting to the head of all German artists to-day. He seems
+ to have an undecided mind, and to combine sadness and irony with weakness and
+ impatience, to be a Viennese musician striving after Wagnerian grandeur. No one
+ expresses the grace of <i>L&auml;ndler</i> and dainty waltzes and mournful reveries
+ better than he; and perhaps no one is nearer the secret of Schubert's moving and
+ voluptuous melancholy; and it is Schubert he recalls at times, both in his good
+ qualities and certain of his faults. But he wants to be Beethoven or Wagner. And he
+ is wrong; for he lacks their balance and gigantic force. One saw that only too well
+ when he was conducting the <i>Choral Symphony</i>.</p>
+ <p>But whatever he may be, or whatever disappointment he may have brought me at
+ Strasburg, I will never allow myself to speak lightly or scoffingly of him. I am
+ confident that a musician with so lofty an aim will one day create a work worthy of
+ himself.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>Richard Strauss is a complete contrast to Mahler. He has always the air of a
+ heedless and discontented child. Tall and slim, rather elegant and supercilious, he
+ seems to be of a more refined race than most other German artists of to-day.
+ Scornful, <i>blas&eacute;</i> with success, and very exacting, his bearing towards
+ other musicians has nothing of Mahler's <a name="page226"
+ id="page226"/>winning modesty. He is not less nervous than Mahler,
+ and while he is conducting the orchestra he seems to indulge in a frenzied dance
+ which follows the smallest details of his music&mdash;music that is as agitated as
+ limpid water into which a stone has been flung. But he has a great advantage over
+ Mahler; he knows how to rest after his labours. Both excitable and sleepy by nature,
+ his highly-strung nerves are counterbalanced by his indolence, and there is in the
+ depths of him a Bavarian love of luxury. I am quite sure that when his hours of
+ intense living are over, after he has spent an excessive amount of energy, he has
+ hours when he is only partially alive. One then sees his eyes with a vague and sleepy
+ look in them; and he is like old Rameau, who used to walk about for hours as if he
+ were an automaton, seeing nothing and thinking of nothing.</p>
+ <p>At Strasburg Strauss conducted his <i>Sinfonia Domestica</i>, whose programme
+ seems boldly to defy reason, and even good taste. In the symphony he pictures himself
+ with his wife and his boy (<i>"Meiner lieben Frau und unserm Jungen gewidmet"</i>).
+ "I do not see," said Strauss, "why I should not compose a symphony about myself; I
+ find myself quite as interesting as Napoleon or Alexander." Some people have replied
+ that everybody else might not share his interest. But I shall not use that argument;
+ it is quite possible for an artist of Strauss's worth to keep us entertained. What
+ grates upon me more is the way in which he speaks of himself. The disproportion
+ between his subject <a name="page227"
+ id="page227"/>and the means he has of expressing it is too strong.
+ Above all, I do not like this display of the inner and secret self. There is a want
+ of reticence in this <i>Sinfonia Domestica</i>. The fireside, the sitting-room, and
+ the bedchamber, are open to all-comers. Is this the family feeling of Germany to-day?
+ I admit that the first time I heard the work it jarred upon me for purely moral
+ reasons, in spite of the liking I have for its composer. But afterwards I altered my
+ first opinion, and found the music admirable. Do you know the programme?</p>
+ <p>The first part shows you three people: a man, a woman, and a child. The man is
+ represented by three themes: a <i>motif</i> full of spirit and humour, a thoughtful
+ <i>motif</i>, and a <i>motif</i> expressing eager and enthusiastic action. The woman
+ has only two themes: one expressing caprice, and the other love and tenderness. The
+ child has a single <i>motif</i>, which is quiet, innocent, and not very defined in
+ character; its real value is not shown until it is developed.... Which of the two
+ parents is he like? The family sit round him and discuss him. "He is just like his
+ father" (<i>Ganz der Papa</i>), say the aunts. "He is the image of his mother"
+ (<i>Ganz die Mama</i>), say the uncles.</p>
+ <p>The second part of the symphony is a scherzo which represents the child at play;
+ there are terribly noisy games, games of Herculean gaiety, and you can hear the
+ parents talking all over the house. How far we seem from Schumann's good little
+ children and their simple-hearted families! At last the child is put to bed; they
+ rock him to <a name="page228" id="page228"/>
+ sleep, and the clock strikes seven. Night comes. There are dreams and some uneasy
+ sleep. Then a love scene.... The clock strikes seven in the morning. Everybody wakes
+ up, and there is a merry discussion. We hear a double fugue in which the theme of the
+ man and the theme of the woman contradict each other with exasperating and ludicrous
+ obstinacy; and the man has the last word. Finally there is the apotheosis of the
+ child and family life.</p>
+ <p>Such a programme serves rather to lead the listener astray than to guide him. It
+ spoils the idea of the work by emphasising its anecdotal and rather comic side. For
+ without doubt the comic side is there, and Strauss has warned us in vain that he did
+ not wish to make an amusing picture of married life, but to praise the sacredness of
+ marriage and parenthood; but he possesses such a strong vein of humour that it cannot
+ help getting the better of him. There is nothing really grave or religious about the
+ music, except when he is speaking of the child; and then the rough merriment of the
+ man grows gentle, and the irritating coquetry of the woman becomes exquisitely
+ tender. Otherwise Strauss's satire and love of jesting get the upper hand, and reach
+ an almost epic gaiety and strength.</p>
+ <p>But one must forget this unwise programme, which borders on bad taste and at times
+ on something even worse. When one has succeeded in forgetting it one discovers a
+ well-proportioned symphony in four parts&mdash;Allegro, Scherzo, Adagio, and Finale
+ in fugue form&mdash;and one of the finest works in contem<a
+ name="page229" id="page229"/>porary music. It has the passionate
+ exuberance of Strauss's preceding symphony, <i>Heldenleben</i>, but it is superior in
+ artistic construction; one may even say that it is Strauss's most perfect work since
+ <i>Tod und Verkl&auml;rung</i> ("Death and Transfiguration"), with a richness of
+ colouring and technical skill that <i>Tod und Verkl&auml;rung</i> did not possess.
+ One is dazzled by the beauty of an orchestration which is light and pliant, and
+ capable of expressing delicate shades of feeling; and this struck me the more after
+ the solid massiveness of Mahler's orchestration, which is like heavy unleavened
+ bread. With Strauss everything is full of life and sinew, and there is nothing
+ wasted. Possibly the first setting-out of his themes has rather too schematic a
+ character; and perhaps the melodic utterance is rather restricted and not very lofty;
+ but it is very personal, and one finds it impossible to disassociate his personality
+ from these vigorous themes that burn with youthful ardour, and cut the air like
+ arrows, and twist themselves in freakish arabesques. In the adagio depicting night,
+ there is, though in very bad taste, much seriousness and reverie and stirring
+ emotion. The fugue at the end is of astonishing sprightliness; and is a mixture of
+ colossal jesting and heroic pastoral poetry worthy of Beethoven, whose style it
+ recalls in the breadth of its development. The final apotheosis is filled with life;
+ its joy makes the heart beat. The most extravagant harmonic effects and the most
+ abominable discords are softened and almost disappear in the wonderful combination of
+ <i>timbres</i>. It is the work of a strong and sensual <a
+ name="page230" id="page230"/>artist, the true heir of the Wagner of
+ the <i>Meistersinger</i>.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>Upon the whole, these works make one see that, in spite of their apparent
+ audacity, Strauss and Mahler are beginning to make a surreptitious retreat from their
+ early standpoint, and are abandoning the symphony with a programme. Strauss's last
+ work will lose nothing by calling itself quite simply <i>Sinfonia Domestica</i>,
+ without adding any further information. It is a true symphony; and the same may be
+ said of Mahler's composition. But Strauss and Mahler are already reforming
+ themselves, and are coming back to the model of the classic symphony.</p>
+ <p>But there are more important conclusions to be drawn from a hearing of this kind.
+ The first is that Strauss's talent is becoming more and more exceptional in the music
+ of his country. With all his faults, which are considerable, Strauss stands alone in
+ his warmth of imagination, in his unquenchable spontaneity and perpetual youth. And
+ his knowledge and his art are growing every day in the midst of other German art
+ which is growing old. German music in general is showing some grave symptoms. I will
+ not dwell on its neurasthenia, for it is passing through a crisis which will teach it
+ wisdom; but I fear, nevertheless, that this excessive nervous excitement will be
+ followed by torpor. What is really disquieting is that, in spite of all the talent
+ that still abounds, Germany is fast losing her <a
+ name="page231" id="page231"/>chief musical endowments. Her melodic
+ charm has nearly disappeared. One could search the music of Strauss, Mahler, or Hugo
+ Wolf, without finding a melody of any real value, or of any true originality, outside
+ its application to a text, or a literary idea, and its harmonic development. And
+ besides that, German music is daily losing its intimate spirit; there are still
+ traces of this spirit in Wolf, thanks to his exceptionally unhappy life; but there is
+ very little of it in Mahler, in spite of all his efforts to concentrate his mind on
+ himself; and there is hardly any at all in Strauss, although he is the most
+ interesting of the three composers. German musicians have no longer any depth.</p>
+ <p>I have said that I attribute this fact to the detestable influence of the theatre,
+ to which nearly all these artists are attached as <i>Kapellmeister</i>, or directors
+ of opera. To this they owe the melodramatic character of their music, even though it
+ is on the surface only&mdash;music written for show, and aiming chiefly at
+ effect.</p>
+ <p>More baneful even than the influence of the theatre is the influence of success.
+ These musicians have nowadays too many facilities for having their music played. A
+ work is played almost before it is finished, and the musician has no time to live
+ with his work in solitude and silence. Besides this, the works of the chief German
+ musicians are supported by tremendous booming of some kind or another: by their
+ <i>Musikfeste</i>, by their critics, their press, and their "Musical Guides"
+ (<i>Musikf&uuml;hrer</i>), which are apologetic explanations of their works,
+ scattered <a name="page232" id="page232"/>
+ abroad in millions to set the fashion for the sheep-like public. And with all this a
+ musician grows soon contented with himself, and comes to believe any favourable
+ opinion about his work. What a difference from Beethoven, who, all his life, was
+ hammering out the same subjects, and putting his melodies on the anvil twenty times
+ before they reached their final form. That is where Mahler is so lacking. His
+ subjects are a rather vulgarised edition of some of Beethoven's ideas in their
+ unfinished state. But Mahler gets no further than the rough sketch.</p>
+ <p>And, lastly, I want to speak of the greatest danger of all that menaces music in
+ Germany; <i>there is too much music in Germany</i>. This is not a paradox. There is
+ no worse misfortune for art than a super-abundance of it. The music is drowning the
+ musicians. Festival succeeds festival: the day after the Strasburg festival there was
+ to be a Bach festival at Eisenach; and then, at the end of the week, a Beethoven
+ festival at Bonn. Such a plethora of concerts, theatres, choral societies, and
+ chamber-music societies, absorbs the whole life of the musician. When has he time to
+ be alone to listen to the music that sings within him? This senseless flood of music
+ invades the sanctuaries of his soul, weakens its power, and destroys its sacred
+ solitude and the treasures of its thought.</p>
+ <p>You must not think that this excess of music existed in the old days in Germany.
+ In the time of the great classic masters, Germany had hardly any institutions for the
+ giving of regular concerts, and choral performances were hardly known. In <a name="page233" id="page233"/>the Vienna of Mozart
+ and Beethoven there was only a single association that gave concerts, and no
+ <i>Chorvereine</i> at all, and it was the same with other towns in Germany. Does the
+ wonderful spread of musical culture in Germany during the last century correspond
+ with its artistic creation? I do not think so; and one feels the inequality between
+ the two more every day.</p>
+ <p>Do you remember Goethe's ballad of <i>Der Zauberlehrling</i> (<i>L'Apprenti
+ Sorcier</i>) which Dukas so cleverly made into music? There, in the absence of his
+ master, an apprentice set working some magic spells, and so opened sluice-gates that
+ no one could shut; and the house was flooded.</p>
+ <p>This is what Germany has done. She has let loose a flood of music, and is about to
+ be drowned in it.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+ <a name="page234" id="page234"/>
+ <h2><a name="CLAUDE_DEBUSSY" id="CLAUDE_DEBUSSY"></a>CLAUDE DEBUSSY</h2>
+ <h4>PELL&Eacute;AS ET M&Eacute;LISANDE</h4>
+ <p>The first performance of <i>Pell&eacute;as et M&eacute;lisande</i> in Paris, on
+ April 30th, 1902, was a very notable event in the history of French music; its
+ importance can only be compared with that of the first performance of Lully's
+ <i>Cadmus et Hermione</i>, Rameau's <i>Hippolyte et Aricie</i>, and Quick's
+ <i>Iphig&eacute;nie en Aulide</i>; and it may be looked upon as one of the three or
+ four red-letter days in the calendar of our lyric stage.<a name="FNanchor_199_199"
+ id="FNanchor_199_199"></a><a href="#Footnote_199_199" class="fnanchor">[199]</a></p>
+ <p>The success of <i>Pell&eacute;as et M&eacute;lisande</i> is due to many things.
+ Some of them are trivial, such as fashion, which has certainly played its part here
+ as it has in all other successes, though it is a relatively weak part; some of them
+ are more important, and arise from something innate in the spirit of French genius;
+ and there are also moral and aesthetic reasons for its success, and, in the widest
+ sense, purely musical reasons.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>In speaking of the moral reasons of the success <a
+ name="page235" id="page235"/>of <i>Pell&eacute;as et
+ M&eacute;lisande</i>, I would like to draw your attention to a form of thought which
+ is not confined to France, but which is common nowadays in a section of the more
+ distinguished members of European society, and which has found expression in
+ <i>Pell&eacute;as et M&eacute;lisande</i>. The atmosphere in which Maeterlinck's
+ drama moves makes one feel the melancholy resignation of the will to Fate. We are
+ shown that nothing can change the order of events; that, despite our proud illusions,
+ we are not master of ourselves, but the servant of unknown and irresistible forces,
+ which direct the whole tragicomedy of our lives. We are told that no man is
+ responsible for what he likes and what he loves&mdash;that is if he knows what he
+ likes and loves&mdash;and that he lives and dies without knowing why.</p>
+ <p>These fatalistic ideas, reflecting the lassitude of the intellectual aristocracy
+ of Europe, have been wonderfully translated into music by Debussy; and when you feel
+ the poetic and sensual charm of the music, the ideas become fascinating and
+ intoxicating, and their spirit is very infectious. For there is in all music an
+ hypnotic power which is able to reduce the mind to a state of voluptuous
+ submission.</p>
+ <p>The cause of the artistic success of <i>Pell&eacute;as et M&eacute;lisande</i> is
+ of a more specially French character, and marks a reaction that is at once
+ legitimate, natural, and inevitable; I would even say it is vital&mdash;a reaction of
+ French genius against foreign art, and especially against Wagnerian art and its
+ awkward representatives in France.<a name="page236"
+ id="page236"/></p>
+ <p>Is the Wagnerian drama perfectly adapted to German genius? I do not think so; but
+ that is a question which I will leave German musicians to decide. For ourselves, we
+ have the right to assert that the form of Wagnerian drama is antipathetic to the
+ spirit of French people&mdash;to their artistic taste, to their ideas about the
+ theatre, and to their musical feeling. This form may have forced itself upon us, and,
+ by the right of victorious genius, may have strongly influenced the French mind, and
+ may do so again; but nothing will ever make it anything but a stranger in our
+ land.</p>
+ <p>It is not necessary to dwell upon the differences of taste. The Wagnerian ideal
+ is, before everything else, an ideal of power. Wagner's passional and intellectual
+ exaltation and his mystic sensualism are poured out like a fiery torrent, which
+ sweeps away and burns all before it, taking no heed of barriers. Such an art cannot
+ be bound by ordinary rules; it has no need to fear bad taste&mdash;and I commend it.
+ But it is easy to understand that other ideals exist, and that another art might be
+ as expressive by its proprieties and niceties as by its richness and force. And this
+ former art&mdash;our own&mdash;is not so much a reaction against Wagnerian art as a
+ reaction against its caricatures in France and the consequent abuse of an
+ ill-regulated power.</p>
+ <p>Genius has a right to be what it will&mdash;to trample underfoot, if it wishes,
+ taste and morals and the whole of society. But when those who are not geniuses wish
+ to do the same thing they only make themselves ridiculous and odious. There have been
+ <a name="page237" id="page237"/>too many monkey
+ Wagners in France. During the last ten or twenty years scarcely one French musician
+ has escaped Wagner's influence. One understands only too well the revolt of the
+ French mind, in the name of naturalness and good taste, against exaggerations and
+ extremes of passion, whether sincere or not. <i>Pell&eacute;as et
+ M&eacute;lisande</i> came as a manifestation of this revolt. It is an uncompromising
+ reaction against over-emphasis and excess, and against anything that oversteps the
+ limits of the imagination. This distaste of exaggerated words and sentiments results
+ in what is like a fear of showing the feelings at all, even when they are most deeply
+ stirred. With Debussy the passions almost whisper; and it is by the imperceptible
+ vibrations of the melodic line that the love in the hearts of the unhappy couple is
+ shown, by the timid "Oh, why are you going?" at the end of the first act, and the
+ quiet "I love you, too," in the last scene but one. Think of the wild lamentations of
+ the dying Ysolde, and then of the death of M&eacute;lisande, without cries and
+ without words.</p>
+ <p>From a scenic point of view, <i>Pell&eacute;as et M&eacute;lisande</i> is also
+ quite opposed to the Bayreuth ideal. The vast proportions&mdash;almost immoderate
+ proportions&mdash;of the Wagnerian drama, its compact structure and the intense
+ concentration of mind which from beginning to end holds these enormous works and
+ their ideology together, and which is often displayed at the expense of the action
+ and even the emotions, are as far removed as they can be from the French love of
+ clear, logical, and temperate action. The <a name="page238"
+ id="page238"/>little pictures of <i>Pell&eacute;as et
+ M&eacute;lisande</i>, small and sharply cut, each marking without stress a new stage
+ in the evolution of the drama, are built up in quite a different way from those of
+ the Wagnerian theatre.</p>
+ <p>And, as if he wished to accentuate this antagonism, the author of
+ <i>Pell&eacute;as et M&eacute;lisande</i> is now writing a <i>Tristan</i>, whose plot
+ is taken from an old French poem, the text of which has been recently brought to
+ light by M. B&eacute;dier. In its calm and lofty strain it is a wonderful contrast to
+ Wagner's savage and pedantic, though sublime poem.</p>
+ <p>But it is especially by the manner in which they conceive the respective
+ relationships of poetry and music to opera that the two composers differ. With
+ Wagner, music is the kernel of the opera, the glowing focus, the centre of
+ attraction; it absorbs everything, and it stands absolutely first. But that is not
+ the French conception. The musical stage, as we conceive it in France (if not what we
+ actually possess), should present such a combination of the arts as go to make an
+ harmonious whole. We demand that an equal balance shall be kept between poetry and
+ music; and if their equilibrium must be a little upset, we should prefer that poetry
+ was not the loser, as its utterance is more conscious and rational. That was Gluck's
+ aim; and because he realised it so well he gained a reputation among the French
+ public which nothing will destroy. Debussy's strength lies in the methods by which he
+ has approached this ideal of musical temperateness and disinterestedness, and in the
+ way he has placed his <a name="page239"
+ id="page239"/>genius as a composer at the service of the drama. He
+ has never sought to dominate Maeterlinck's poem, or to swallow it up in a torrent of
+ music; he has made it so much a part of himself that at the present time no Frenchman
+ is able to think of a passage in the play without Debussy's music singing at the same
+ time within him.</p>
+ <p>But apart from all these reasons that make the work important in the history of
+ opera, there are purely musical reasons for its success, which are of deeper
+ significance still.<a name="FNanchor_200_200" id="FNanchor_200_200"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_200_200" class="fnanchor">[200]</a> <i>Pell&eacute;as et
+ M&eacute;lisande</i> has brought about a reform in the dramatic music of France. This
+ reform is concerned with several things, and, first of all, with recitative.</p>
+ <p>In France we have never had&mdash;apart from a few attempts in
+ <i>op&eacute;ra-comique</i>&mdash;a recitative that exactly expressed our natural
+ speech. Lully and Rameau took for their model the high-flown declamation of the
+ tragedy stage of their time. And French opera for the past twenty years has chosen a
+ more dangerous model still&mdash;the declamation of Wagner, with its vocal leaps and
+ its resounding and heavy accentuation. Nothing could be more displeasing in French.
+ All people of taste suffered from it, though they did not admit it. At this time,
+ Antoine, G&eacute;mier, and Guitry were making theatrical declamation more natural,
+ and this made the exaggerated declamation of the French opera appear more ridiculous
+ and more archaic still. And so a <a name="page240"
+ id="page240"/>reform in recitative was inevitable. Jean-Jacques
+ Rousseau had foreseen it in the very direction in which Debussy<a
+ name="FNanchor_201_201" id="FNanchor_201_201"></a><a href="#Footnote_201_201"
+ class="fnanchor">[201]</a> has accomplished it. He showed in his <i>Lettre sur la
+ musique fran&ccedil;aise</i> that there was no connection between the inflections of
+ French speech, "whose accents are so harmonious and simple," and "the shrill and
+ noisy intonations" of the recitative of French opera. And he concluded by saying that
+ the kind of recitative that would best suit us should "wander between little
+ intervals, and neither raise nor lower the voice very much; and should have little
+ sustained sound, no noise, and no cries of any description&mdash;nothing, indeed,
+ that resembled singing, and little inequality in the duration or value of the notes,
+ or in their intervals." This is the very definition of Debussy's recitative.</p>
+ <p>The symphonic fabric of <i>Pell&eacute;as et M&eacute;lisande</i> differs just as
+ widely from Wagner's dramas. With Wagner it is a living thing that springs from one
+ great root, a system of interlaced phrases whose powerful growth puts out branches in
+ every direction, like an oak. Or, to take another simile, it is like a painting,
+ which though it has not been executed at a single sitting, yet gives us that
+ impression; and, in spite of the retouching and altering to which it has been
+ subjected, still has the effect of a compact whole, of an indestructible amalgam,
+ from <a name="page241" id="page241"/>which
+ nothing can be detached. Debussy's system, on the contrary, is, so to speak, a sort
+ of classic impressionism&mdash;an impressionism that is refined, harmonious, and
+ calm; that moves along in musical pictures, each of which corresponds to a subtle and
+ fleeting moment of the soul's life; and the painting is done by clever little strokes
+ put in with a soft and delicate touch. This art is more allied to that of Moussorgski
+ (though without any of his roughness) than that of Wagner, in spite of one or two
+ reminiscences of <i>Parsifal</i>, which are only extraneous traits in the work. In
+ <i>Pell&eacute;as et M&eacute;lisande</i> one finds no persistent <i>leitmotifs</i>
+ running through the work, or themes which pretend to translate into music the life of
+ characters and types; but, instead, we have phrases that express changing feelings,
+ that change with the feelings. More than that, Debussy's harmony is not, as it was
+ with Wagner and all the German school, a fettered harmony, tightly bound to the
+ despotic laws of counterpoint; it is, as Laloy<a name="FNanchor_202_202"
+ id="FNanchor_202_202"></a><a href="#Footnote_202_202" class="fnanchor">[202]</a> has
+ said, a harmony that is first of all harmonious, and has its origin and end in
+ itself.</p>
+ <p>As Debussy's art only attempts to give the impression of the moment, without
+ troubling itself with what may come after, it is free from care, and takes its fill
+ in the enjoyment of the moment. In the garden of harmonies it selects the most
+ beautiful flowers; for sincerity of expression takes a second <a name="page242" id="page242"/>place with it, and
+ its first idea is to please. In this again it interprets the aesthetic sensualism of
+ the French race, which seeks pleasure in art, and does not willingly admit ugliness,
+ even when it seems to be justified by the needs of the drama and of truth. Mozart
+ shared the same thought: "Music," he said, "even in the most terrible situations,
+ ought never to offend the ear; it should charm it even there; and, in short, always
+ remain music."</p>
+ <p>As for Debussy's harmonic language, his originality does not consist, as some of
+ his foolish admirers have said, in the invention of new chords, but in the new use he
+ makes of them. A man is not a great artist because he makes use of unresolved
+ sevenths and ninths, consecutive major thirds and ninths, and harmonic progressions
+ based on a scale of whole tones; one is only an artist when one makes them say
+ something. And it is not on account of the peculiarities of Debussy's style&mdash;of
+ which one may find isolated examples in great composers before him, in Chopin, Liszt,
+ Chabrier, and Richard Strauss&mdash;but because with Debussy these peculiarities are
+ an expression of his personality, and because <i>Pell&eacute;as et
+ M&eacute;lisande</i>, "the land of ninths," has a poetic atmosphere which is like no
+ other musical drama ever written.</p>
+ <p>Lastly, the orchestration is purposely restrained, light, and divided, for Debussy
+ has a fine disdain for those orgies of sound to which Wagner's art has accustomed us;
+ it is as sober and polished as a fine classic phrase of the latter part of the
+ seventeenth century. <i>Ne quid nimis</i> ("Nothing superfluous")<a name="page243" id="page243"/>is the artist's
+ motto. Instead of amalgamating the <i>timbres</i> to get a massive effect, he
+ disengages their separate personalities, as it were, and delicately blends them
+ without changing their individual nature. Like the impressionist painters of to-day,
+ he paints with primary colours, but with a delicate moderation that rejects anything
+ harsh as if it were something unseemly.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <p>I have given more than enough reasons to account for the success of
+ <i>Pell&eacute;as et M&eacute;lisande</i> and the place that its admirers give it in
+ the history of opera. There is every reason to believe that the composer has not been
+ as acutely conscious of his musico-dramatic reform as his disciples have been. The
+ reform with him has a more instinctive character; and that is what gives it its
+ strength. It responds to an unconscious yet profound need of the French spirit. I
+ would even venture to say that the historical importance of Debussy's work is greater
+ than its artistic value. His personality is not without faults, and the gravest are
+ perhaps negative faults&mdash;the absence of certain qualities, and even of the
+ strong and extravagant faults which made the heroes of the art world, like Beethoven
+ and Wagner. His voluptuous nature is at once changeable and precise; and his dreams
+ are as clear and delicate as the art of a poet of the Pleiades in the sixteenth
+ century, or of a Japanese painter. But among all his gifts he has a quality which I
+ have not found so evident in any other musician&mdash;except perhaps Mozart; and this
+ <a name="page244" id="page244"/>quality is a
+ genius for good taste. Debussy has it in excess, so that he almost sacrifices the
+ other elements of art to it, until the passionate force of his music, even its very
+ life, seems to be impoverished. But one must not deceive oneself; that impoverishment
+ is only apparent, and in all his work there are evidences that his passion is only
+ veiled. It is only the trembling of the melodic line, or the orchestration which,
+ like a shadow passing before the eyes, tells us of the drama that is being played in
+ the hearts of his characters. This lofty shame of emotion is something as rare in
+ opera as a Racine tragedy is in poetry&mdash;they are works of the same order, and
+ both of them perfect flowers of the French spirit. Anyone who lives in foreign parts
+ and is curious to know what France is like and understand her genius should study
+ <i>Pell&eacute;as et M&eacute;lisande</i> as they would study Racine's
+ <i>B&eacute;r&eacute;nice</i>.</p>
+ <p>Not that Debussy's art entirely represents French genius any more than Racine's
+ does; for there is quite another side to it which is not represented there; and that
+ side is heroic action, the intoxication of reason and laughter, the passion for
+ light, the France of Rabelais, Moli&egrave;re, Diderot, and in music, we will
+ say&mdash;for want of better names&mdash;the France of Berlioz and Bizet. To tell the
+ truth, that is the France I prefer. But Heaven preserve me from ignoring the other!
+ It is the balance between these two Frances that makes French genius. In our
+ contemporary music, <i>Pell&eacute;as et M&eacute;lisande</i> is at one end of the
+ pole of our art and <i>Carmen</i> is at the other. The one is all on the surface, all
+ life, with no <a name="page245" id="page245"/>
+ shadows, and no underneath. The other is below the surface, bathed in twilight, and
+ enveloped in silence. And this double ideal is the alternation between the gentle
+ sunlight and the faint mist that veils the soft, luminous sky of the Isle of
+ France.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+ <a name="AWAKENING" id="AWAKENING"></a>
+ <div class="center">
+ <img src="images/music254.png" alt="music" title="music" />
+ </div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+ <h2>THE AWAKENING: A SKETCH OF THE MUSICAL
+ MOVEMENT IN PARIS SINCE 1870</h2>
+ <a name="page246" id="page246"/>
+ <p>It is not possible in a few pages to give an account of forty years of active and
+ fruitful life without many omissions, and also without a certain dryness entailed by
+ lists of names. But I have purposely abstained from trying to arouse interest by any
+ artifices of writing and treatment, as I wish to let deeds speak for themselves.</p>
+ <p>I want to show, by this simple account, the splendid efforts made by musicians in
+ France since 1870, and the growth of the faith and energy that has recreated French
+ music. Such an awakening seems to me a fine thing to look upon, and very comforting.
+ But few people in France realise it, outside a handful of musicians. It is to the
+ public at large I dedicate these pages, so that they may know what a generation of
+ artists with large hearts <a name="page247"
+ id="page247"/>and strong determination have done for the honour of
+ our race. The nation must not be allowed to forget what she owes to some of her
+ sons.</p>
+ <p>But you must not accuse me of contradicting myself if in another work, which will
+ appear at the same time as this one,<a name="FNanchor_203_203"
+ id="FNanchor_203_203"></a><a href="#Footnote_203_203" class="fnanchor">[203]</a> I
+ indulge in some sarcasm over the failings and absurdities of French music to-day. I
+ think that for the last ten years French musicians have rather imprudently and
+ prematurely proclaimed their victory, and that, in a general way, their
+ works&mdash;apart from three or four&mdash;are not worth as much as their endeavours.
+ But their endeavours are heroic; and I know nothing finer in the whole history of
+ France. May they continue! But that is only possible by practising a
+ virtue&mdash;modesty. The completion of a part is not the completion of the
+ whole.</p>
+ <br />
+ <a name='paris' id='paris'></a>
+ <h4>PARIS AND MUSIC</h4>
+ <p>The nature of Paris is so complex and unstable that one feels it is presumptuous
+ to try to define it. It is a city so highly-strung, so ingrained with fickleness, and
+ so changeable in its tastes, that a book that truly describes it at the moment it is
+ written is no longer accurate by the time it is published. And then, there is not
+ only one Paris; there are two or three Parises&mdash;fashionable Paris, middle-class
+ Paris, intellectual Paris, vulgar Paris&mdash;all living side by side, but
+ intermingling very little. If you do not know the little towns within the great<a name="page248" id="page248"/>Town, you cannot know
+ the strong and often inconsistent life of this great organism as a whole.</p>
+ <p>If one wishes to get an idea of the musical life of Paris, one must take into
+ account the variety of its centres and the perpetual flow of its thought&mdash;a
+ thought which never stops, but is always over-shooting the goal for which it seemed
+ bound. This incessant change of opinion is scornfully called "fashion" by the
+ foreigner. And there is, without doubt, in the artistic aristocracy of Paris, as in
+ all great towns, a herd of idle people on the watch for new fashions&mdash;in art, as
+ well as in dress&mdash;who wish to single out certain of them for no serious reason
+ at all. But, in spite of their pretensions, they have only an infinitesimal share in
+ the changes of artistic taste. The origin of these changes is in the Parisian brain
+ itself&mdash;a brain that is quick and feverish, always working, greedy of knowledge,
+ easily tired, grasping to-day the splendours of a work, seeing to-morrow its defects,
+ building up reputations as rapidly as it pulls them down, and yet, in spite of all
+ its apparent caprices, always logical and sincere. It has its momentary infatuations
+ and dislikes, but no lasting prejudices; and, by its curiosity, its absolute liberty,
+ and its very French habit of criticising everything, it is a marvellous barometer,
+ sensitive to all the hidden currents of thought in the soul of the West, and often
+ indicating, months in advance, the variations and disturbances of the artistic and
+ political world.</p>
+ <p>And this barometer is registering what is happening just now in the world of
+ music, where a move<a name="page249"
+ id="page249"/>ment has been making itself felt in France for several
+ years, whose effect other nations&mdash;perhaps more musical nations&mdash;will not
+ feel till later. For the nations that have the strongest artistic traditions are not
+ necessarily those that are likely to develop a new art. To do that one must have a
+ virgin soil and spirits untrammelled by a heritage from the past. In 1870 no one had
+ a lighter heritage to bear than French musicians; for the past had been forgotten,
+ and such a thing as real musical education did not exist.</p>
+ <p>The musical weakness of that time was a very curious thing, and has given many
+ people the impression that France has never been a musical nation. Historically
+ speaking, nothing could be more wrong. Certainly there are races more gifted in music
+ than others; but often the seeming differences of race are really the differences of
+ time; and a nation appears great or little in its art according to what period of its
+ history we consider. England was a musical nation until the Revolution of 1688;
+ France was the greatest musical nation in the sixteenth century; and the recent
+ publications of M. Henry Expert have given us a glimpse of the originality and
+ perfection of the Franco-Belgian art during the Renaissance. But without going back
+ as far as that, we find that Paris was a very musical town at the time of the
+ Restoration, at the time of the first performance of Beethoven's symphonies at the
+ Conservatoire, and the first great works of Berlioz, and the Italian Opera. In
+ Berlioz's <i>M&eacute;moires</i> you can read about the enthusiasm, the tears, <a name="page250" id="page250"/>and the feeling, that
+ the performances of Gluck's and Spontini's operas aroused; and in the same book one
+ sees clearly that this musical warmth lasted until 1840, after which it died down
+ little by little, and was succeeded by complete musical apathy in the second
+ Empire&mdash;an apathy from which Berlioz suffered cruelly, so that one may even say
+ he died crushed by the indifference of the public. At this time Meyerbeer was
+ reigning at the Opera. This incredible weakening of musical feeling in France, from
+ 1840 to 1870, is nowhere better shown than in its romantic and realistic writers, for
+ whom music was an hermetically sealed door. All these artists were "<i>visuels</i>,"
+ for whom music was only a noise. Hugo is supposed to have said that Germany's
+ inferiority was measured by its superiority in music.<a name="FNanchor_204_204"
+ id="FNanchor_204_204"></a><a href="#Footnote_204_204" class="fnanchor">[204]</a> "The
+ elder Dumas detested," Berlioz says, "even bad music."<a name="FNanchor_205_205"
+ id="FNanchor_205_205"></a><a href="#Footnote_205_205" class="fnanchor">[205]</a> The
+ journal of the Goncourts calmly reflects the almost universal scorn of literary men
+ for music. In a conversation which took place in 1862 between Goncourt and
+ Th&eacute;ophile Gautier, Goncourt said:</p>
+ <p>"We confessed to him our complete infirmity, our musical deafness&mdash;we who, at
+ the most, only liked military music."<a name="page251"
+ id="page251"/></p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"Well," said Gautier, "what you tell me pleases me very much. I am like you; I
+ prefer silence to music. I have only just succeeded, after having lived part of my
+ life with a singer, in being able to tell good music from bad; but it is all the
+ same to me."<a name="FNanchor_206_206" id="FNanchor_206_206"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_206_206" class="fnanchor">[206]</a></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>And he added:</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"But it is a very curious thing that all other writers of our time are like
+ this. Balzac hated music. Hugo could not stand it. Even Lamartine, who himself is
+ like a piano to be hired or sold, holds it in horror!"</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>It needed a complete upheaval of the nation&mdash;a political and moral
+ upheaval&mdash;to change that frame of mind. Some indication of the change was making
+ itself felt in the last years of the second Empire. Wagner, who suffered from the
+ hostility or indifference of the public in 1860, at the time when
+ <i>Tannh&auml;user</i> was performed at the Opera, had already found, however, a few
+ understanding people in Paris who discerned his genius and sincerely admired him. The
+ most interesting of the writers who first began to understand musical emotion is
+ Charles Baudelaire. In 1861, Pasdeloup gave the first <i>Concerts populaires de
+ musique classique</i> at the Cirque d'Hiver. The Berlioz Festival, organised by M.
+ Reyer, on March 23rd, 1870, a year after Berlioz's death, revealed to France the
+ grandeur of its greatest musical genius, and was the beginning of a campaign of
+ public reparation to his memory.</p>
+ <p><a name="page252" id="page252"/>The
+ disasters of the war in 1870 regenerated the nation's artistic spirit. Music felt its
+ effect immediately.<a name="FNanchor_207_207" id="FNanchor_207_207"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_207_207" class="fnanchor">[207]</a> On February 24th, 1871, the
+ <i>Soci&eacute;t&eacute; nationale de Musique</i> was instituted to propagate the
+ works of French composers; and in 1873 the <i>Concerts de l'Association
+ artistique</i> were started under M. Colonne's direction; and these concerts, besides
+ making people acquainted with the classic composers of symphonies and the masters of
+ the young French school, were especially devoted to the honouring of Berlioz, whose
+ triumph reached its summit about 1880.<a name="FNanchor_208_208"
+ id="FNanchor_208_208"></a><a href="#Footnote_208_208" class="fnanchor">[208]</a></p>
+ <p>At this time Wagner's success, in its turn, began to make itself felt. For this M.
+ Lamoureux, whose concerts began in 1882, was chiefly responsible. Wagner's influence
+ considerably helped forward the progress of French art, and aroused a love for music
+ in people other than musicians; and, by his all-embracing personality and the vast
+ domain of his work in art, not only engaged the interest of the musical world, but
+ that of <a name="page253" id="page253"/>the
+ theatrical world, and the world of poetry and the plastic arts. One may say that from
+ 1885 Wagner's work acted directly or indirectly on the whole of artistic thought,
+ even on the religious and intellectual thought of the most distinguished people in
+ Paris. And a curious historical witness of its world-wide influence and momentary
+ supremacy over all other arts was the founding of the <i>Revue
+ Wagn&eacute;rienne</i>, where, united by the same artistic devotion, were found
+ writers and poets such as Verlaine, Mallarm&eacute;, Swinburne, Villiers de l'Isle
+ Adam, Huysmans, Richepin, Catulle Mend&egrave;s, &Eacute;douard Rod, Stuart Merrill,
+ Ephraim Mikha&euml;l, etc., and painters like Fantin-Latour, Jacques Blanche, Odilon
+ Redon; and critics like Teodor de Wyzewa, H.S. Chamberlain, Hennequin, Camille
+ Beno&icirc;t, A. Ernst, de Fourcaud, Wilder, E. Schur&eacute;, Soubies, Malherbe,
+ Gabriel Mourey, etc. These writers not only discussed musical subjects, but judged
+ painting, literature, and philosophy, from a Wagnerian point of view. Hennequin
+ compared the philosophic systems of Herbert Spencer and Wagner. Teodor de Wyzewa made
+ a study of Wagnerian literature&mdash;not the literature that commentated and the
+ paintings that illustrated Wagner's works, but the literature and the painting that
+ were inspired by Wagner's principles&mdash;from Egyptian statuary to Degas's
+ paintings, from Homer's writings to those of Villiers de l'Isle Adam! In a word, the
+ whole universe was seen and judged by the thought of Bayreuth. And though this folly
+ scarcely lasted more than three or four years&mdash;the length of the life of that
+ little magazine&mdash;<a name="page254"
+ id="page254"/>Wagner's genius dominated nearly the whole of French
+ art for ten or twelve years.<a name="FNanchor_209_209" id="FNanchor_209_209"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_209_209" class="fnanchor">[209]</a> An ardent musical propaganda by
+ means of concerts was carried on among the public; and the young intellectuals of the
+ day were won over. But the finest service that Wagnerism rendered to French art was
+ that it interested the general public in music; although the tyranny its influence
+ exercised became, in time, very stifling.</p>
+ <p>Then, in 1890, there were signs of a movement that was in revolt against its
+ despotism. The great wind from the East began to drop, and veered to the North.
+ Scandinavian and Russian influences were making themselves felt. An exaggerated
+ infatuation for Grieg, though limited to a small number of people, was an indication
+ of the change in public taste. In 1890, C&eacute;sar Franck died in Paris. Belgian by
+ birth and temperament, and French in feeling and by musical education, he had
+ remained outside the Wagnerian movement in his own serene and fecund solitude. To his
+ intellectual greatness and the charm his personal genius held for the little band of
+ friends who knew and revered him he added the authority of his knowledge.
+ Unconsciously he brought back to us the soul of Sebastian Bach, with its infinite
+ richness and depth; and through this he found himself the head of a school (without
+ having wished it) and the greatest teacher of contemporary French music. After his
+ death, his <a name="page255" id="page255"/>name
+ was the means of rallying together the younger school of musicians. In 1892, the
+ <i>Chanteurs de Saint-Gervais</i>, under the direction of M. Charles Bordes,
+ reinstated to honour and popularised Gregorian and Palestrinian music; and, following
+ the initiative of their director, the <i>Schola Cantorum</i> was founded in 1894 for
+ the revival of religious music. Ambition grew with success; and from the
+ <i>Schola</i> sprang the <i>&Eacute;cole Sup&eacute;rieure de Musique</i>, under the
+ direction of Franck's most famous pupil, M. Vincent d'Indy. This school, founded on a
+ solid knowledge, not only of the classics, but of the primitives in music, took from
+ its very beginning in 1900 a frankly national character, and was in some ways opposed
+ to German art. At the same time, performances of Bach and seventeenth-and
+ eighteenth-century music became more and more frequent; and more intimate
+ relationship with the artists of other countries, repeated visits of the great
+ <i>Kapellmeister</i>, foreign virtuosi and composers (especially Richard Strauss),
+ and, lastly, of Russian composers, completed the education of the Parisian musical
+ public, who, after repeated rebukes from the critics, became conscious of the
+ awakening of a national personality, and of an impatient desire to free itself from
+ German tutelage. By turns it gratefully and warmly received M. Bruneau's <i>Le
+ R&ecirc;ve</i> (1891), M. d'Indy's <i>Fervaal</i> (1898), M. Gustave Charpentier's
+ <i>Louise</i> (1900)&mdash;all of which seemed like works of liberation. But, as a
+ matter of fact, these lyric dramas were by no means free from foreign influences, and
+ especially <a name="page256" id="page256"/>from
+ Wagnerian influences. M. Debussy's <i>Pell&eacute;as et M&eacute;lisande</i>, in
+ 1902, seemed to mark more truly the emancipation of French music. From this time on,
+ French music felt that it had left school, and claimed to have founded a new art,
+ which reflected the spirit of the race, and was freer and suppler than the Wagnerian
+ art. These ideas, which were seized upon and enlarged by the press, brought about
+ rather quickly a conviction in French artists of France's superiority in music. Is
+ that conviction justified? The future alone can tell us. But one may see by this
+ brief outline of events how real is the evolution of the musical spirit in France
+ since 1870, in spite of the apparent contradictions of fashion which appear on the
+ surface of art. It is the spirit of France that is, after long oppression and by a
+ patient but eager initiation, realising its power and wishing to dominate in its
+ turn.</p>
+ <p>I wanted at first to trace the broad line of the movement which for the last
+ thirty years has been affecting French music; and now I shall consider the musical
+ institutions that have had their share in this movement. You will not be surprised if
+ I ignore some of the most celebrated, which have lost their interest in it, in order
+ that I may consider those that are the true authors of our regeneration.</p>
+ <br />
+ <a name='before' id='before'></a>
+ <h4>MUSICAL INSTITUTIONS BEFORE 1870</h4>
+ <p>It is not by any means the oldest and most celebrated musical institutions which
+ have taken the largest share in this evolution of music in the last thirty
+ years.<a name="page257" id="page257"/></p>
+ <p>The <i>Acad&eacute;mie des Beaux-Arts</i>, where six chairs are reserved for the
+ musical section, could have played a very important part in the musical organisation
+ of France by the authority of its name, and by the many prizes that it gives for
+ composition and criticism, especially by the <i>Prix de Rome</i>, which it awards
+ every year. But it does not play its part well, partly because of the antiquated
+ statutes that govern it, by which a handful of musicians are associated with a great
+ number of painters, sculptors, and architects, who are ignorant of music and mock at
+ the musicians, as they did in the time of Berlioz; and partly because it is the
+ custom of the Academy that the little group of musicians shall be trained in a very
+ conservative way. One of the names of these musicians is justly celebrated&mdash;that
+ of M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns; but there are others whose fame is of poorer quality, and
+ others still who have no fame at all. And the whole forms a little group, which
+ though it does not put any actual obstacles in the way of the progress of art, yet
+ does not look upon it favourably, but remains rather apart in an indifferent or even
+ hostile spirit.</p>
+ <p>The <i>Conservatoire national de Musique et de D&eacute;clamation</i>, which dates
+ from the last years of the <i>Ancien R&eacute;gime</i> and the Revolution, was
+ designed by its patriotic and-democratic origin to serve the cause of national art
+ and free progress.<a name="FNanchor_210_210" id="FNanchor_210_210"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_210_210" class="fnanchor">[210]</a></p>
+ <p><a name="page258" id="page258"/>It was for a
+ long time the corner-stone of the edifice of music in Paris. But although it has
+ always numbered in its ranks many illustrious and devoted professors&mdash;among whom
+ it recognised, a little late, the founder of the young French school, C&eacute;sar
+ Franck&mdash;and though the majority of artists who have made a name in French music
+ have received its teaching, and the list of laureates of Rome who have come from its
+ composition classes includes all the heads of the artistic movement to-day in all its
+ diversity, and ranges from M. Massenet to M. Bruneau, and from M. Charpentier to M.
+ Debussy&mdash;in spite of all this, it is no secret that, since 1870, the official
+ action with regard to the movement amounts to almost nothing; though we must at least
+ do it justice, and say that it has not hindered it.<a name="FNanchor_211_211"
+ id="FNanchor_211_211"></a><a href="#Footnote_211_211" class="fnanchor">[211]</a></p>
+ <p>But if the spirit of this academy has often destroyed the effect of the excellent
+ teaching there, by making success in academic competitions the chief aim of the
+ professors and their pupils, yet a certain freedom <a
+ name="page259" id="page259"/>has always reigned in the institution.
+ And though this freedom is mainly the result of indifference, it has, however,
+ permitted the more independent temperaments to develop in peace&mdash;from Berlioz to
+ M. Ravel. One should be grateful for this. But such virtues are too negative to give
+ the Conservatoire a high place in the musical history of the Third Republic; and it
+ is only lately, under the direction of M. Gabriel Faur&eacute;, that it has
+ endeavoured, not without difficulty, to get back its place at the head of French art,
+ which it had lost, and which others had taken.</p>
+ <p>The <i>Soci&eacute;t&eacute; des Concerts du Conservatoire</i>, founded in 1828
+ under the direction of Habeneck, has had its hour of glory in the musical history of
+ Paris. It was through this society that Beethoven's greatness was revealed to
+ France.<a name="FNanchor_212_212" id="FNanchor_212_212"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_212_212" class="fnanchor">[212]</a> It was at the Conservatoire that
+ the early important works of Berlioz were first given: <i>La Fantastique</i>,
+ <i>Harold</i>, and <i>Rom&eacute;o et Juliette</i>. It was there, nearer our own
+ time, that Saint-Sa&euml;ns's <i>Symphonie avec Orgue</i> and C&eacute;sar Franck's
+ <i>Symphonie</i> were played for the first time. But for a long time the
+ Conservatoire seemed to take its name too literally, and to restrict its sphere to
+ that of a museum for classical music.</p>
+ <p><a name="page260" id="page260"/>In later
+ years, however, the <i>Soci&eacute;t&eacute; des Concerts</i>, with M. Marty, began
+ to consider new works. Its orchestra, composed of eminent instrumentalists, enjoys a
+ classical fame; though it is now no longer alone in the excellence of its
+ performances, and has perhaps lost a little the secret that it claimed to possess for
+ the interpretation of great classical works. It excels in works of a neo-classic
+ character, like those of M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns, which are stronger in style and taste
+ than in life and passion. The Conservatoire concerts have also a relative superiority
+ over other concerts in Paris in the performance of choral works, which up to the
+ present have been very second-rate. But these concerts are not easy of access for the
+ general public, as the number of seats for sale is very limited. And so the society
+ is representative of a little public whose taste is, broadly speaking, conservative
+ and official; and the noise of the strife outside its doors only reaches its ears
+ slowly, and with a deadened sound.</p>
+ <p>The influence of the Conservatoire is, in music especially, an influence of the
+ past and of the Government. One may say much the same of the Opera. This ancient
+ association, which bears the imposing name of <i>Acad&eacute;mie nationale de
+ Musique</i> and dates from 1669, is a sort of national institution which is more
+ concerned with the history of official art than with living art. The satire with
+ which Jean-Jacques describes, in his <i>Nouvelle H&eacute;lo&iuml;se</i>, the stiff
+ solemnity and mournful pomp of its performances has not lost much of its truth. What
+ is lacking in the Opera to-day is the enthusiasm that <a
+ name="page261" id="page261"/>accompanied its former musical struggles
+ in the times of the "<i>Encyclop&eacute;distes</i>" and the "<i>guerre des
+ coins</i>." The great battles of art are now fought outside its doors; and it has
+ become by degrees a showy <i>salon</i>, a little faded perhaps, where the public is
+ more interested in itself than in the performance. In spite of the enormous sums that
+ it swallows up every year (nearly four million francs),<a name="FNanchor_213_213"
+ id="FNanchor_213_213"></a><a href="#Footnote_213_213" class="fnanchor">[213]</a> only
+ one or two new pieces are produced in a year, and they are rarely works that are
+ representative of the modern school. And though it has at last admitted Wagner's
+ dramas into its repertory, one can no longer consider these works, half a century
+ old, to be in the vanguard of music. The most esteemed masters of the French school,
+ such as Massenet, Reyer, Chausson, and Vincent d'Indy, had to seek refuge in the
+ Th&eacute;&acirc;tre de la Monnaie at Brussels before they could get their works
+ received at the Opera in Paris. And the classical composers fare no better. Neither
+ <i>Fidelio</i> nor Gluck's tragedies&mdash;with the exception of <i>Armide</i>, which
+ was put on under pressure of fashion&mdash;are represented; and when by chance they
+ give <i>Freisch&uuml;tz</i> or <i>Don Juan</i>, one wonders if it would not have been
+ better to let them rest in oblivion, rather than treat them sacrilegiously by adding,
+ cutting, introducing ballets and new recitatives, and deforming their style so as to
+ bring them "up to date."<a name="FNanchor_214_214" id="FNanchor_214_214"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_214_214" class="fnanchor">[214]</a></p>
+ <p><a name="page262" id="page262"/>In spite of
+ the changes of taste and the campaign of the press, the Opera has remained to this
+ day as it was in the time of Meyerbeer and Gounod and their disciples. But it would
+ be foolish to pretend that it has not its public. The receipts show well enough that
+ <i>Faust</i> is in greater favour than <i>Siegfried</i> or <i>Tristan</i>, not to
+ speak of the more recent works of the new French school, which cannot be acclimatised
+ there.</p>
+ <p>Without doubt, the enormous stage at the Opera does not lend itself well to modern
+ musical dramas, which are intimate and concentrated, and would be lost in its immense
+ space, which is more adapted for formal processions like the marches in the
+ <i>Proph&egrave;te</i> and <i>A&iuml;da</i>. Besides this, there is the conventional
+ acting of the majority of the singers, the dull lifelessness of the choruses, the
+ defective acoustics, and the exaggerated utterance and gestures of the actors,
+ demanded by the great dimensions of the place&mdash;all of which is a serious
+ obstacle to the conception of a living and simple art. But the chief obstacle will
+ always lie in the very nature of such a theatre&mdash;a theatre of luxury and vanity,
+ created for a set of snobs, whose least interest is the music, who have not enough
+ intellect to create a fashion, but who servilely follow every fashion after it is
+ thirty years old. Such a theatre no longer counts in the history of French music; and
+ its next directors will need a vast amount of ingenuity and energy to get a semblance
+ of life into such a dead colossus.<a name="page263"
+ id="page263"/></p>
+ <p>But it is quite another affair with the Op&eacute;ra-Comique. This theatre has
+ taken a very active part in the development of modern music. Without renouncing its
+ classic traditions, or its delightful repertory of the old
+ <i>op&eacute;ra-comiques</i>, it has had understanding enough, under the judicious
+ management of M. Albert Carr&eacute;, to hold itself open for any interesting
+ productions in dramatic music. It takes no side among the different schools; and the
+ representatives of the old-fashioned light opera with their songs elbow the leaders
+ of the advanced school. No association has done more important work, among musical
+ dramas as well as musical comedies, during the last twenty years. In this theatre,
+ which produced <i>Carmen</i> in 1875, <i>Manon</i> in 1884, and the <i>Roi d'Ys</i>
+ in 1888, were played the principal dramas of M. Bruneau, as well as M. Charpentier's
+ <i>Louise</i>, M. Debussy's <i>Pell&eacute;as et M&eacute;lisande</i>, and M. Dukas's
+ <i>Ariane et Barbebleue</i>. It may seem astonishing that such works should have
+ found a place at the Op&eacute;ra-Comique and not at the Opera. But if two musical
+ theatres of different kinds exist, one of which pretends to have the monopoly of
+ great art, while the other with a simpler and more intimate character seeks only to
+ please, it is always the latter that has a better chance of development and of making
+ new discoveries; for the first is oppressed by traditions that become ever stiffer
+ and more pedantic, while the other with its simplicity and lack of pretension is able
+ to accommodate itself to any manner of life. How many artists have revolu<a name="page264" id="page264"/>tionised their times
+ while they were merely looked upon as people who amused! Frescobaldi and Philipp
+ Emanuel Bach brought fresh life to art, but were scorned by the so-called
+ representatives of fine art; Mozart's <i>opere buffe</i> have more of truth and life
+ in them than his <i>opere serie</i>; and there is as much dramatic power in an
+ <i>op&eacute;ra-comique</i> like <i>Carmen</i> as in all the repertory of grand Opera
+ to-day. And so the Op&eacute;ra-Comique theatre has become the home of the boldest
+ experiments in musical drama. The most daring or the most violent ventures into
+ musical realism, after the manner of Charpentier or Bruneau, and the subtle fantasies
+ of a delicate art of dreams, like that of Debussy, have found a welcome there. It has
+ also been open to various kinds of foreign art: Humperdinck's <i>H&auml;nsel und
+ Gretel</i>, Verdi's <i>Falstaff</i>, the works of Puccini, Mascagni, and the young
+ Italian school, Richard Strauss's <i>Feuersnot</i>, Rimsky-Korsakow's
+ <i>Sn&eacute;gourotchka</i>, have all been played. And they have even given the
+ classic masterpieces of opera there: <i>Fidelio</i>, <i>Orfeo</i>, <i>Alceste</i>,
+ the two <i>Iphig&eacute;nies</i>; and taken more pains with them and mounted them
+ with more pious zeal than they do at the Opera. The operas themselves are more at
+ home there, too, for the size of the theatre is more like that of the
+ eighteenth-century theatres. It is true that the stage rather lacks depth; but the
+ ingenuity of the director and the admirable scenic artists he employs has succeeded
+ in making one forget this defect, and accomplished marvels. No theatre in Paris has
+ more artistic staging, and some of the scenery that has been <a
+ name="page265" id="page265"/>designed lately is a masterpiece of its
+ kind. The Op&eacute;ra-Comique has also the advantage of excellent conductors, and
+ one of them, M. Messager, who is now Director, has, by his clever interpretations,
+ greatly contributed to the success of the works of the new school.</p>
+ <br />
+ <a name='new' id='new'></a>
+ <h4>NEW MUSICAL INSTITUTIONS</h4>
+ <h4>1. <i>The Soci&eacute;t&eacute; Nationale</i></h4>
+ <p>Before 1870, French music had already in the Opera and the Op&eacute;ra-Comique
+ (without counting the various endeavours of the Th&eacute;&acirc;tre Lyrique) an
+ outlet which was nearly enough for the needs of her dramatic productions. Even when
+ musical taste was most decadent, the works of Gounod, Ambroise Thomas, and
+ Mass&eacute;, had always upheld the name of French <i>op&eacute;ra-comique</i>. But
+ what was almost entirely lacking was an outlet for symphonic music and chamber-music.
+ "Before 1870," wrote M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns in <i>Harmonie et M&eacute;lodie</i>, "a
+ French composer who was foolish enough to venture on to the ground of instrumental
+ music had no other means of getting his works performed than by himself arranging a
+ concert for them." Such was Berlioz's case; for he had to gather together an
+ orchestra and hire a room each time he wished to get a hearing for his great
+ symphonies. The financial result was often disastrous: the performance of the
+ <i>Damnation de Faust</i> in 1846 was, for example, a complete failure, and he had to
+ give it up. The Conservatoire, which was formerly more hospitable, <a name="page266" id="page266"/>rather reluctantly
+ performed a portion of <i>L'Enfance du Christ</i>; but it gave young composers no
+ encouragement.</p>
+ <p>The first man who attempted to make the symphony popular, M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns
+ tells us in his <i>Portraits et Souvenirs</i>, was Seghers, a dissentient member of
+ the <i>Soci&eacute;t&eacute; des Concerts du Conservatoire</i>, who during several
+ years (1848-1854) was conductor of the <i>Soci&eacute;t&eacute; de
+ Sainte-C&eacute;cile</i>, which had its quarters in a room in the rue de la
+ Chauss&eacute;e d'Antin. There he had performed Mendelssohn's <i>Symphonie
+ Italienne</i>, the overtures to <i>Tannh&auml;user</i> and <i>Manfred</i>, Berlioz's
+ <i>Fuite en &Eacute;gypte</i>, and Gounod's and Bizet's early, works. But lack of
+ money cut short his efforts.</p>
+ <p>Pasdeloup took up the work. After having been conductor for the
+ <i>Soci&eacute;t&eacute; des jeunes artistes du Conservatoire</i> since 1851, in the
+ Salle Herz, he founded, in 1861, at the Cirque d'Hiver, with the financial support of
+ a rich moneylender, the first <i>Concerts populaires de musique classique</i>.
+ Unhappily, says M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns, Pasdeloup, even up to 1870, made an almost
+ exclusive selection of German classical works. He raised an impenetrable barrier
+ before the young French school, and the only French works he played were symphonies
+ by Gounod and Gouvy, and the overtures of <i>Les Francs-Juges</i> and <i>La
+ Muette</i>. It was impossible to set up a rival society against him; and an exclusive
+ monopoly in music was, therefore, held by him. According to M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns he
+ was a mediocre musician, and had, in spite of his passion for music, "immense <a name="page267" id="page267"/>incapacity." In
+ <i>Harmonie et M&eacute;lodie</i> M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns says: "The few chamber-music
+ societies that existed were also closed to all new-comers; their programmes only
+ contained the names of undisputed celebrities, the writers of classic symphonies. In
+ those times one had really to be devoid of all common sense to write music."</p>
+ <p>A new generation was growing up, however,&mdash;a generation that was serious and
+ thoughtful, that was more attracted by pure music than by the theatre, that was
+ filled with a burning desire to found a national art. To this generation M.
+ Saint-Sa&euml;ns and M. Vincent d'Indy belong. The war of 1870 strengthened these
+ ideas about music, and, while the war was still raging, there sprang from them the
+ <i>Soci&eacute;t&eacute; Nationale de Musique</i>.</p>
+ <p>One must speak of this society with respect, for it was the cradle and sanctuary
+ of French art.<a name="FNanchor_215_215" id="FNanchor_215_215"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_215_215" class="fnanchor">[215]</a> All that was great in French
+ music from 1870 to 1900 found a home there. Without it, the greater part of the works
+ that are the honour of our music would never have been played; perhaps they would not
+ ever have been written. The Society possessed the rare merit of being able to
+ anticipate public opinion by ten or eleven years, and in some ways it has formed the
+ public mind and obliged it to honour those whom the Society had already recognised as
+ great musicians.</p>
+ <p><a name="page268" id="page268"/>The two
+ founders of the Society were Romaine Bussine, professor of Singing at the
+ Conservatoire, and M. Camille Saint-Sa&euml;ns. And, following their initiative,
+ C&eacute;sar Franck, Ernest Guiraud, Massenet, Garcin, Gabriel Faur&eacute;, Henri
+ Duparc, Th&eacute;odore Dubois, and Taffanel, joined forces with them, and at a
+ meeting on 25 February, 1871, agreed to found a musical society that should give
+ hearings to the works of living French composers exclusively. The first meetings were
+ interrupted by the doings of the Commune; but they began again in October, 1871. The
+ Society's early statutes were drawn up by Alexis de Castillon, a military officer and
+ a talented composer, who, after having served in the war of 1870 at the head of the
+ <i>mobiles</i> of Eure-et-Loire, was one of the founders of French chamber-music, and
+ died prematurely in 1873, aged thirty-five. It was these statutes, signed by
+ Saint-Sa&euml;ns, Castillon, and Garcin, that gave the Society its title of
+ <i>Soci&eacute;t&eacute; Nationale de Musique</i>, and its device, "<i>Ars
+ gallica</i>." This is what the statutes say about the aims of the Society:</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"The aim of the Society is to aid the production and the popularisation of all
+ serious musical works, whether published or unpublished, of French composers; to
+ encourage and bring to light, so far as is in its power, all musical endeavour,
+ whatever form it may take, on condition that there is evidence of high, artistic
+ aspiration on the part of the author.... It is in brotherly love, with complete
+ forgetfulness of self, and with the firm intention of aiding one <a name="page269" id="page269"/>another as far as
+ they can, that the members of the Society will co-operate, each in his own sphere
+ of action, for the study and performance of the works which they shall be called
+ upon to select and to interpret."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>The first Committee was made up as follows: President, Bussine; Vice-President,
+ Saint-Sa&euml;ns; Secretary, Alexis de Castillon; Under-Secretary, Jules Garcin;
+ Treasurer, Lenepveu. The members of the Committee were: C&eacute;sar Franck,
+ Th&eacute;odore Dubois, E. Guiraud, Fissot, Bourgault-Ducoudray, Faur&eacute;, and
+ Lalo.</p>
+ <p>The first concert was given on 25 November, 1871, in the Salle Pleyel; and it is
+ worthy of note that the first work played was a trio of C&eacute;sar Franck's. Since
+ then the Society has given three hundred and fifty performances of chamber-music or
+ orchestral works. The best known French composers and virtuosi have taken part as
+ executants, among others: C&eacute;sar Franck, Saint-Sa&euml;ns, Massenet, Bizet,
+ Vincent d'Indy, Faur&eacute;, Chabrier, Guiraud, Debussy, Lekeu, Lamoureux,
+ Chevillard, Taffanel, Widor, Messager, Di&eacute;mer, Sarasate, Risler, Cortot,
+ Ysaye, etc. And among the compositions that have been played for the first time it is
+ enough to mention the following:</p>
+ <p>C&eacute;sar Franck: Nearly the whole of his works, including his Sonata, Trio,
+ Quartette, Quintette, Symphonic Variations, Preludes and Fugues, Mass,
+ <i>R&eacute;demption</i>, <i>Psyche</i>, and a part of <i>Les
+ B&eacute;atitudes</i>.</p>
+ <p>Saint-Sa&euml;ns: <i>Pha&eacute;ton</i>, <i>Second Symphony</i>, Sonatas,<a name="page270" id="page270"/>Persian Melodies, the
+ <i>Rapsodie d'Auvergne</i>, and a quartette.</p>
+ <p>Vincent d'Indy: The trilogy of <i>Wallenstein</i>, the <i>Po&ecirc;me des
+ Montagues</i>, the <i>Symphonie sur un th&egrave;me montagnard</i>, and
+ quartettes.</p>
+ <p>Chabrier: Part of <i>Gwendoline</i>.</p>
+ <p>Lalo: Fragments of the <i>Roi d'Ys</i>, Rhapsodies and Symphonies.</p>
+ <p>Bruneau: <i>Penth&eacute;sil&eacute;e</i>, <i>La Belle au Bois Dormant</i>.</p>
+ <p>Chausson: <i>Viviane</i>, <i>H&eacute;l&egrave;ne</i>, <i>La Temp&ecirc;te</i>, a
+ quartette and a symphony.</p>
+ <p>Debussy: <i>La Damoiselle &eacute;lue</i>, the <i>Pr&eacute;lude &agrave;
+ l'apr&egrave;s-midi d'un faune</i>, a quartette, pieces for the pianoforte, and
+ melodies.</p>
+ <p>Dukas: <i>L'Apprenti Sorcier</i>, and a sonata for the pianoforte.</p>
+ <p>Lekeu: <i>Androm&egrave;de</i>.</p>
+ <p>Alberic Magnard: Symphonies and a quartette.</p>
+ <p>Ravel: <i>Sch&eacute;h&eacute;razade</i>, <i>Histoires Naturelles</i>, etc.</p>
+ <p>Saint-Sa&euml;ns was director with Bussine until 1886. But from 1881 the influence
+ of Franck and his disciples became more and more felt; and Saint-Sa&euml;ns began to
+ lose interest in the efforts of the new school. In 1886 there was a division of
+ opinion about a proposition of Vincent d'Indy's to introduce the works of classical
+ masters and foreign composers into the programmes. This proposition was adopted; but
+ Saint-Sa&euml;ns and Bussine sent in their resignations. Franck then became the true
+ president, although he refused the title; and after his death, in 1890, Vincent
+ d'Indy took his place. Under these two directors a quite important place <a name="page271" id="page271"/>was given to old and
+ classical music by composers such as Palestrina, Vittoria, Josquin, Bach,
+ H&auml;ndel, Rameau, Gluck, Beethoven, Schumann, Liszt, and Brahms. Foreign
+ contemporary music only occupied a very limited place. Wagner's name only appears
+ once, in a transcription of the <i>Venusberg</i> for the pianoforte; and Richard
+ Strauss's name figures only against his Quartette. Grieg had his hour of popularity
+ there about 1887, as well as the Russians&mdash;Moussorgski, Borodine,
+ Rimsky-Korsakow, Liadow, and Glazounow&mdash;whom M. Debussy has perhaps helped to
+ make known to us. At the present moment the Society seems more exclusively French
+ than ever; and the influence of M. Vincent d'Indy and the school of Franck is
+ predominant. That is only natural; the <i>Soci&eacute;t&eacute; Nationale</i> most
+ truly earned its title to glory by discerning C&eacute;sar Franck's genius; for the
+ Society was a little sanctuary where the great artist was honoured at a time when he
+ was ignored or laughed at by the rest of the world. This character of a sanctuary was
+ kept even after victory. In its general programme of 1903-1904, the Society reminded
+ us with pride that it had remained faithful to the promises made in 1871; and it
+ added that if, in order to permit its members to keep abreast of the general progress
+ of art, it had little by little allowed classical masterpieces and modern foreign
+ works of interest on its programmes, it had, however, always kept its guest-chamber
+ open, and shaped many a future reputation there.</p>
+ <p>Nothing is truer. The <i>Soci&eacute;t&eacute; Nationale</i> is indeed <a name="page272" id="page272"/>a guest-chamber,
+ where for the past thirty years a guest-chamber art and guest-chamber opinions have
+ been formed; and from it some of the profoundest and most poetic French music has
+ been derived, such as Franck's and Debussy's chamber-music. But its atmosphere is
+ becoming daily more rarefied. That is a danger. It is to be feared that this art and
+ thought may be absorbed by the decadent subtleties or pedantic scholasticism which is
+ apt to accompany all coteries&mdash;in short, that its music will be salon-music
+ rather than chamber-music. Even the Society itself seems to have felt this at times;
+ and at different periods has sought contact with the general public, and put itself
+ into direct communication with it. "It becomes more and more necessary," wrote M.
+ Saint-Sa&euml;ns, "that French composers should find something intermediate between
+ an intimate hearing of their music and a performance of it before the general
+ public&mdash;something which would not be a speculative thing like a big concert, but
+ which would be analogous to the artistic attraction of an exhibition of painting, and
+ which would dare everything. It is a new aim for the <i>Soci&eacute;t&eacute;
+ Nationale</i>." But it does not seem that it has yet attained this goal, nor that it
+ is near attaining it, despite some not quite happy attempts.</p>
+ <p>But at least the <i>Soci&eacute;t&eacute; Nationale</i> has gloriously achieved
+ the task it set itself. In thirty years it has created in Paris a little centre of
+ earnest composers of symphonies and chamber-music, and a cultured public that seems
+ able to understand them.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <a name="page273" id="page273"/>
+ <h4>2. <i>The Grand Symphony Concerts</i></h4>
+ <p>Although it was an urgent matter that young French composers should unite to
+ withstand the general indifference of the public, it was more urgent still that that
+ indifference should be attacked, and that music should be brought within reach of
+ ordinary people. It was a matter of taking up and completing Pasdeloup's work in a
+ more artistic and more modern spirit.</p>
+ <p>A publisher of music, Georges Hartmann, feeling the forces that were drawing
+ together in French art, gathered about him the greater part of the talented men of
+ the young school&mdash;Franck, Bizet, Saint-Sa&euml;ns, Massenet, Delibes, Lalo, A.
+ de Castillon, Th. Dubois, Guiraud, Godard, Paladilhe, and Jonci&egrave;res&mdash;and
+ undertook to produce their works in public. He rented the Od&eacute;on theatre, and
+ got together an orchestra, the conductorship of which he entrusted to M.
+ &Eacute;douard Colonne. And on 2 March, 1873, the <i>Concert National</i> was
+ inaugurated in a musical matin&eacute;e, where M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns played his
+ <i>Concerto in G minor</i> and Mme. Viardot sang Schubert's <i>Roi des Aulnes</i>. In
+ the first year six ordinary concerts were given, and, besides that, two sacred
+ concerts with choirs, at which C&eacute;sar Franck's <i>R&eacute;demption</i> and
+ Massenet's <i>Marie-Magdeleine</i> were performed. In 1874 the Od&eacute;on was
+ abandoned for the Ch&acirc;telet. This venture attracted some attention, and the
+ concerts were patronised by the public; but the financial results were not <a name="page274" id="page274"/>great.<a
+ name="FNanchor_216_216" id="FNanchor_216_216"></a><a href="#Footnote_216_216"
+ class="fnanchor">[216]</a> Hartmann was discouraged and wished to give the whole
+ thing up. But M. &Eacute;douard Colonne conceived the idea of turning his orchestra
+ into a society, and of continuing the work under the name of <i>Association
+ Artistique</i>. Among the artist-founders were MM. Bruneau, Benjamin Godard, and Paul
+ Hillemacher. Its early days were full of struggle; but owing to the perseverance of
+ the Association all obstacles were finally overcome. In 1903 a festival was held to
+ celebrate its thirtieth anniversary. During these thirty years it had given more than
+ eight hundred concerts, and had performed the works of about three hundred composers,
+ of which half were French. The four composers most frequently heard at the
+ Ch&acirc;telet were Saint-Sa&euml;ns, Wagner, Beethoven, and Berlioz.<a
+ name="FNanchor_217_217" id="FNanchor_217_217"></a><a href="#Footnote_217_217"
+ class="fnanchor">[217]</a></p>
+ <p>Berlioz is almost the exclusive property of the Ch&acirc;telet. Not only have they
+ performed his works there more frequently than anywhere else,<a
+ name="FNanchor_218_218" id="FNanchor_218_218"></a><a href="#Footnote_218_218"
+ class="fnanchor">[218]</a> but they are better understood there than in other places.
+ The Colonne orchestra and its conductor, gifted with great warmth of
+ spirit,&mdash;though it is sometimes a little intemperate&mdash;are rather bothered
+ by works of a classic nature and by those that show contemplative feeling; but they
+ give wonderful ex<a name="page275"
+ id="page275"/>pression to Berlioz's tumultuous romanticism, his
+ poetic enthusiasm, and the bright and delicate colouring of his paintings and his
+ musical landscapes. Although Berlioz has his place at the Chevillard and
+ Conservatoire concerts, it is to the Ch&acirc;telet that his followers flock; and
+ their enthusiasm has not been affected by the campaign that for several years has
+ been directed against Berlioz by some French critics under the influence of the
+ younger musical party&mdash;the followers of d'Indy and Debussy.</p>
+ <p>It is also at the Ch&acirc;telet that the keenest musical passion has been
+ preserved in the public, even to this day. Thanks to the size of the theatre, which
+ is one of the largest in Paris, and to the great number of cheap seats, you may
+ always find there a number of young students who make the most interested kind of
+ public possible. And the music is something more than a pleasure to them&mdash;it is
+ a necessity. There are some that make great sacrifices in order to have a seat at the
+ Sunday concerts. And many of these young men and women live all the week on the
+ thought of forgetting the world for a few hours in musical enjoyment. Such a public
+ did not exist in France before 1870. It is to the honour of the Ch&acirc;telet and
+ the Pasdeloup concerts to have created it.</p>
+ <p>&Eacute;douard Colonne has done more than educate musical taste in France; for no
+ one has worked harder than he to break down the barriers that separated the French
+ public from the art of other lands; and, at the same time, he has himself helped
+ <a name="page276" id="page276"/>to make French
+ art known to foreigners. When he himself was conducting concerts all over Europe he
+ entrusted the conductorship at the Ch&acirc;telet to the great German
+ <i>Kapellmeister</i> and to foreign composers&mdash;to Richard Strauss, Grieg,
+ Tschaikowsky, Hans Richter, Hermann Levi, Mottl, Nikisch, Mengelberg, Siegfried
+ Wagner, and many others. No other conductor has done so much for Parisian music
+ during the last thirty years; and we must not forget it.<a name="FNanchor_219_219"
+ id="FNanchor_219_219"></a><a href="#Footnote_219_219" class="fnanchor">[219]</a></p>
+ <p>The Lamoureux concerts have had from the beginning a very different character from
+ the Colonne concerts. That difference lies partly in the personality of the two
+ conductors, and partly in the fact that the Lamoureux concerts, although of later
+ date than the Colonne concerts by less than ten years, represent a new generation in
+ music. The progress of the musical public was singularly rapid: hardly had they
+ explored the rich treasure-house of Berlioz's music than they were making discoveries
+ in the world of Wagner. And in that world they needed a new guide, who had intimate
+ knowledge of Wagner's art and of German art in general. Charles Lamoureux was that
+ guide. In 1873 he conducted special performances of Bach and H&auml;ndel, given by
+ the <i>Societ&eacute; de l'Harmonie sacr&eacute;e</i>. After leaving the
+ conductorship of the Opera, he inaugurated, on 21 October, 1881, at the
+ Ch&acirc;teau-d'Eau theatre, the <i>Soci&eacute;t&eacute; des Nouveaux Concerts</i>.
+ These concerts had at first very comprehensive programmes of <a
+ name="page277" id="page277"/>every kind of music and every kind of
+ school. At the first concert there were works of Beethoven, H&auml;ndel, Gluck,
+ Sacchini, Cimarosa, and Berlioz. In the first year Lamoureux had Beethoven's <i>Ninth
+ Symphony</i> performed, as well as a large part of <i>Lohengrin</i>, and numerous
+ works of young French musicians. Various compositions of Lalo, Vincent d'Indy, and
+ Chabrier, were performed there for the first time. But it was especially to the study
+ of Wagner's works that Lamoureux most gladly devoted himself. It was he who gave the
+ first hearings of Wagner in their entirety in France, such as the first and second
+ act of <i>Tristan</i>, in 1884-1885. The Wagnerian battle was still going on at that
+ time, as the notice printed at the head of the programme of <i>Tristan</i> shows.</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"The management of the <i>Soci&eacute;t&eacute; des Nouveaux Concerts</i> is
+ desirous of avoiding any disturbance during the performance of the second act of
+ <i>Tristan</i>, and urgently and respectfully begs that the audience will abstain
+ from giving any mark of their approval or disapproval before the end of the
+ act."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>The same year, in the Eden theatre, to which the concerts had been transferred,
+ Lamoureux conducted, for the first time in Paris, the first act of the
+ <i>Walk&uuml;re</i>. In these concerts the tenor, Van Dyck, made his
+ <i>d&eacute;but</i>; later, he was one of the leading performers at Bayreuth. In
+ 1886-1887 Lamoureux rehearsed and conducted the only <a
+ name="page278" id="page278"/>performance of <i>Lohengrin</i> at the
+ Eden theatre. Disturbances in the streets prevented further performances. Lamoureux
+ then established himself in the concert-room of the Cirque des Champs
+ &Eacute;lys&eacute;es, where for eleven years he has given what are called the
+ <i>Concerts-Lamoureux</i>. He continued to spread the knowledge of Wagner's works,
+ and has sometimes had the help of some of the most celebrated of the Bayreuth
+ artists, among others, that of Mme. Materna and Lilli Lehmann. At the end of the
+ season of 1897 Lamoureux wished to disband his orchestra in order to conduct concerts
+ abroad. But the members of the orchestra decided to remain together under the name of
+ the <i>Association des Concerts-Lamoureux</i>, with Lamoureux's son-in-law, M.
+ Camille Chevillard, as conductor. But Lamoureux was not long before he returned to
+ the conductorship of the concerts, which had now returned to the Ch&acirc;teau-d'Eau
+ theatre; and a few months before his death, in 1899, he conducted the first
+ performance of <i>Tristan</i> at the Nouveau theatre. And so he had the happiness of
+ being present at the complete triumph of the cause for which he had fought so
+ stubbornly for nearly twenty years.<a name="FNanchor_220_220"
+ id="FNanchor_220_220"></a><a href="#Footnote_220_220" class="fnanchor">[220]</a></p>
+ <p>Lamoureux's performances of Wagner's works have been among the best that have ever
+ been given. He had a regard for the work as a whole and a care for its details, to
+ which the Colonne orchestra did not quite attain. On the other hand, Lamoureux's
+ <a name="page279" id="page279"/>defect was the
+ exuberant liveliness with which he interpreted compositions of a romantic nature. He
+ did not fully understand these works; and although he knew much more about classic
+ art than his rival, he rendered its letter rather than its spirit, and paid such
+ sedulous attention to detail that music like Beethoven's lost its intensity and its
+ life. But both his talents and his defects fitted him to be an excellent interpreter
+ of the young neo-Wagnerian school, the principal representatives of which in France
+ were then M. Vincent d'Indy and M. Emmanuel Chabrier. Lamoureux had need, to a
+ certain extent, to be himself directed either by the living traditions of Bayreuth,
+ or by the thought of modern and living composers; and the greatest service he
+ rendered to French music was his creation, thanks to his extreme care for material
+ perfection, of an orchestra that was marvellously equipped for symphonic music.</p>
+ <p>This seeking for perfection has been carried on by his successor, M. Camille
+ Chevillard, whose orchestra is even more refined still. One may say, I think, that it
+ is to-day the best in Paris. M. Chevillard is more attracted by pure music than
+ Lamoureux was; and he rightly finds that dramatic music has been occupying too large
+ a place in Parisian concerts. In a letter published by the <i>Mercure de France</i>,
+ in January, 1903, he reproaches the educators of public taste with having fostered a
+ liking for opera, and with not having awakened a respect for pure music: "Any four
+ bars from one of Mozart's quartettes have," he says, "a greater <a name="page280" id="page280"/>educational value
+ than a showy scene from an opera." No one in Paris conducts classic works better than
+ he, especially the works that possess clean, plastic beauty; and in Germany itself it
+ would be difficult to find anyone who would give a more delicate interpretation of
+ some of H&auml;ndel's and Mozart's symphonic works. His orchestra has kept, moreover,
+ the superiority that it had already acquired in its repertory of Wagner's works. But
+ M. Chevillard has communicated a warmth and energy of rhythm to it that it did not
+ possess before. His interpretations of Beethoven, even if they are somewhat
+ superficial, are very full of life. Like Lamoureux, he has hardly caught the spirit
+ of French romantic works&mdash;of Berlioz, and still less of Franck and his school;
+ and he seems to have but lukewarm sympathy for the more recent developments of French
+ music. But he understands well the German romantic composers, especially Schumann,
+ for whom he has a marked liking; and he tried, though without great success, to
+ introduce Liszt and Brahms into France, and was the first among us to attract real
+ attention to Russian music, whose brilliant and delicate colouring he excels in
+ rendering. And, like M. Colonne, he has brought the great German <i>Kapellmeister</i>
+ among us&mdash;Weingartner, Nikisch, and Richard Strauss, the last mentioned having
+ directed the first performance in Paris of his symphonic poems, <i>Zarathustra</i>,
+ <i>Don Quixote</i>, and <i>Heldenleben</i>, at the Lamoureux concerts.</p>
+ <p>Nothing could have better completed the musical <a
+ name="page281" id="page281"/>education of the public than this
+ continuous defile, for the past ten years, of <i>Kapellmeister</i> and foreign
+ virtuosi, and the comparisons that their different styles and interpretations
+ afforded. Nothing has better helped forward the improvement of Parisian orchestras
+ than the emulation brought about by the meetings between Parisian conductors and
+ those of other countries. At present our own conductors are worthy rivals of the best
+ in Germany. The string instruments are good; the wood has kept its old French
+ superiority; and though the brass is still the weakest part of our orchestras, it has
+ made great progress. One may still criticise the grouping of orchestras at concerts,
+ for it is often defective; there is a disproportion between the different families of
+ instruments and, in consequence, between their different sonorities, some of which
+ are too thin and others too dull. But these defects are fairly common all over Europe
+ to-day. Unhappily, more peculiar to France is the insufficiency or poor quality of
+ the choirs, whose progress has been far from keeping pace with that of the
+ orchestras. It is to this side of music that the directors of concerts must now bring
+ their efforts to bear.</p>
+ <p>The Lamoureux Concerts have not had as stable a dwelling-place as the
+ Ch&acirc;telet Concerts. They have wandered about Paris from one room to
+ another&mdash;from the Cirque d'Hiver to the Cirque d'&Eacute;t&eacute;, and from the
+ Ch&acirc;teau-d'Eau to the Nouveau Th&eacute;&acirc;tre. At the present moment they
+ are in the Salle Gaveau, which is much too small for them. In spite of the progress
+ of music and musical taste, Paris <a name="page282"
+ id="page282"/>has not yet a concert-hall, as the smallest provincial
+ towns in Germany have; and this shameful indifference, unworthy of the artistic
+ renown of Paris, obliges the symphonic societies to take refuge in circuses or
+ theatres, which they share with other kinds of performers, though the acoustics of
+ these places are not intended for concerts. And so it happens that for six years the
+ Chevillard Concerts have been given at the back of a music-hall, which has the same
+ entrance, and which is only separated from the concert-room by a small passage, so
+ that the roaring choruses of a <i>danse du venire</i> may mingle with an adagio of
+ Beethoven's or a scene from the Tetralogy. Worse than this, the smallness of the
+ place into which these concerts have been crammed has been a serious obstacle in the
+ way of making them popular. Nevertheless, in the promenade and galleries of the
+ Nouveau Th&eacute;&acirc;tre, in later years, arose what may be called a little war
+ over concertos. It was rather a curious episode in the history of the musical taste
+ of Paris, and merits a few words here. In every country, but especially in those
+ countries that are least musical, a virtuoso profits by public favour, often to the
+ detriment of the work he is performing; for what is most liked in music is the
+ musician. The virtuoso&mdash;whose importance must not be underrated, and who is
+ worthy of honour when he is a reverential and sympathetic interpreter of
+ genius&mdash;has too often taken a lamentable part, especially in Latin countries, in
+ the degrading of musical taste; for empty virtuosity makes a desert of art. The <a name="page283" id="page283"/>fashion of inept
+ fantasias and acrobatic variations has, it is true, gone by; but of late years
+ virtuosity has returned in an offensive way, and, sheltering itself under the solemn
+ classical name of "concertos," it usurped a place of rather exaggerated importance in
+ symphony concerts, and especially in M. Chevillard's concerts&mdash;a place which
+ Lamoureux would never have given it. Then the younger and more enthusiastic part of
+ the public began to revolt; and very soon, with perfect impartiality and quite
+ indiscriminately, began to hiss famous and obscure virtuosi alike in their
+ performance of any concerto, whether it was splendid or detestable. Nothing found
+ favour with them&mdash;neither the playing of Paderewski, nor the music of
+ Saint-Sa&euml;ns and the great masters. The management of the concerts went its own
+ way and tried in vain to put out the disturbers, and to forbid them entry to the
+ concert-room; and the battle went on for a long time, and critics were drawn into it.
+ But in spite of its ridiculous excesses, and the barbarism of the methods by which
+ the parterre expressed its opinions, that quarrel is not without interest. It proved
+ how a passion and enthusiasm for music had been roused in France; and the passion,
+ though unjust in its expression, was more fruitful and of far greater worth than
+ indifference.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <h4>3. <i>The Schola Cantorum</i></h4>
+ <p>The Lamoureux Concerts had served their purpose, and, in their turn, their heroic
+ mission came <a name="page284" id="page284"/>to
+ an end. They had forced Wagner on Paris; and Paris, as always, had overshot the mark,
+ and could swear by no one but Wagner. French musicians were translating Gounod's or
+ Massenet's ideas into Wagner's style; Parisian critics repeated Wagner's theories at
+ random, whether they understood them or not&mdash;generally when they did not
+ understand them. A reaction was inevitable directly Paris was well saturated with
+ Wagner; and it came about in 1890, among a chosen few, some of whom had been, and
+ were even still, under Wagner's influence. It was at first only a mild reaction, and
+ showed itself in a return to the classics of the past and to the great primitives in
+ music.</p>
+ <p>There had been several attempts in this direction before, but none of them had
+ succeeded in making any impression on the mass of the public. In 1843, Joseph
+ Napol&eacute;on Ney, Prince of Moszkowa, founded in Paris a society for the
+ performance of religious and classical vocal music. This society, which the Prince
+ himself conducted in his own house, set itself to perform the vocal works of the
+ sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.<a name="FNanchor_221_221"
+ id="FNanchor_221_221"></a><a href="#Footnote_221_221" class="fnanchor">[221]</a></p>
+ <p>In 1853, Louis Niedermeyer founded in Paris an <i>&Eacute;cole de musique
+ religieuse et classique</i>, which strove "to form singers, organists, choir-masters,
+ and composers of music, by the study of the classic works of the great masters of the
+ fifteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth <a name="page285"
+ id="page285"/>centuries." This school, subsidised by the State, was a
+ nursery for some real musicians. It reckoned among its pupils some noted composers,
+ conductors, organists, and historians; among others, M. Gabriel Faur&eacute;, M.
+ Andr&eacute; Messager, M. Eug&egrave;ne Gigout, and M. Henry Expert. M.
+ Saint-Sa&euml;ns was a professor there, and became its president. Nearly five hundred
+ organists, choir-masters, and professors of music of the Conservatoire and other
+ French colleges were trained there. But this school, serious in intention, and a
+ refuge for the classic spirit in the midst of the prevailing bad taste, did not
+ trouble itself about influencing the public, and, in fact, almost ignored it.</p>
+ <p>Lamoureux attempted in 1873 to perform the great choral works of Bach and
+ H&auml;ndel; and in 1878 the celebrated French organist, M. Alexandre Guilmant,
+ ventured to give concerts at the Trocad&eacute;ro for the organ and orchestra, which
+ were devoted to religious music of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. But the
+ deplorable acoustics of the concert-room had a prejudicial effect on the works that
+ were performed there; and the public did not respond very warmly to M. Guilmant's
+ efforts, and seemed from the first only to find an historical interest in the
+ masterpieces, and to miss their depth and life altogether.</p>
+ <p>Then a pupil of Franck's, M. Henry Expert, who began his admirable works on
+ Musical History in 1882, laid the foundation of the <i>Soci&eacute;t&eacute; J.S.
+ Bach</i>, in order to spread the knowledge of ancient music written between the
+ twelfth and eighteenth cen<a name="page286"
+ id="page286"/>turies. And he succeeded in interesting in his
+ undertaking, not only the principal French musicians, such as C&eacute;sar Franck,
+ Saint-Sa&euml;ns, and Gounod, but also foreigners, such as Hans von B&uuml;low,
+ Tschaikowsky, Grieg, Sgambati, and Gevaert. Unhappily this society never got farther
+ than arranging what it wanted to do, and only sketched out the plans that were
+ realised later by Charles Bordes.</p>
+ <p>The general public were not really interested in the art of the old musicians
+ until the <i>Association des Chanteurs de Saint-Gervais</i> was founded in 1892 by
+ Charles Bordes, the choirmaster of the church of Saint-Gervais. The immediate success
+ and the noisy renown of the Society were due to other things besides the talent of
+ its conductor, who combined with a lively artistic intelligence both common-sense and
+ energy and a remarkable gift for organisation&mdash;it was due partly to the help of
+ favourable circumstances, partly to the surfeit of Wagnerism, of which I have just
+ spoken, and partly to the birth of a new religious art, which had sprung up since the
+ death of C&eacute;sar Franck round the memory of that great musician.</p>
+ <p>It is not my intention here to write an appreciation of C&eacute;sar Franck's
+ genius, but it is not possible to understand the musical movement in Paris of the
+ last fifteen years if one does not take into account the importance of his teaching.
+ The organ class at the Conservatoire, where in 1872 Franck succeeded his old master
+ Benoist, was for a long time, as M. Vincent d'Indy says, "the true centre for the
+ <a name="page287" id="page287"/>study of
+ Composition at the Conservatoire. Many of his fellow-workers could never bring
+ themselves to look upon him as one of themselves, because he had the boldness to see
+ in art something other than the means of earning a living. Indeed, C&eacute;sar
+ Franck was not of them; and they made him feel this." But the young students made no
+ mistake about the matter. "At this time," M. d'Indy also tells us,<a
+ name="FNanchor_222_222" id="FNanchor_222_222"></a><a href="#Footnote_222_222"
+ class="fnanchor">[222]</a> "that is to say from 1872 to 1876, the three courses of
+ Advanced Musical Composition were given by three professors who were not at all
+ fitted for their work. One was Victor Mass&eacute;, a composer of simple light operas
+ and a man with no understanding of a symphony, who was very frequently ill and had to
+ entrust his teaching to one of his pupils; another was Henri Reber, an oldish
+ musician with narrow and dogmatic ideas; and the third was Fran&ccedil;ois Bazin, who
+ was not capable of distinguishing in his pupil's fugues a false answer from a true
+ one, and whose highest title to glory is derived from a composition called <i>Le
+ Voyage en Chine</i>. So it is not surprising that C&eacute;sar Franck's teaching,
+ founded on that of Bach and Beethoven, but admitting, as well, imagination and all
+ new and liberal ideas, did, at that time, draw to him all young minds that had lofty
+ ambitions and that were really in love with their art. And so, quite unconsciously,
+ the master attracted to himself all the sincere and artistic talent that was
+ scattered <a name="page288" id="page288"/>about
+ the different classes of the Conservatoire, as well as that of his outside
+ pupils."</p>
+ <p>Among those who received his direct teaching<a name="FNanchor_223_223"
+ id="FNanchor_223_223"></a><a href="#Footnote_223_223" class="fnanchor">[223]</a> were
+ Henri Duparc, Alexis de Castillon, Vincent d'Indy, Ernest Chausson, Pierre de
+ Br&eacute;ville, Augusta Holmes, Louis de Serres, Charles Bordes, Guy Ropartz, and
+ Guillaume Lekeu. And if to these we add the pupils in the organ classes, who also
+ came under his influence, we have, among others, Samuel Rousseau, Gabriel
+ Piern&eacute;, Auguste Chapuis, Paul Vidal, and Georges Marty; and also the virtuosi
+ who were for some time intimate with him, such as Armand Parent and Eug&egrave;ne
+ Ysaye, to whom Franck dedicated his violin sonata. And if one thinks, too, of the
+ artists who, though not his pupils, felt his power&mdash;artists such as Gabriel
+ Faur&eacute;, Alexandre Guilmant, Emmanuel Chabrier, and Paul Dukas&mdash;one may see
+ that nearly the whole musical generation of Paris of that time took its inspiration
+ from C&eacute;sar Franck. And it was largely with the intention of perpetuating his
+ teaching that his pupils, Charles Bordes and Vincent d'Indy, and his friend,
+ Alexandre Guilmant, founded in 1894, four years after his death, the <i>Schola
+ Cantorum</i>, which has kept his memory alive ever since.</p>
+ <p>"Our revered father, Franck," said Vincent d'Indy, in a speech, "is in some ways
+ the grandfather of the <i>Schola Cantorum</i>; for it is his system of teaching that
+ we apply and try to carry on here."<a name="FNanchor_224_224" id="FNanchor_224_224"></a><a href="#Footnote_224_224"
+ class="fnanchor">[224]</a><a name="page289"
+ id="page289"/></p>
+ <p>The influence of Franck was twofold: it was artistic and moral. On the one hand he
+ was, if I may so put it, an admirable professor of musical architecture; he founded a
+ school of symphony and chamber-music such as France had never had before, which in
+ certain directions was newer and more daring than that of the German symphony
+ writers. And, on the other hand, he exercised by his own character a memorable
+ influence over all those who came into contact with him. His profound faith, that
+ fine, indulgent, and calm faith, shone round him like a glory. The Catholic party,
+ who were awakening to new life in France just then, tried, after his death, to
+ identify his ideals with their own. But this was, as we have said elsewhere,<a
+ name="FNanchor_225_225" id="FNanchor_225_225"></a><a href="#Footnote_225_225"
+ class="fnanchor">[225]</a> to narrow Franck's mind; for its great charm lay in its
+ harmonious union of religion and liberty, which never limited its artistic sympathies
+ to an exclusive ideal. The composer's son, M. Georges C&eacute;sar-Franck, has in
+ vain protested against this monopoly of his father, and says:</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"According to certain writers, who wish to reduce everything to a dead level and
+ deduce all things from a single cause, C&eacute;sar Franck was a mystic whose true
+ domain was religious music. Nothing could be wider of the mark. The public is given
+ to generalisations, and is too easily gulled. They will judge a composer on a
+ single work, or a group of works, and class him once and for all.... In reality, my
+ father was a man of all-round <a name="page290"
+ id="page290"/>accomplishments. As a finished musician, he was
+ master of every form of composition. He wrote both religious and secular
+ music&mdash;melodies, dances, pastorales, oratorios, symphonic poems, symphonies,
+ sonatas, trios, and operas. He did not confine his attention to any particular kind
+ of work to the exclusion of other kinds; he was able to express himself in any way
+ he chose."<a name="FNanchor_226_226" id="FNanchor_226_226"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_226_226" class="fnanchor">[226]</a></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>But as what was really religious in him found itself in agreement with a current
+ of thought that was rather powerful at that time, it was inevitable that this one
+ side of his genius should be first brought to light, and that religious music should
+ be the first to benefit by his work. And also one of the early manifestos<a
+ name="FNanchor_227_227" id="FNanchor_227_227"></a><a href="#Footnote_227_227"
+ class="fnanchor">[227]</a> of the <i>Schola Cantorum</i> dealt with the reform of
+ sacred music by carrying it back to great ancient models; and its first decision was
+ as follows: "Gregorian chant shall rest for all time the fountain-head and the base
+ of the Church's music, and shall constitute the only model by which it may be truly
+ judged."<a name="FNanchor_228_228" id="FNanchor_228_228"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_228_228" class="fnanchor">[228]</a></p>
+ <p><a name="page291" id="page291"/>They added
+ to this, however, music <i>&agrave; la Palestrina</i>, and any music that conformed
+ to its principles or was inspired by its example. Such archaic ideas would certainly
+ never create a new kind of religious music, but at least they have helped to restore
+ the old art; and they received their official consecration in the famous letter
+ written by Pope Pius X on the Re-form of Sacred Music.</p>
+ <p>The achievement of an artistic ideal so restricted as this would not have
+ sufficed, however, to assure the success of the <i>Schola Cantorum</i>, nor establish
+ its authority with a public that was, whatever people may say, only lukewarm in its
+ religion, and that would only interest itself in the religious art of other days as
+ it would in a passing fashion. But the spirit of curiosity and the meaning of modern
+ life began to weigh little by little with the Schola's principles. After singing
+ Palestrinian and Gregorian chants at the Church of Saint-Gervais during Holy Week,
+ they played Carissimi, Sch&uuml;tz, and the Italian and German masters of the
+ seventeenth century. Then came Bach's cantatas; and their performance, given by M.
+ Bordes in the Salle d'Harcourt, attracted large audiences and started the cult of
+ this master in Paris. Then they sang Rameau and Gluck; and, finally, all ancient
+ music, sacred or secular, was approved. And so this little school, <a name="page292" id="page292"/>which had been
+ consecrated to the cult of ancient religious music, and had made so modest a
+ beginning,<a name="FNanchor_229_229" id="FNanchor_229_229"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_229_229" class="fnanchor">[229]</a> developed into a School of Art
+ capable of satisfying modern wants; and in 1900, when M. Vincent d'Indy became
+ president of the <i>Schola</i>, it was decided to move the school into larger
+ premises in the Rue Saint-Jacques.</p>
+ <p>The programme of this new school was explained by M. Vincent d'Indy in his
+ Inauguration speech on 2 November, 1900, and showed how he based the foundations of
+ musical teaching upon history.</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"Art, in its journey across the ages, is a microcosm which has, like the world
+ itself, successive stages of youth, maturity, and old age; but it never
+ dies&mdash;it renews itself perpetually. It is not like a perfect circle; it is
+ like a spiral, and in its growth is always mounting higher. I believe in making
+ students follow the same path that art itself has followed, so that they shall
+ undergo during their term of study the same transformations that music itself has
+ undergone during the centuries. In this way they will come out much better armed
+ for the difficulties of modern art, since they will have lived, so to speak, the
+ life of art, and followed the natural and inevitable order of the forms that made
+ up the different epochs of artistic development."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p><a name="page293" id="page293"/>M. d'Indy
+ claims that this system may be applied as successfully to instrumentalists and
+ singers as to future composers. "For it is as profitable for them to know," he says,
+ "how to sing a liturgic monody properly, or to be able to play a Corelli sonata in a
+ suitable style, as it is for composers to study the structure of a motet or a suite."
+ M. d'Indy, moreover, obliged all students, without distinction, to attend the
+ lectures on vocal music; and, besides that, he instituted a special class to teach
+ the conducting of orchestras&mdash;which was something quite new to France. His
+ object, as he clearly said, was to give a new form to modern music by means of a
+ knowledge of the music of the past.</p>
+ <p>On this subject he says:</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"Where shall we find the quickening life that will give us fresh forms and
+ formulas? The source is not really difficult to discover. Do not let us seek it
+ anywhere but in the decorative art of the plain-song singers, in the architectural
+ art of the age of Palestrina, and in the expressive art of the great Italians of
+ the seventeenth century. It is there, and <i>there alone</i>, that we shall find
+ melodic craft, rhythmic cadences, and a harmonic magnificence that is really
+ new&mdash;if our modern spirit can only learn how to absorb their nutritious
+ essence. And so I prescribe for all pupils in the School the careful study of
+ classic forms, because <i>they alone</i> are able to give the elements of a new
+ life to our music, which <a name="page294"
+ id="page294"/>will be founded on principles that are sane, solid,
+ and trustworthy."<a name="FNanchor_230_230" id="FNanchor_230_230"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_230_230" class="fnanchor">[230]</a></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>This fine and intelligent eclecticism was likely to develop a critical spirit, but
+ was rather less adapted to form original personalities. In any case, however, it was
+ excellent discipline in the formation of musical taste; and, in truth, the
+ <i>&Eacute;cole Sup&eacute;rieure de musique</i> of the Rue Saint-Jacques became a
+ new Conservatoire, both more modern and more learned than the old Conservatoire, and
+ freer, and yet less free, because more self-satisfied. The school developed very
+ quickly. From having twenty-one pupils in 1896, it had three hundred and twenty in
+ 1908. Eminent musicians and professors learned in the history and science of music
+ taught there, and M. d'Indy himself took the Composition classes.<a
+ name="FNanchor_231_231" id="FNanchor_231_231"></a><a href="#Footnote_231_231"
+ class="fnanchor">[231]</a> And in its short career the <i>Schola</i> may already be
+ credited with the training of young composers, such as MM. Roussel, D&eacute;odat de
+ S&eacute;verac, Gustave Bret, Labey, Samazeuilh, R. de Cast&eacute;ra,
+ S&eacute;rieyx, Alquier, Coindreau, Estienne, Le Flem, and Groz; and to these may be
+ added M. d'Indy's private pupils, Witkowski, and one of the foremost of modern
+ composers, Alberic Magnard.</p>
+ <p>Outside the influence that the School exercises by its teaching, its propaganda by
+ means of concerts and publications is very active. From its founda<a name="page295" id="page295"/>tion up to 1904 it
+ had given two hundred performances in one hundred and thirty provincial towns; more
+ than one hundred and fifty concerts in Paris, of which fifty were of orchestral and
+ choral music, sixty of organ music, and forty of chamber-music. These concerts have
+ been well attended by enthusiastic and appreciative audiences, and have been a school
+ for public taste. One does not look for perfect execution there,<a
+ name="FNanchor_232_232" id="FNanchor_232_232"></a><a href="#Footnote_232_232"
+ class="fnanchor">[232]</a> but for intelligent interpretations and a thirst for a
+ fuller knowledge of the great works of the past. They have revived Monteverde's
+ <i>Orfeo</i> and his <i>Incoronazione di Poppea</i>, which had been forgotten these
+ three centuries; and it was following an interest created by repeated performances of
+ Rameau at the <i>Schola</i><a name="FNanchor_233_233" id="FNanchor_233_233"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_233_233" class="fnanchor">[233]</a> that <i>Dardanus</i> was
+ performed at Dijon under M. d'Indy's direction, <i>Castor et Pollux</i> at
+ Montpellier under M. Charles Bordes' direction, and that in 1908 the Opera at Paris
+ gave <i>Hippolyte et Aricie</i>. Branches of the <i>Schola</i> have, been started at
+ Lyons, Marseilles, Bordeaux, Avignon, Montpellier, Nancy, &Eacute;pinal,
+ Montlu&ccedil;on, Saint-Chamond, and Saint-Jean-de<a
+ name="page296" id="page296"/>Luz.<a name="FNanchor_234_234"
+ id="FNanchor_234_234"></a><a href="#Footnote_234_234" class="fnanchor">[234]</a> A
+ publishing house has been associated with the School at Paris; and from this we get
+ Reviews, such as the <i>Tribune de Saint-Gervais</i>; publications of old music, such
+ as the <i>Anthologie des ma&icirc;tres religieux primitifs des XVe, XVIe, et XVIIe
+ si&egrave;cles</i>, edited by Charles Bordes; the <i>Archives des ma&icirc;tres de
+ l'orgue des XVIe, XVIIe, et XVIIIe si&egrave;cles</i>, edited by Alexandre Guilmant
+ and Andr&eacute; Pirro; the <i>Concerts spirituels de la Schola</i>, the new editions
+ of <i>Orfeo</i>, and the <i>Incoronazione di Poppea</i>, edited by M. Vincent d'Indy;
+ and publications of modern music, such as the <i>Collection du chant populaire</i>,
+ the <i>R&eacute;pertoire moderne de musique vocale et d'orgue</i>, and, notably, the
+ <i>&Eacute;dition mutuelle</i>, published by the composers themselves, whose property
+ it is.</p>
+ <p>And all this shows such a marvellous activity and gives evidence of such
+ whole-hearted enthusiasm that I cannot bring myself to join issue with the critics
+ who have lately attacked the <i>Schola</i>, though their attacks have been in some
+ degree merited. Pettiness is to be found even in great artists, and imperfection in
+ every human work; and defects reveal themselves most clearly after a victory has been
+ won. The <i>Schola</i> has not escaped the critical periods that accompany growth,
+ through which <a name="page297" id="page297"/>
+ every work must pass if it is to triumph and endure. Without doubt, the sudden
+ illness and premature retirement of the founder of the work, M. Charles Bordes,
+ deprived the <i>Schola</i> of one of its most active forces&mdash;a force that was
+ perhaps necessary for the school's successful development. For this man had been the
+ school's life and soul, and retired, worn out by the heavy labours which he had borne
+ alone during ten years.<a name="FNanchor_235_235" id="FNanchor_235_235"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_235_235" class="fnanchor">[235]</a></p>
+ <p>But M. d'Indy, like a courageous apostle, has continued the direction of the
+ <i>Schola</i> with a firm hand and unwearying care, despite his varied activities as
+ composer, professor, and <i>Kapellmeister</i>; and he is one of the surest and most
+ reliable guides for a young school of French music. And if his mind is rather given
+ to abstractions, and his moods are sometimes rather combative, and certain prejudices
+ (which are not always musical ones) make him lean towards ideals of reason and
+ immovable faith&mdash;and if at times his followers unconsciously distort his ideas,
+ and try to dam the stream which flows from life itself, I am convinced it is only the
+ <a name="page298" id="page298"/>passing
+ evidence of a reaction, perhaps a natural one, against the exaggerations they have
+ encountered, and that the <i>Schola</i> will always know how to avoid the rocks where
+ revolutionaries of the past have run aground and become the conservatives of the
+ morrow. I hope the <i>Schola</i> will never grow into the kind of aristocratic school
+ that builds walls about itself, but will always open wide its doors and welcome every
+ new force in music, even to such as have ideals opposed to its own. Its future renown
+ and the well-being of French art can only thus be maintained.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <h4>4. <i>The Chamber-Music Societies</i></h4>
+ <p>On parallel lines with the big symphony concerts and the new
+ <i>conservatoires</i>, societies were formed to spread the knowledge of, and form a
+ taste for, chamber-music. This music, so common in Germany, was almost unknown in
+ Paris before 1870. There was nothing but the Maurin Quartette, which gave five or six
+ concerts every winter in the Salle Pleyel, and played Beethoven's last quartettes
+ there. But these performances only attracted a small number of artists;<a
+ name="FNanchor_236_236" id="FNanchor_236_236"></a><a href="#Footnote_236_236"
+ class="fnanchor">[236]</a> and so far as the general public was concerned the
+ <i>Soci&eacute;t&eacute; des derniers quar<a name="page299"
+ id="page299"/>tuors de Beethoven</i> had the reputation for devoting
+ itself to a singular and incomprehensible kind of music that had been written by a
+ deaf man.</p>
+ <p>The true founder of chamber-music concerts in Paris was M. &Eacute;mile Lemoine,
+ who started the society called <i>La Trompette</i>. He has given us a history of his
+ work in the <i>Revue Musicale</i> (15 October, 1903). He was an engineer at the
+ &Eacute;cole Poly-technique; and after he had left school he formed, about 1860, a
+ quartette society of earnest amateurs, though they were not very skilled performers.
+ This little society continued to meet regularly, and after perfecting itself little
+ by little, finally opened its doors to the general public, which attended the
+ concerts in gradually increasing numbers. Then <i>La Trompette</i> came into being.
+ It prospered from the day that M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns&mdash;who was at that time a young
+ man&mdash;made its acquaintance. He was pleased with these gatherings, and became an
+ intimate friend of Lemoine; and he interested himself in the society, and induced
+ other celebrated artists to take an interest in it, too. Among its early friends were
+ MM. Alphonse Duvernoy, Di&eacute;mer, Pugno, Delsart, Breitner, Delaborde, Ch. de
+ B&eacute;riot, Fissot, Marsick, Lo&euml;b, R&eacute;my, and Holmann. With such
+ patronage, <i>La Trompette</i> soon acquired fame in the musical world, and "it
+ represented in classical chamber-music the semi-official part played by the
+ <i>Soci&eacute;t&eacute; des Concerts du Conservatoire</i> in classical orchestral
+ music. Rubinstein, Paderewski, Eug&egrave;ne d'Albert, Hans von B&uuml;low, Arthur de
+ Greef, Mme. Essipoff, and Mme. Menter, never missed getting a <a name="page300" id="page300"/>hearing there when
+ their tours led them to Paris; and to figure on the programme of <i>La Trompette</i>
+ was like the consecration of an artist." Such a society naturally contributed a great
+ deal to the spread of classical chamber-music in Paris. M. Lemoine writes:</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"Classical music was so little known to the musical public that even the
+ audiences of <i>La Trompette</i>, cultured as they were, did not at all understand
+ Beethoven's last quartettes; and my friends jeered at my taste for enigmas. This
+ only made me the more determined that they should hear one of these great works at
+ each concert. And sometimes I would give the same work at two or three concerts
+ running if I thought it had not been properly appreciated. In that case I used to
+ say before the performance: 'It seems to me that such-and-such a work has not been
+ quite understood at the last hearing; and as it is a really marvellous work, I am
+ sure that your feeling is that you do not know it sufficiently. So I have included
+ it in to-day's programme.'"<a name="FNanchor_237_237" id="FNanchor_237_237"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_237_237" class="fnanchor">[237]</a></p>
+ </div>
+ <p>These performances of sonatas, trios, and quartettes, were attentively listened to
+ by an audience of five or six hundred persons, the greater part of <a name="page301" id="page301"/>them cultured people,
+ students from the poly-technics and universities, who formed the kernel of a very
+ discerning and enthusiastic public for chamber-music.</p>
+ <p>By degrees, following the example of &Eacute;mile Lemoine, other quartette
+ societies were formed; and at present they are so numerous that it would be difficult
+ to name them all. And then there sprang up the same spirit of intelligent curiosity
+ that had induced the French <i>Kapellmeister</i> of the symphony concert societies
+ sometimes to introduce their German and Russian colleagues as conductors; and for
+ this purpose the <i>Nouvelle Soci&eacute;t&eacute; Philharmonique de Paris</i> was
+ founded, in 1901, on the initiative of Dr. Fr&auml;nkel and under the direction of M.
+ Emmanuel Rey, to give a hearing in Paris to the principal foreign quartette players.
+ And the profit was as great in one case as in the other; and the friendly rivalry
+ between French quartette players and those of other countries bore good fruit, and
+ gave us a fuller understanding of the inner character of German music.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <h4>5. <i>Musical Learning and the University</i></h4>
+ <p>While this movement was going on in the artistic world, scholars were taking their
+ share in it, and music was beginning to invade the University.</p>
+ <p>But the thing was brought about with some difficulty; for among these serious
+ people music did not count as a serious study. Music was thought <a name="page302" id="page302"/>of as an agreeable
+ art, a social accomplishment, and the idea of making it the subject of scientific
+ teaching must have been received with some amusement. Even up to the present time,
+ general histories of Art have refused to accord music a place, so little was thought
+ of it; and other arts were indignant at being mentioned in the same breath with it.
+ This is illustrated in the eternal dispute among M. Jourdain's masters, when the
+ fencing-master says:</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"And from this we know what great consideration is due to us in a State; and how
+ the science of Fencing is far above all useless sciences, such as dancing and
+ music."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>The first lectures on Aesthetics and Musical History were not given in France
+ until after the war of 1870.<a name="FNanchor_238_238" id="FNanchor_238_238"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_238_238" class="fnanchor">[238]</a> They were then given at the
+ Conservatoire, and, until quite lately, were the only lectures on Music of any
+ importance in Paris. Since 1878 they have been given in a very excellent way by M.
+ Bourgault-Ducoudray; but, as is only natural in a school of music, their character is
+ artistic rather than scientific, and takes the form of a sort of illustration of the
+ practical work that is done at the Conservatoire. And as for Parisian musical
+ criticism as a whole, it had, thirty years ago, an <a
+ name="page303" id="page303"/>almost exclusively literary character,
+ and was without technical precision or historical knowledge.</p>
+ <p>There again, on the territory of science, as on that of art, a new generation of
+ musicians had sprung up since the war, a group of men versed in the history and
+ aesthetics of music such as France had never known before. About 1890 the result of
+ their labours began to appear. Henry Expert published his fine work, <i>Ma&icirc;tres
+ Musiciens de la Renaissance</i>, in which he revived a whole century of French music.
+ Alexander Guilmant and Andr&eacute; Pirro brought to daylight the works of our
+ seventeenth and eighteenth century organists. Pierre Aubry studied mediaeval music.
+ The admirable publications of the Benedictines of Solesmes awoke at the <i>Schola</i>
+ and in the world outside it a taste for the study of religious music. Michel Brenet
+ attacked all epochs of musical history, and produced, by his solid learning, some
+ fine work. Julien Tiersot began the history of French folk-song, and rescued the
+ music of the Revolution from oblivion. The publisher Durand set to work on his great
+ editions of Rameau and Couperin. Towards 1893 the study of Music was introduced at
+ the Sorbonne by some young professors, who made the subject the theses for their
+ doctor's degree.<a name="FNanchor_239_239" id="FNanchor_239_239"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_239_239" class="fnanchor">[239]</a><a
+ name="page304" id="page304"/></p>
+ <p>This movement with regard to musical study grew rapidly; and the first
+ International Congress of Music, held in Paris at the time of the Universal
+ Exhibition of 1900, gave historians of music an opportunity of realising their
+ influence. In a few years, teaching about music was to be had everywhere. At first
+ there were the free lectures of M. Lionel Dauriac and M. Georges Houdard at the
+ Sorbonne, those of MM. Aubry, Gastou&eacute;, Pirro, and Vincent d'Indy at the
+ <i>Schola</i> and the <i>Institut Catholique</i>; and then, at the beginning of 1902,
+ there was the little Faculty of Music of the <i>&Eacute;cole des Hautes &Eacute;tudes
+ sociales</i>, making a centre for the efforts of French scholars of music; and, in
+ 1900, two official courses of lectures on Musical History and Aesthetics were given
+ at the College de France and the Sorbonne.</p>
+ <p>The progress of musical criticism was just as rapid. Professors of faculties, old
+ pupils of the &Eacute;cole Normale Sup&eacute;rieure, or the &Eacute;cole des
+ Chartes, such as Henri Lichtenberger, Louis Laloy, and Pierre Aubrey, examined works
+ of the past, and even of the present, by the exact methods of historical criticism.
+ Choir-masters and organists of great erudition, such as Andre Pirro and
+ Gastou&eacute;, and composers like Vincent d'Indy, Dukas, Debussy, and some others,
+ analysed their art with the confidence that the intimate knowledge of its practice
+ <a name="page305" id="page305"/>brings. A
+ perfect efflorescence of works on music appeared. A galaxy of distinguished writers
+ and a public were found to support two separate collections of Biographies of
+ Musicians (which were issued at the same time by different publishers), as well as
+ five or six good musical journals of a scientific character, some of which rivalled
+ the best in Germany. And, finally, the French section of the <i>Soci&eacute;t&eacute;
+ Internationale de Musique</i>, which was founded in 1899 in Berlin to establish
+ communication between the scholars of all countries, found so favourable a ground
+ with us that the number of its adherents in Paris alone is now over one hundred.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+ <h4>6. <i>Music and the People</i></h4>
+ <p>Thus music had almost come back to its own, as far as the higher kind of teaching
+ and the intellectual world were concerned. It remained for a place to be found for it
+ in other kinds of teaching; for there, and especially in secondary education, its
+ advance was less sure. It remained for us to make it enter into the life of the
+ nation and into the people's education. This was a difficult task, for in France art
+ has always had an aristocratic character; and it was a task in which neither the
+ State nor musicians were very interested. The Republic still continued to regard
+ music as something outside the people. There had even been opposition shown during
+ the last thirty years towards any <a name="page306"
+ id="page306"/>attempt at popular musical education. In the old days
+ of the Pasdeloup concerts one could pay seventy-five centimes for the cheapest
+ places, and have a seat for that; but at some of the symphony concerts to-day the
+ cheapest seats are two and four francs. And so the people that sometimes came to the
+ Pasdeloup concerts never come at all to the big concerts to-day.</p>
+ <p>And that is why one should applaud the enterprise of Victor Charpentier, who, in
+ March, 1905, founded a Symphonic Society of amateurs called <i>L'Orchestre</i>, to
+ give free hearings for the benefit of the people. And in that Paris, where forty
+ years ago one would have had a good deal of trouble to get together two or three
+ amateur quartettes, Victor Charpentier has been able to count on one hundred and
+ fifty good performers,<a name="FNanchor_240_240" id="FNanchor_240_240"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_240_240" class="fnanchor">[240]</a> who under his direction, or that
+ of Saint-Sa&euml;ns or Gabriel Faur&eacute;, have already given seventeen free
+ concerts, of which ten were given at the Trocad&eacute;ro.<a name="FNanchor_241_241"
+ id="FNanchor_241_241"></a><a href="#Footnote_241_241" class="fnanchor">[241]</a> It
+ is to be hoped that the State will help forward such a generous work for the people
+ in a rather more practical way than it has done up till now.<a
+ name="FNanchor_242_242" id="FNanchor_242_242"></a><a href="#Footnote_242_242"
+ class="fnanchor">[242]</a><a name="page307"
+ id="page307"/></p>
+ <p>Attempts have been made at different times to found a <i>Th&eacute;&acirc;tre
+ Lyrique Populaire</i>. But up to the present time none has succeeded. The first
+ attempts were made in 1847. M. Carvalho's old Th&eacute;&acirc;tre-Lyrique was never
+ a financial success, though quite distinguished performances of operas were given
+ there, such as Gounod's <i>Faust</i> and Gluck's <i>Orfeo</i>, with Mme. Viardot as
+ an interpreter and Berlioz as conductor; and the directors who followed
+ Carvalho&mdash;Rety, Pasdeloup, etc.&mdash;did not succeed any better. In 1875
+ Vizentini took over the Ga&icirc;t&eacute;, with a grant of two hundred thousand
+ francs and excellent artists; but he had to give it up. Since then all sorts of other
+ schemes have been tried by Viollet-le-Duc, Guimet, Lamoureux, Melchior de
+ Vog&uuml;&eacute; and Julien Goujon, Gabriel Parisot, Colonne and Milliet, Deville,
+ Lagoan&egrave;re, Corneille,<a name="page308"
+ id="page308"/>Gailhard, and Carr&eacute;; but none of them achieved
+ any success. At the moment, a new attempt is being made; and this time the thing
+ seems to show every sign of being a success.</p>
+ <p>But whatever may be the educational value of the theatre and concerts, they are
+ not complete enough in themselves for the people. To make their influence deep and
+ enduring it must be combined with teaching. Music, no less than every other
+ expression of thought, has no use for the illiterate.</p>
+ <p>So in this case there was everything to be done. There was no other popular
+ teaching but that of the numerous Galin-Paris-Chev&eacute; schools. These schools
+ have rendered great service, and are continuing to render it; but their simplified
+ methods are not without drawbacks and gaps. Their purpose is to teach the people a
+ musical language different from that of cultured people; and although it may not be
+ as difficult as is supposed to go from a knowledge of the one to a knowledge of the
+ other, it is always wrong to raise up a fresh barrier&mdash;however small it
+ is&mdash;between the cultured people and the other people, who in our own country are
+ already too widely separated.</p>
+ <p>And besides, it is not enough to know one's letters; one must also have books to
+ read. What books have the people had?&mdash;so far songs sung at the caf&eacute;
+ concerts and the stupid repertoires of choral societies. The folk-song had
+ practically disappeared, and was not yet ready for re-birth; for the populace, even
+ more readily than the cul<a name="page309"
+ id="page309"/>tured people, are inclined to blush at anything which
+ suggests "popularity."<a name="FNanchor_243_243" id="FNanchor_243_243"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_243_243" class="fnanchor">[243]</a></p>
+ <p>It is nearly twenty-five years since M. Bourgault-Ducoudray, who was one of the
+ people who fostered the growth of choral singing in France, pointed out, in an
+ account of the teaching of singing, the usefulness of making children sing the old
+ popular airs of the French provinces, and of getting the teachers to make collections
+ of them. In 1895, as the result of a meeting organised by the <i>Correspondance
+ g&eacute;n&eacute;rale de l'Instruction primaire</i>, delightful collections of
+ folk-songs were distributed in the schools. The melodies were taken from old airs
+ collected by M. Julien Tiersot, and M. Maurice Buchor had put some fresh and
+ sparkling verses to them. "M. Buchor," I wrote at the time, "will enjoy a pleasure
+ not common to poets of our day: his songs will soar up into the open air, like the
+ lark in his <i>Chanson de labour</i>. The populace may even recognise its own spirit
+ in them, and one day take possession of them, as if they were of their own
+ contriving."<a name="FNanchor_244_244" id="FNanchor_244_244"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_244_244" class="fnanchor">[244]</a> This prediction has been almost
+ com<a name="page310" id="page310"/>pletely
+ realised, and M. Buchor's songs are now the property of all the people of France.</p>
+ <p>But M. Buchor did not remain content to be a poet of popular song. During the last
+ twelve years he has made, with untiring energy, a tour of all the &Eacute;coles
+ Normales in France, returning several times to places where he found signs of good
+ vocal ability. In each school he made the pupils sing his songs&mdash;in unison, or
+ in two or three parts, sometimes massing the boys' and girls' schools of one town
+ together. His ambition grew with his success; and to the folk-song melodies<a
+ name="FNanchor_245_245" id="FNanchor_245_245"></a><a href="#Footnote_245_245"
+ class="fnanchor">[245]</a> he began gradually to add pieces of classical music. And
+ to impress the music better on the singers he changed the existing words, and tried
+ to find others, which by their moral and poetic beauty more exactly translated the
+ musical feeling.<a name="FNanchor_246_246" id="FNanchor_246_246"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_246_246" class="fnanchor">[246]</a></p>
+ <p><a name="page311" id="page311"/>And at last
+ he composed and grouped together twenty-four poems in his <i>Po&egrave;me de la Vie
+ humaine</i><a name="FNanchor_247_247" id="FNanchor_247_247"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_247_247" class="fnanchor">[247]</a>&mdash;fine odes and songs,
+ written for classic airs and choruses, a vast repertory of the people's joys and
+ sorrows, fitting the momentous hours of family or public life. With a people that has
+ ancient musical traditions, as Germany has, music is the vehicle for the words and
+ impresses them in the heart; but in France's case it is truer to say that the words
+ have brought the music of H&auml;ndel and Beethoven into the hearts of French
+ school-children. The great thing is that the music has really got hold of them, and
+ that now one may hear the provincial &Eacute;coles Normales performing choruses from
+ <i>Fidelio, The Messiah</i>, Schumann's<a name="page312"
+ id="page312"/><i>Faust</i>, or Bach cantatas.<a
+ name="FNanchor_248_248" id="FNanchor_248_248"></a><a href="#Footnote_248_248"
+ class="fnanchor">[248]</a> The honour of this remarkable achievement, which no one
+ could have believed possible twenty years ago, belongs almost entirely to M. Maurice
+ Buchor.<a name="FNanchor_249_249" id="FNanchor_249_249"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_249_249" class="fnanchor">[249]</a></p>
+ <p>M. Buchor's endeavours have been the most extensive and the most fruitful, but he
+ is not alone in individual effort. There was, twenty years ago, in the suburbs of
+ Paris and in the provinces, a large number of well-meaning people who devoted
+ themselves to the work of musical education with sincerity and splendid enthusiasm.
+ But their good works were too isolated, and were swamped by the <a name="page313" id="page313"/>apathy of the people
+ about them; though sometimes they kindled little fires of love and understanding in
+ art, which only needed coaxing in order to burn brightly; and even their less happy
+ efforts generally succeeded in lighting a few sparks, which were left smouldering in
+ people's hearts.<a name="FNanchor_250_250" id="FNanchor_250_250"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_250_250" class="fnanchor">[250]</a></p>
+ <p>At length, as a result of these individual efforts, the State began to show an
+ interest in this educational movement, although it had for so long stood apart from
+ it.<a name="FNanchor_251_251" id="FNanchor_251_251"></a><a href="#Footnote_251_251"
+ class="fnanchor">[251]</a> It discovered, in its turn, the educational value of
+ singing. A musical test was instituted at the examination for the <i>Brevet
+ sup&eacute;rieur</i><a name="FNanchor_252_252" id="FNanchor_252_252"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_252_252" class="fnanchor">[252]</a> which made the study of solfeggio
+ a more serious matter in the &Eacute;coles Normales. In 1903 an endeavour was made to
+ organise the teaching of music in the schools and colleges in a more rational way.<a
+ name="FNanchor_253_253" id="FNanchor_253_253"></a><a href="#Footnote_253_253"
+ class="fnanchor">[253]</a></p>
+ <p><a name="page314" id="page314"/>In 1904,
+ following the suggestions of M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns and M. Bourgault-Ducoudray,
+ class-singing was incorporated with other subjects in the programme of teaching,<a
+ name="FNanchor_254_254" id="FNanchor_254_254"></a><a href="#Footnote_254_254"
+ class="fnanchor">[254]</a> and a free school of choral singing was started in Paris
+ under the honorary chairmanship of M. Henry Marcel, director of the Beaux-Arts, and
+ under the direction of M. Radiguer. Quite lately a choral society for young
+ school-girls has been formed, with the Vice-Provost as president and a membership of
+ from six to seven hundred young girls, who since 1906 have given an annual concert
+ under the direction of M. Gabriel Piern&eacute;. And lastly, at the end of 1907, an
+ association of professors was started to undertake the teaching of music in the
+ institutions of public instruction; its chairman was the Inspector-General, M.
+ Gilles, and its honorary presidents were M. Liard and M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns. Its object
+ is to aid the progress of musical instruction by establishing a centre to promote
+ friendly relations among professors of music; by centralising their interests and
+ studies; by organising a circulating library of music and a periodical magazine in
+ which questions relating to music may be discussed; by establishing communication
+ between French professors and foreign professors; and by seeking to bring together
+ professors of music and professors in other branches of public teaching.</p>
+ <p>All this is not much, and we are yet terribly behindhand, especially as regards
+ secondary teaching, which is considered less important than primary <a name="page315" id="page315"/>teaching.<a
+ name="FNanchor_255_255" id="FNanchor_255_255"></a><a href="#Footnote_255_255"
+ class="fnanchor">[255]</a> But we are scrambling out of an abyss of ignorance, and it
+ is something to have the desire to get out of it. We must remember that Germany has
+ not always been in its present plethoric state of musical prosperity. The great
+ choral societies only date from the end of the eighteenth century. Germany in the
+ time of Bach was poor&mdash;if not poorer&mdash;in means for performing choral works
+ than France to-day. Bach's only executants were his pupils at the Thomasschule at
+ Leipzig, of which barely a score knew how to sing.<a name="FNanchor_256_256"
+ id="FNanchor_256_256"></a><a href="#Footnote_256_256" class="fnanchor">[256]</a> And
+ now these people gather together for the great <i>M&auml;nnergesangsfeste</i> (choral
+ festivals) and the <i>Musikfeste</i> (music festivals) of Imperial Germany.</p>
+ <p>Let us hope on and persevere. The main thing is that a start has been made; the
+ thing that remains is to have patience and&mdash;persistence.</p>
+ <br />
+ <a name='present' id='present'></a>
+ <h4>THE PRESENT CONDITION OF FRENCH MUSIC</h4>
+ <p>We have seen how the musical education of France is going on in theatres, in
+ concerts, in schools, by lectures and by books; and the Parisian's rather restless
+ desire for knowledge seems to be satisfied for the moment. The mind of Paris has made
+ a journey&mdash;a hasty journey, it is true <a name="page316"
+ id="page316"/>through the music of other countries and other times,<a
+ name="FNanchor_257_257" id="FNanchor_257_257"></a><a href="#Footnote_257_257"
+ class="fnanchor">[257]</a> and is now becoming introspective. After a mad enthusiasm
+ over discoveries in strange lands, music and musical criticism have regained their
+ self-possession and their jealous love of independence. A very decided reaction
+ against foreign music has been shown since the time of the Universal Exhibition of
+ 1900. This movement is not unconnected, consciously or unconsciously, with the
+ nationalist train of thought, which was stirred up in France, and especially in
+ Paris, somewhere about the same time. But it is also a natural development in the
+ evolution of music. French music felt new vigour springing up within her, and was
+ astonished at it; her days of preparation were over, and she aspired to fly alone;
+ and, in accordance with the eternal rule of history, the first use she made of her
+ newly-acquired strength was to defy her teachers. And this revolt against foreign
+ influences was directed&mdash;one had expected it&mdash;against the strongest of the
+ influences&mdash;the influence of German music as personified by Wagner. Two
+ discussions in magazines, in 1903 and 1904, brought this state of mind curiously to
+ light: one was an enquiry held by M. Jacques Morland in the <i>Mercure de France</i>
+ (January, 1903) as to <i>The Influence of German Music in France</i>; and the other
+ was that of M. Paul Landormy in the <i>Revue Bleue</i> (March and April,<a name="page317" id="page317"/>1904) as to <i>The
+ Present Condition of French Music</i>. The first was like a shout of deliverance, and
+ was not without exaggeration and a good deal of ingratitude; for it represented
+ French musicians and critics throwing off Wagner's influence because it had had its
+ day; the second set forth the theories of the new French school, and declared the
+ independence of that school.</p>
+ <p>For several years the leader of the young school, M. Claude Debussy, has, in his
+ writings in the <i>Revue Blanche</i> and <i>Gil Blas</i>, attacked Wagnerian art. His
+ personality is very French&mdash;capricious, poetic, and <i>spirituelle</i>, full of
+ lively intelligence, heedless, independent, scattering new ideas, giving vent to
+ paradoxical caprice, criticising the opinions of centuries with the teasing
+ impertinence of a little street boy, attacking great heroes of music like Gluck,
+ Wagner, and Beethoven, upholding only Bach, Mozart, and Weber, and loudly professing
+ his preference for the old French masters of the eighteenth century. But in spite of
+ this he is bringing back to French music its true nature and its forgotten
+ ideals&mdash;its clearness, its elegant simplicity, its naturalness, and especially
+ its grace and plastic beauty. He wishes music to free itself from all literary and
+ philosophic pretensions, which have burdened German music in the nineteenth century
+ (and perhaps have always done so); he wishes music to get away from the rhetoric
+ which has been handed down to us through the centuries, from its heavy construction
+ and precise orderliness, from its harmonic and rhythmic formulas, and the <a name="page318" id="page318"/>exercises of
+ oratorical embroidery. He wishes that all about it shall be painting and poetry; that
+ it shall explain its true feeling in a clear and direct way; and that melody,
+ harmony, and rhythm shall develop broadly along the lines of inner laws, and not
+ after the pretended laws of some intellectual arrangement. And he himself preaches by
+ example in his <i>Pell&eacute;as et M&eacute;lisande</i>, and breaks with all the
+ principles of the Bayreuth drama, and gives us the model of the new art of his
+ dreams. And on all sides discerning and well-informed critics, such as M. Pierre Lalo
+ of <i>Le Temps</i>, M. Louis Laloy of the <i>Revue Musicale</i> and the <i>Mercure
+ Musicale</i>, and M. Marnold of <i>Le Mercure de France</i>, have championed his
+ doctrines and his art. Even the <i>Schola Cantorum</i>, whose eclectic and archaic
+ spirit is very different from that of Debussy, seemed at first to be drawn into the
+ same current of thought; and this school which had so helped to propagate the foreign
+ influences of the past, did not seem to be quite insensible to the nationalistic
+ preoccupation of the last few years. So the <i>Schola</i> devoted itself more and
+ more&mdash;as was moreover its right and duty&mdash;to the French music of the past,
+ and filled its concert programmes with French works of the seventeenth and eighteenth
+ centuries&mdash;with Marc Antoine Charpentier, Du Mont, Leclair, Cl&eacute;rambault,
+ Couperin, and the French primitive composers for the organ, the harpsichord, and the
+ violin; and with the works of dramatic composers, especially of the great Rameau,
+ who, after a period of complete oblivion, suddenly benefited by this <a name="page319" id="page319"/>excessive reaction,
+ to the detriment of Gluck, whom the young critics, following M. Debussy's example,
+ severely abused.<a name="FNanchor_258_258" id="FNanchor_258_258"></a><a
+ href="#Footnote_258_258" class="fnanchor">[258]</a> There was even a moment when the
+ <i>Schola</i> took a decided share in the battle, and, through M. Charles Bordes,
+ issued a manifesto&mdash;<i>Credo</i>, as they called it&mdash;about a new art
+ founded on the ancient traditions of French music:</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"We wish to have free speech in music&mdash;a sustained recitative, infinite
+ variety, and, in short, complete liberty in musical utterance. We wish for the
+ triumph of natural music, so that it shall be as free and full of movement as
+ speech, and as plastic and rhythmic as a classical dance."</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>It was open war against the metrical art of the last three centuries, in the name
+ of national tradition (more or less freely interpreted), of folk-song, and of
+ Gregorian chant. And "the constant and avowed purpose of all this campaign was the
+ triumph of French music, and its cult."<a name="FNanchor_259_259"
+ id="FNanchor_259_259"></a><a href="#Footnote_259_259" class="fnanchor">[259]</a></p>
+ <p>This manifesto reflects in its own way the spirit of Debussy and his untrammelled
+ musical impressionism; and though it shows a good deal of na&iuml;vet&eacute; and
+ some intolerance, there was in it a strength of youthful enthusiasm that accorded
+ <a name="page320" id="page320"/>with the great
+ hopes of the time, and foretold glorious days to come and a splendid harvest of
+ music.</p>
+ <p>Not many years have passed since then; yet the sky is already a little clouded,
+ the light not quite so bright. Hope has not failed; but it has not been fulfilled.
+ France is waiting, and is getting a little impatient. But the impatience is
+ unnecessary; for to found an art we must bring time to our aid; art must ripen
+ tranquilly. Yet tranquillity is what is most lacking in Parisian art. The artists,
+ instead of working steadily at their own tasks and uniting in a common aim, are given
+ up to sterile disputes. The young French school hardly exists any longer, as it has
+ now split up into two or three parties. To a fight against foreign art has succeeded
+ a fight among themselves: it is the deep-rooted evil of the country, this vain
+ expenditure of force. And most curious of all is the fact that the quarrel is not
+ between the conservatives and the progressives in music, but between the two most
+ advanced sections: the <i>Schola</i> on the one hand, who, should it gain the
+ victory, would through its dogmas and traditions inevitably develop the airs of a
+ little academy; and, on the other hand, the independent party, whose most important
+ representative is M. Debussy. It is not for us to enter into the quarrel; we would
+ only suggest to the parties in question that if any profit is to result from their
+ misunderstanding, it will be derived by a third party&mdash;the party in favour of
+ routine, the party that has never lost favour with the great theatre-going
+ public,&mdash;<a name="page321" id="page321"/>a
+ party that will soon make good the place it has lost if those who aim at defending
+ art set about fighting one another. Victory has been proclaimed too soon; for
+ whatever the optimistic representatives of the young school may say, victory has not
+ yet been gained; and it will not be gained for some time yet&mdash;not until public
+ taste is changed, not while the nation lacks musical education, nor until the
+ cultured few are united to the people, through whom their thoughts shall be
+ preserved. For not only&mdash;with a few rare and generous exceptions&mdash;do the
+ more aristocratic sections of society ignore the education of the people, but they
+ ignore the very existence of the people's soul. Here and there, a composer&mdash;such
+ as Bizet and M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns, or M. d'Indy and his disciples&mdash;will build up
+ symphonies and rhapsodies and very difficult pieces for the piano on the popular airs
+ of Auvergne, Provence, or the Cevennes; but that is only a whim of theirs, a little
+ ingenious pastime for clever artists, such as the Flemish masters of the fifteenth
+ century indulged in when they decorated popular airs with polyphonic elaborations. In
+ spite of the advance of the democratic spirit, musical art&mdash;or at least all that
+ counts in musical art&mdash;has never been more aristocratic than it is to-day.
+ Probably the phenomenon is not peculiar to music, and shows itself more or less in
+ other arts; but in no other art is it so dangerous, for no other has roots less
+ firmly fixed in the soil of France. And it is no consolation to tell oneself that
+ this is according to the great French traditions, which have nearly always been <a name="page322" id="page322"/>aristocratic.
+ Traditions, great and small, are menaced to-day; the axe is ready for them. Whoever
+ wishes to live must adapt himself to the new conditions of life. The future of art is
+ at stake. To continue as we are doing is not only to weaken music by condemning it to
+ live in unhealthy conditions, but also to risk its disappearing sooner or later under
+ the rising flood of popular misconceptions of music. Let us take warning by the fact
+ that we have already had to defend music<a name="FNanchor_260_260"
+ id="FNanchor_260_260"></a><a href="#Footnote_260_260" class="fnanchor">[260]</a> when
+ it was attacked at some of the parliamentary assemblies; and let us remember the
+ pitifulness of the defence. We must not let the day come when a famous speech will be
+ repeated with a slight alteration&mdash;"The Republic has no need of musicians."</p>
+ <p>It is the historian's duty to point out the dangers of the present hour, and to
+ remind the French musicians who have been satisfied with their first victory that the
+ future is anything but sure, and that we must never disarm while we have a common
+ enemy before us, an enemy especially dangerous in a democracy&mdash;mediocrity.</p>
+ <p>The road that stretches before us is long and difficult. But if we turn our heads
+ and look back over the way we have come we may take heart. Which of us does not feel
+ a little glow of pride at the thought of what has been done in the last thirty <a name="page323" id="page323"/>years? Here is a town
+ where, before 1870, music had fallen to the most miserable depths, which to-day teems
+ with concerts and schools of music&mdash;a town where one of the first symphonic
+ schools in Europe has sprung from nothing, a town where an enthusiastic concert-going
+ public has been formed, possessing among its members some great critics with broad
+ interests and a fine, free spirit&mdash;all this is the pride of France. And we have,
+ too, a little band of musicians; among them, in the first rank, that great painter of
+ dreams, Claude Debussy; that master of constructive art, Dukas; that impassioned
+ thinker, Alb&eacute;ric Magnard; that ironic poet, Ravel; and those delicate and
+ finished writers, Albert Roussel and D&eacute;odat de S&eacute;verac; without mention
+ of the younger musicians who are in the vanguard of their art. And all this poetic
+ force, though not the most vigorous, is the most original in Europe to-day. Whatever
+ gaps one may find in our musical organisation, still so new, whatever results this
+ movement may lead to, it is impossible not to admire a people whom defeat has
+ aroused, and a generation that has accomplished the magnificent work of reviving the
+ nation's music with such untiring perseverance and such steadfast faith. The names of
+ Camille Saint-Sa&euml;ns, C&eacute;sar Franck, Charles Bordes, and Vincent d'Indy,
+ will remain associated before all others with this work of national regeneration,
+ where so much talent and so much devotion, from the leaders of orchestras and
+ celebrated composers down to that obscure body of artists and music-lovers, have
+ joined <a name="page324" id="page324"/>forces
+ in the fight against indifference and routine. They have the right to be proud of
+ their work. But for ourselves, let us waste no time in thinking about it. Our hopes
+ are great. Let us justify them.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+ <h2><a name="FOOTNOTES" id="FOOTNOTES"></a>FOOTNOTES:</h2>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span
+ class="label">[1]</span></a> "And you, Russia, who have saved me...." (Berlioz,
+ <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, II, 353, Calmann-L&eacute;vy's edition, 1897).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span
+ class="label">[2]</span></a> <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, II, 149.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span
+ class="label">[3]</span></a> The literary work of Berlioz is rather uneven. Beside
+ passages of exquisite beauty we find others that are ridiculous in their
+ exaggerated sentiment, and there are some that even lack good taste. But he had a
+ natural gift of style, and his writing is vigorous, and full of feeling, especially
+ towards the latter half of his life. The <i>Procession des Rogations</i> is often
+ quoted from the <i>M&eacute;moires</i>; and some of his poetical text, particularly
+ that in <i>L'Enfance du Christ</i> and in <i>Les Troyens</i>, is written in
+ beautiful language and with a fine sense of rhythm. His <i>M&eacute;moires</i> as a
+ whole is one of the most delightful books ever written by an artist. Wagner was a
+ greater poet, but as a prose writer Berlioz is infinitely superior. See Paul
+ Morillot's essay on <i>Berlioz &eacute;crivain</i>, 1903, Grenoble.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span
+ class="label">[4]</span></a> "Chance, that unknown god, who plays such a great part
+ in my life" (<i>M&eacute;moires</i>, II, 161).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span
+ class="label">[5]</span></a> "I was fair," wrote Berlioz to B&uuml;low (unpublished
+ letters, 1858). "A shock of reddish hair," he wrote in his <i>M&eacute;moires</i>,
+ I, 165. "Sandy-coloured hair," said Reyer. For the colour of Berlioz's hair I rely
+ upon the evidence of Mme. Chap&oacute;t, his niece.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span
+ class="label">[6]</span></a> Joseph d'Ortigue, <i>Le Balcon de l'Op&eacute;ra</i>,
+ 1833.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span
+ class="label">[7]</span></a> E. Legouv&eacute;, <i>Soixante ans de souvenirs</i>.
+ Legouv&eacute; describes Berlioz here as he saw him for the first time.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span
+ class="label">[8]</span></a> "A passable baritone," says Berlioz
+ <i>(M&eacute;moires</i>, I, 58). In 1830, in the streets of Paris, he sang "a bass
+ part" <i>(M&eacute;moires</i>, I, 156). During his first visit to Germany the
+ Prince of Hechingen made him sing "the part of the violoncello" in one of his
+ compositions (<i>M&eacute;moires</i>, II, 32).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span
+ class="label">[9]</span></a> There are two good portraits of Berlioz. One is a
+ photograph by Pierre Petit, taken in 1863, which he sent to Mme. Estelle Fornier.
+ It shows him leaning on his elbow, with his head bent, and his eyes fixed on the
+ ground as if he were tired. The other is the photograph which he had reproduced in
+ the first edition of his <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, and which shows him leaning back,
+ his hands in his pockets, his head upright, with an expression of energy in his
+ face, and a fixed and stern look in his eyes.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span
+ class="label">[10]</span></a> He would go on foot from Naples to Rome in a straight
+ line over the mountains, and would walk at one stretch from Subiaco to Tivoli.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span
+ class="label">[11]</span></a> This brought on several attacks of bronchitis and
+ frequent sore throats, as well as the internal affection from which he died.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span
+ class="label">[12]</span></a> "Music and love are the two wings of the soul," he
+ wrote in his <i>M&eacute;moires</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span
+ class="label">[13]</span></a> <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, I, 11.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span
+ class="label">[14]</span></a> Julien Tiersot, <i>Hector Berlioz et la
+ soci&eacute;t&eacute; de son temps</i>, 1903, Hachette.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span
+ class="label">[15]</span></a> See the <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, I, 139.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span
+ class="label">[16]</span></a> "I do not know how to describe this terrible
+ sickness.... My throbbing breast seems to be sinking into space; and my heart,
+ drawing in some irresistible force, feels as though it would expand until it
+ evaporated and dissolved away. My skin becomes hot and tender, and flushes from
+ head to foot. I want to cry out to my friends (even those I do not care for) to
+ help and comfort me, to save me from destruction, and keep in the life that is
+ ebbing from me. I have no sensation of impending death in these attacks, and
+ suicide seems impossible; I do not want to die&mdash;far from it, I want very much
+ to live, to intensify life a thousandfold. It is an excessive appetite for
+ happiness, which becomes unbearable when it lacks food; and it is only satisfied by
+ intense delights, which give this great overflow of feeling an outlet. It is not a
+ state of spleen, though that may follow later ... spleen is rather the congealing
+ of all these emotions&mdash;the block of ice. Even when I am calm I feel a little
+ of this '<i>isolement</i>' on Sundays in summer, when our towns are lifeless, and
+ everyone is in the country; for I know that people are enjoying themselves away
+ from me, and I feel their absence. The <i>adagio</i> of Beethoven's symphonies,
+ certain scenes from Gluck's <i>Alceste</i> and <i>Armide</i>, an air from his
+ Italian opera <i>Telemacco</i>, the Elysian fields of his <i>Orfeo</i>, will bring
+ on rather bad attacks of this suffering; but these masterpieces bring with them
+ also an antidote&mdash;they make one's tears flow, and then the pain is eased. On
+ the other hand, the <i>adagio</i> of some of Beethoven's sonatas and Gluck's
+ <i>Iphig&eacute;nie en Tauride</i> are full of melancholy, and therefore provoke
+ spleen ... it is then cold within, the sky is grey and overcast with clouds, the
+ north wind moans dully...." <i>(M&eacute;moires</i>, I, 246).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span
+ class="label">[17]</span></a> <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, I, 98.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span
+ class="label">[18]</span></a> "Isn't it really devilish," he said to
+ Legouv&eacute;, "tragic and silly at the same time? I should deserve to go to hell
+ if I wasn't there already."</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span
+ class="label">[19]</span></a> <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, II, 335. See the touching
+ passages he wrote on Henrietta Smithson's death.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span
+ class="label">[20]</span></a> "One day, Henrietta, who was living alone at
+ Montmartre, heard someone ring the bell, and went to open the door.</p>
+ <p>"'Is Mme. Berlioz at home?'</p>
+ <p>"'I am Mme. Berlioz.'</p>
+ <p>"'You are mistaken; I asked for Mme. Berlioz.'</p>
+ <p>"'And I tell you, I am Mme. Berlioz.'</p>
+ <p>"'No, you are not. You are speaking of the old Mme. Berlioz, the one who was
+ abandoned; I am speaking of the young and pretty and loved one. Well, that is
+ myself!'</p>
+ <p>"And Recio went out and banged the door after her.</p>
+ <p>"Legouv&eacute; said to Berlioz, 'Who told you this abominable thing? I suppose
+ she who did it; and then she boasted about it into the bargain. Why didn't you turn
+ her out of the house?' 'How could I?' said Berlioz in broken tones, 'I love her'"
+ <i>(Soixante ans de souvenirs</i>).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span
+ class="label">[21]</span></a> From this woman's nature came his love of revenge, "a
+ thing needless, and yet necessary," he said to his friend Hiller, who, after having
+ made him write the <i>Symphonie fantastique</i> to spite Henrietta Smithson, next
+ made him write the wretched fantasia <i>Euphonia</i> to spite Camille Moke, now
+ Mme. Pleyel. One would feel obliged to draw more attention to the way he often
+ adorned or perverted the truth if one did not feel it arose from his irrepressible
+ and glowing imagination far more than from any intention to mislead; for I believe
+ his real nature to have been a-very straightforward one. I will quote the story of
+ his friend Crispino, a young countryman from Tivoli, as a characteristic example.
+ Berlioz says in his <i>M&eacute;moires</i> (I, 229): "One day when Crispino was
+ lacking in respect I made-him a present of two shirts, a pair of trousers, and
+ three good kicks behind." In a note he added, "This is a lie, and is the result of
+ an artist's tendency to aim at effect. I never kicked Crispino." But Berlioz took
+ care afterwards to omit this note. One attaches as little importance to his other
+ small boasts as to this one. The errors in the <i>M&eacute;moires</i> have been
+ greatly exaggerated; and besides, Berlioz is the first to warn his readers that he
+ only wrote what pleased him, and in his preface says that he is not writing his
+ Confessions. Can one blame him for that?</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span
+ class="label">[22]</span></a> <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, II, 158. The heartaches
+ expressed in this chapter will be felt by every artist.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_23_23" id="Footnote_23_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_23"><span
+ class="label">[23]</span></a> <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, II, 349.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_24_24" id="Footnote_24_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_24"><span
+ class="label">[24]</span></a> Berlioz has already touchingly replied to any
+ reproaches that might be made in the words that follow the story I have quoted.
+ "'Coward!' some young enthusiast will say, 'you ought to have written it; you
+ should have been bold.' Ah, young man, you who call me coward did not have to look
+ upon what I did; had you done so you, too, would have had no choice. My wife was
+ there, half dead, only able to moan; she had to have three nurses, and a doctor
+ every day to visit her; and I was sure of the disastrous result of any musical
+ adventure. No, I was not a coward; I know I was only human. I like to believe that
+ I honoured art in proving that she had left me enough reason to distinguish between
+ courage and cruelty" (<i>M&eacute;moires</i>, II, 350).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_25_25" id="Footnote_25_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_25"><span
+ class="label">[25]</span></a> In a note in the <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, Berlioz
+ publishes a letter of Mendelssohn's which protests his "good friendship," and he
+ writes these bitter words: "I have just seen in a volume of Mendelssohn's Letters
+ what his friendship for me consisted of. He says to his mother, in what is plainly
+ a description of myself, '&mdash;&mdash; is a perfect caricature, without a spark
+ of talent ... there are times when I should like to swallow him up'"
+ (<i>M&eacute;moires</i>, II, 48). Berlioz did not add that Mendelssohn also said:
+ "They pretend that Berlioz seeks lofty ideals in art. I don't think so at all. What
+ he wants is to get himself married." The injustice of these insulting words will
+ disgust all those who remember that when Berlioz married Henrietta Smithson she
+ brought as dowry nothing but debts; and that he had only three hundred francs
+ himself, which a friend had lent him.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_26_26" id="Footnote_26_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_26"><span
+ class="label">[26]</span></a> Liszt repudiated him later.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_27_27" id="Footnote_27_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_27"><span
+ class="label">[27]</span></a> Written in an article on the <i>Ouverture de
+ Waverley</i> (<i>Neue Zeitschrift f&uuml;r Musik</i>).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_28_28" id="Footnote_28_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28_28"><span
+ class="label">[28]</span></a> Wagner, who had criticised Berlioz since 1840, and
+ who published a detailed study of his works in his <i>Oper und Drama</i> in 1851,
+ wrote to Liszt in 1855: "I own that it would interest me very much to make the
+ acquaintance of Berlioz's symphonies, and I should like to see the scores. If you
+ have them, will you lend them to me?"</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_29_29" id="Footnote_29_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29_29"><span
+ class="label">[29]</span></a> See Berlioz's letter, cited by J. Tiersot, <i>Hector
+ Berlioz et la soci&eacute;t&eacute; de son temps</i>, p. 275.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_30_30" id="Footnote_30_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30_30"><span
+ class="label">[30]</span></a> <i>Rom&eacute;o, Faust, La Nonne sanglante</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_31_31" id="Footnote_31_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31_31"><span
+ class="label">[31]</span></a> I shall content myself here with noting a fact, which
+ I shall deal with more fully in another essay at the end of this book: it is the
+ decline of musical taste in France&mdash;and, I rather think, in all
+ Europe&mdash;since 1835 or 1840. Berlioz says in his <i>M&eacute;moires</i>: "Since
+ the first performance of <i>Rom&eacute;o et Juliette</i> the indifference of the
+ French public for all that concerns art and literature has grown incredibly"
+ (<i>M&eacute;moires</i>, II, 263). Compare the shouts of excitement and the tears
+ that were drawn from the dilettanti of 1830 (<i>M&eacute;moires</i>, I, 81), at the
+ performances of Italian operas or Gluck's works, with the coldness of the public
+ between 1840 and 1870. A mantle of ice covered art then. How much Berlioz must have
+ suffered. In Germany the great romantic age was dead. Only Wagner remained to give
+ life to music; and he drained all that was left in Europe of love and enthusiasm
+ for music. Berlioz died truly of asphyxia.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_32_32" id="Footnote_32_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32_32"><span
+ class="label">[32]</span></a> Here is an official list of the towns where
+ <i>Benvenuto</i> has been played since 1879 (I am indebted for this information to
+ M. Victor Chap&oacute;t, Berlioz's grandnephew). They are, in alphabetical order:
+ Berlin, Bremen, Brunswick, Dresden, Frankfort-On-Main, Freiburg-im-Breisgau,
+ Hamburg, Hanover, Karlsruhe, Leipzig, Mannheim, Metz, Munich, Prague, Schwerin,
+ Stettin, Strasburg, Stuttgart, Vienna, and Weimar.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_33_33" id="Footnote_33_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33_33"><span
+ class="label">[33]</span></a> <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, II, 420.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_34_34" id="Footnote_34_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34_34"><span
+ class="label">[34]</span></a> "I do not know how Berlioz has managed to be cut off
+ like this. He has neither friends nor followers; neither the warm sun of popularity
+ nor the pleasant shade of friendship" (Liszt to the Princess of Wittgenstein, 16
+ May, 1861).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_35_35" id="Footnote_35_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35_35"><span
+ class="label">[35]</span></a> In a letter to Bennet he says, "I am weary, I am
+ weary...." How often does this piteous cry sound in his letters towards the end of
+ his life. "I feel I am going to die.... I am weary unto death" (21 August,
+ 1868&mdash;six months before his death).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_36_36" id="Footnote_36_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36_36"><span
+ class="label">[36]</span></a> Letter to Asger Hammerick, 1865.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_37_37" id="Footnote_37_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37_37"><span
+ class="label">[37]</span></a> Letters to the Princess of Wittgenstein, 22 July, 21
+ September, 1862; and August, 1864.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_38_38" id="Footnote_38_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38_38"><span
+ class="label">[38]</span></a> <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, II, 335. He shocked
+ Mendelssohn, and even Wagner, by his irreligion. (See Berlioz's letter to Wagner,
+ 10 September, 1855.)</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_39_39" id="Footnote_39_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39_39"><span
+ class="label">[39]</span></a> <i>Les Grotesques de la Musique</i>, pp. 295-6.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_40_40" id="Footnote_40_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40_40"><span
+ class="label">[40]</span></a> Letter to the Abb&eacute; Girod. See Hippeau,
+ <i>Berlioz intime</i>, p. 434.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_41_41" id="Footnote_41_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41_41"><span
+ class="label">[41]</span></a> Letter to Bennet. He did not believe in patriotism.
+ "Patriotism? Fetichism! Cretinism!" (<i>M&eacute;moires</i>, II, 261).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_42_42" id="Footnote_42_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42_42"><span
+ class="label">[42]</span></a> Letter to the Princess of Wittgenstein, 22 July,
+ 1862.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_43_43" id="Footnote_43_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43_43"><span
+ class="label">[43]</span></a> <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, II, 391.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_44_44" id="Footnote_44_44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_44_44"><span
+ class="label">[44]</span></a> Letters to the Princess of Wittgenstein, 22 January,
+ 1859; 30 August, 1864; 13 July, 1866; and to A. Morel, 21 August, 1864.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_45_45" id="Footnote_45_45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_45_45"><span
+ class="label">[45]</span></a> " ... Qui viderit illas<br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em;">De lacrymis factas sentiet esse
+ meis,"</span><br />
+ wrote Berlioz, as an inscription for his <i>Tristes</i> in 1854.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_46_46" id="Footnote_46_46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_46_46"><span
+ class="label">[46]</span></a> "One instantly recognises a companion in misfortune;
+ and I found I was a happier man than Berlioz" (Wagner to Liszt, 5 July, 1855).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_47_47" id="Footnote_47_47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_47_47"><span
+ class="label">[47]</span></a> <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, II, 396.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_48_48" id="Footnote_48_48"></a><a href="#FNanchor_48_48"><span
+ class="label">[48]</span></a> <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, II, 415.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_49_49" id="Footnote_49_49"></a><a href="#FNanchor_49_49"><span
+ class="label">[49]</span></a> "Yes, it is to that escape from the world that
+ <i>Parsifal</i> owes its birth and growth. What man can, during a whole lifetime,
+ gaze into the depths of this world with a calm reason and a cheerful heart? When he
+ sees murder and rapine organised and legalised by a system of lies, impostures, and
+ hypocrisy, will he not avert his eyes and shudder with disgust?" (Wagner,
+ <i>Representations of the Sacred Drama of Parsifal at Bayreuth, in 1882</i>.)</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_50_50" id="Footnote_50_50"></a><a href="#FNanchor_50_50"><span
+ class="label">[50]</span></a> The scene was described to me by his friend, Malwida
+ von Meysenbug, the calm and fearless author of <i>M&eacute;moires d'une
+ Id&eacute;aliste</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_51_51" id="Footnote_51_51"></a><a href="#FNanchor_51_51"><span
+ class="label">[51]</span></a> "I have only blank walls before my windows. On the
+ side of the street a pug dog has been barking for an hour, a parrot screaming, and
+ a parroqueet imitating the chirp of sparrows. On the side of the yard the
+ washerwomen are singing, and another parroqueet cries incessantly, 'Shoulder
+ arrms!' How long the day is!"</p>
+ <p>"The maddening noise of carriages shakes the silence of the night. Paris wet and
+ muddy! Parisian Paris! Now everything is quiet ... she is sleeping the sleep of the
+ unjust" (Written to Ferrand, <i>Lettres intimes</i>, pp. 269 and 302).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_52_52" id="Footnote_52_52"></a><a href="#FNanchor_52_52"><span
+ class="label">[52]</span></a> He used to say that nothing would remain of his work;
+ that he had deceived himself; and that he would have liked to burn his scores.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_53_53" id="Footnote_53_53"></a><a href="#FNanchor_53_53"><span
+ class="label">[53]</span></a> Blaze de Bury met him one autumn evening, on the
+ quay, just before his death, as he was returning from the Institute. "His face was
+ pale, his figure wasted and bent, and his expression dejected and nervous; one
+ might have taken him for a walking shadow. Even his eyes, those large round hazel
+ eyes, had extinguished their fire. For a second he clasped my hand in his own thin,
+ lifeless one, and repeated, in a voice that was hardly more than a whisper,
+ Aeschylus's words: 'Oh, this life of man! When he is happy a shadow is enough to
+ disturb him; and when he is unhappy his trouble may be wiped away, as with a wet
+ sponge, and all is forgotten'" (<i>Musiciens d'hier et d'aujourd'hui</i>).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_54_54" id="Footnote_54_54"></a><a href="#FNanchor_54_54"><span
+ class="label">[54]</span></a> <i>A travers chants</i>, pp. 8-9.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_55_55" id="Footnote_55_55"></a><a href="#FNanchor_55_55"><span
+ class="label">[55]</span></a> In truth, this genius was smouldering since his
+ childhood; it was there from the beginning; and the proof of it lies in the fact
+ that he used for his <i>Ouverture des Francs-Juges</i> and for the <i>Symphonie
+ fantastique</i> airs and phrases of quintets which he had written when twelve years
+ old (see <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, I, 16-18).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_56_56" id="Footnote_56_56"></a><a href="#FNanchor_56_56"><span
+ class="label">[56]</span></a> The <i>Huit sc&egrave;nes de Faust</i> are taken from
+ Goethe's tragedy, translated by <i>G&eacute;rard de Nerval</i>, and they include:
+ (1) <i>Chants de la f&ecirc;te de P&acirc;ques</i>; (2) <i>Paysans sous les
+ tilleuls</i>; (3) <i>Concert des Sylphes</i>; (4 and 5) <i>Taverne d'Auerbach</i>,
+ with the two songs of the Rat and the Flea; (6) <i>Chanson du roi de
+ Thul&eacute;</i>; (7) <i>Romance de Marguerite</i>, "D'amour, l'ardente flamme,"
+ and <i>Choeur de soldats</i>; (8) <i>S&eacute;r&eacute;nade de
+ M&eacute;phistoph&eacute;l&egrave;s</i>&mdash;that is to say, the most celebrated
+ and characteristic pages of the <i>Damnation</i> (see M. Prudhomme's essays on
+ <i>Le Cycle de Berlioz</i>).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_57_57" id="Footnote_57_57"></a><a href="#FNanchor_57_57"><span
+ class="label">[57]</span></a> One could hardly find a better manifestation of the
+ soul of a youthful musical genius than that in certain letters written at this
+ time; in particular the letter written to Ferrand on 28 June, 1828, with its
+ feverish postscript. What a life of rich and overflowing vigour! It is a joy to
+ read it; one drinks at the source of life itself.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_58_58" id="Footnote_58_58"></a><a href="#FNanchor_58_58"><span
+ class="label">[58]</span></a> <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, I, 70.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_59_59" id="Footnote_59_59"></a><a href="#FNanchor_59_59"><span
+ class="label">[59]</span></a> <i>Ibid</i>. To make amends for this he published, in
+ 1829, a biographical notice of Beethoven, in which his appreciation of him is
+ remarkably in advance of his age. He wrote there: "The <i>Choral Symphony</i> is
+ the culminating point of Beethoven's genius," and he speaks of the Fourth Symphony
+ in C sharp minor with great discernment.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_60_60" id="Footnote_60_60"></a><a href="#FNanchor_60_60"><span
+ class="label">[60]</span></a> Beethoven died in 1827, the year when Berlioz was
+ writing his first important work, the <i>Ouverture des Francs-Juges</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_61_61" id="Footnote_61_61"></a><a href="#FNanchor_61_61"><span
+ class="label">[61]</span></a> He left Henrietta Smithson in 1842; she died in
+ 1854.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_62_62" id="Footnote_62_62"></a><a href="#FNanchor_62_62"><span
+ class="label">[62]</span></a> Written by Berlioz himself, in irony, in a letter of
+ 1855.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_63_63" id="Footnote_63_63"></a><a href="#FNanchor_63_63"><span
+ class="label">[63]</span></a> <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, I, 307.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_64_64" id="Footnote_64_64"></a><a href="#FNanchor_64_64"><span
+ class="label">[64]</span></a> About this time he wrote to Liszt regarding
+ <i>L'Enfance du Christ</i>: "I think I have hit upon something good in Herod's
+ scena and air with the soothsayers; it is full of character, and will, I hope,
+ please you. There are, perhaps, more graceful and pleasing things, but with the
+ exception of the Bethlehem duet, I do not think they have the same quality of
+ originality" (17 December, 1854).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_65_65" id="Footnote_65_65"></a><a href="#FNanchor_65_65"><span
+ class="label">[65]</span></a> In 1830, old Rouget de Lisle called Berlioz, "a
+ volcano in eruption" (<i>M&eacute;moires</i>, I, 158).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_66_66" id="Footnote_66_66"></a><a href="#FNanchor_66_66"><span
+ class="label">[66]</span></a> M. Camille Saint-Sa&euml;ns wrote in his <i>Portraits
+ et Souvenirs</i>, 1900: "Whoever reads Berlioz's scores before hearing them played
+ can have no real idea of their effect. The instruments appear to be arranged in
+ defiance of all common sense; and it would seem, to use professional slang, that
+ <i>cela ne dut pas sonner</i>, but <i>cela sonne</i> wonderfully. If we find here
+ and there obscurities of style, they do not appear in the orchestra; light streams
+ into it and plays there as in the facets of a diamond."</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_67_67" id="Footnote_67_67"></a><a href="#FNanchor_67_67"><span
+ class="label">[67]</span></a> See the excellent essay of H. Lavoix, in his
+ <i>Histoire de l'Instrumentation</i>. It should be noticed that Berlioz's
+ observations in his <i>Trait&eacute; d'instrumentation et d'orchestration
+ modernes</i> (1844) have not been lost upon Richard Strauss, who has just published
+ a German edition of the work, and some of whose most famous orchestral effects are
+ realisations of Berlioz's ideas.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_68_68" id="Footnote_68_68"></a><a href="#FNanchor_68_68"><span
+ class="label">[68]</span></a> One may judge of this instinct by one fact: he wrote
+ the overtures of <i>Les Francs-Juges</i> and <i>Waverley</i> without really knowing
+ if it were possible to play them. "I was so ignorant," he says, "of the mechanism
+ of certain instruments, that after having written the solo in D flat for the
+ trombone in the Introduction of <i>Les Francs-Juges</i>, I feared it would be
+ terribly difficult to play. So I went, very anxious, to one of the trombonists of
+ the Opera orchestra. He looked at the passage and reassured me. 'The key of D flat
+ is,' he said, 'one of the pleasantest for that instrument; and you can count on a
+ splendid effect for that passage'" <i>(M&eacute;moires</i>, I, 63).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_69_69" id="Footnote_69_69"></a><a href="#FNanchor_69_69"><span
+ class="label">[69]</span></a> <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, I, 64.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_70_70" id="Footnote_70_70"></a><a href="#FNanchor_70_70"><span
+ class="label">[70]</span></a> "Berlioz displayed, in calculating the properties of
+ mechanism, a really astounding scientific knowledge. If the inventors of our modern
+ industrial machinery are to be considered benefactors of humanity to-day, Berlioz
+ deserves to be considered as the true saviour of the musical world; for, thanks to
+ him, musicians can produce surprising effects in music by the varied use of simple
+ mechanical means.... Berlioz lies hopelessly buried beneath the ruins of his own
+ contrivances" (<i>Oper und Drama</i>, 1851).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_71_71" id="Footnote_71_71"></a><a href="#FNanchor_71_71"><span
+ class="label">[71]</span></a> Letter from Berlioz to Ferrand.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_72_72" id="Footnote_72_72"></a><a href="#FNanchor_72_72"><span
+ class="label">[72]</span></a> "The chief characteristics of my music are passionate
+ expression, inward warmth, rhythmic in pulses, and unforeseen effects. When I speak
+ of passionate expression, I mean an expression that desperately strives to
+ reproduce the inward feeling of its subject, even when the theme is contrary to
+ passion, and deals with gentle emotions or the deepest calm. It is this kind of
+ expression that may be found in <i>L'Enfance du Christ</i>, and, above all, in the
+ scene of <i>Le Ciel</i> in the <i>Damnation de Faust</i> and in the <i>Sanctus</i>
+ of the <i>Requiem</i>" (<i>M&eacute;moires</i>, II, 361).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_73_73" id="Footnote_73_73"></a><a href="#FNanchor_73_73"><span
+ class="label">[73]</span></a> "So you are in the midst of melting glaciers in your
+ <i>Niebelungen</i>! To be writing in the presence of Nature herself must be
+ splendid. It is an enjoyment which I am denied. Beautiful landscapes, lofty peaks,
+ or great stretches of sea, absorb me instead of evoking ideas in me. I feel, but I
+ cannot express what I feel. I can only paint the moon when I see its reflection in
+ the bottom of a well" (Berlioz to Wagner, 10 September, 1855).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_74_74" id="Footnote_74_74"></a><a href="#FNanchor_74_74"><span
+ class="label">[74]</span></a> <i>Musikf&uuml;hrer</i>, 29 November, 1903.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_75_75" id="Footnote_75_75"></a><a href="#FNanchor_75_75"><span
+ class="label">[75]</span></a> <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, II, 361.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_76_76" id="Footnote_76_76"></a><a href="#FNanchor_76_76"><span
+ class="label">[76]</span></a> M. Jean Marnold has remarked this genius for monody
+ in Berlioz in his article on <i>Hector Berlioz, musicien (Mercure de France</i>, 15
+ January, and 1 February, 1905).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_77_77" id="Footnote_77_77"></a><a href="#FNanchor_77_77"><span
+ class="label">[77]</span></a> Gluck himself said this in a letter to the <i>Mercure
+ de France</i>, February, 1773.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_78_78" id="Footnote_78_78"></a><a href="#FNanchor_78_78"><span
+ class="label">[78]</span></a> I am not speaking of the Franco-Flemish masters at
+ the end of the sixteenth century: of Jannequin, Costeley, Claude le Jeune, or
+ Mauduit, recently discovered by M. Henry Expert, who are possessed of so original a
+ flavour, and have yet remained almost entirely unknown from their own time to ours.
+ Religious wars bruised France's musical traditions and denied some of the grandeur
+ of her art.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_79_79" id="Footnote_79_79"></a><a href="#FNanchor_79_79"><span
+ class="label">[79]</span></a> It is amusing to find Wagner comparing Berlioz with
+ Auber, as the type of a true French musician&mdash;Auber and his mixed Italian and
+ German opera. That shows how Wagner, like most Germans, was incapable of grasping
+ the real originality of French music, and how he saw only its externals. The best
+ way to find out the musical characteristics of a nation is to study its folk-songs.
+ If only someone would devote himself to the study of French folk-song (and there is
+ no lack of material), people would realise perhaps how much it differs from German
+ folk-song, and how the temperament of the French race shows itself there as being
+ sweeter and freer, more vigorous and more expressive.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_80_80" id="Footnote_80_80"></a><a href="#FNanchor_80_80"><span
+ class="label">[80]</span></a> <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, I, 221.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_81_81" id="Footnote_81_81"></a><a href="#FNanchor_81_81"><span
+ class="label">[81]</span></a> "Music to-day, in the vigour of her youth, is
+ emancipated and free and can do what she pleases. Many old rules have no longer any
+ vogue; they were made by unreflecting minds, or by lovers of routine for other
+ lovers of routine. New needs of the mind, of the heart, and of the sense of
+ hearing, make necessary new endeavours and, in some cases, the breaking of ancient
+ laws. Many forms have become too hackneyed to be still adopted. The same thing may
+ be entirely good or entirely bad, according to the use one makes of it, or the
+ reasons one has for making use of it. Sound and sonority are secondary to thought,
+ and thought is secondary to feeling and passion." (These opinions were given with
+ reference to Wagner's concerts in Paris, in 1860, and are taken from <i>A travers
+ chants</i>, p. 312.)</p>
+ <p>Compare Beethoven's words: "There is no rule that one may not break for the
+ advancement of beauty."</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_82_82" id="Footnote_82_82"></a><a href="#FNanchor_82_82"><span
+ class="label">[82]</span></a> Is it necessary to recall the <i>&eacute;p&icirc;tre
+ d&eacute;dicatoire</i> of <i>Alceste</i> in 1769, and Gluck's declaration that he
+ "sought to bring music to its true function&mdash;that of helping poetry to
+ strengthen the expression of the emotions and the interest of a situation ... and
+ to make it what fine colouring and the happy arrangement of light and shade are to
+ a skilful drawing"?</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_83_83" id="Footnote_83_83"></a><a href="#FNanchor_83_83"><span
+ class="label">[83]</span></a> This revolutionary theory was already Mozart's:
+ "Music should reign supreme and make one forget everything else.... In an opera it
+ is absolutely necessary that Poetry should be Music's obedient daughter" (Letter to
+ his father, 13 October, 1781). Despairing probably at being unable to obtain this
+ obedience, Mozart thought seriously of breaking up the form of opera, and of
+ putting in its place, in 1778, a sort of melodrama (of which Rousseau had given an
+ example in 1773), which he called "duodrama," where music and poetry were loosely
+ associated, yet not dependent on each other, but went side by side on two parallel
+ roads (Letter of 12 November, 1778).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_84_84" id="Footnote_84_84"></a><a href="#FNanchor_84_84"><span
+ class="label">[84]</span></a> <i>Tribune de Saint Gervais</i>, November, 1903.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_85_85" id="Footnote_85_85"></a><a href="#FNanchor_85_85"><span
+ class="label">[85]</span></a> <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, II, 365.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_86_86" id="Footnote_86_86"></a><a href="#FNanchor_86_86"><span
+ class="label">[86]</span></a> "This composition contains a dose of sublimity much
+ too strong for the ordinary public; and Berlioz, with the splendid insolence of
+ genius, advises the conductor, in a note, to turn the page and pass it over"
+ (Georges de Massougnes, <i>Berlioz</i>). This fine study by Georges de Massougnes
+ appeared in 1870, and is very much in advance of its time.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_87_87" id="Footnote_87_87"></a><a href="#FNanchor_87_87"><span
+ class="label">[87]</span></a> "Oh, how I love, honour, and reverence Schumann for
+ having written this article alone" (Hugo Wolf, 1884).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_88_88" id="Footnote_88_88"></a><a href="#FNanchor_88_88"><span
+ class="label">[88]</span></a> <i>Neue Zeitschrift f&uuml;r Musik</i>. See <i>Hector
+ Berlioz und Robert Schumann</i>. Berlioz was constantly righting for this freedom
+ of rhythm&mdash;for "those harmonies of rhythm," as he said. He wished to form a
+ Rhythm class at the Conservatoire (<i>M&eacute;moires</i>, II, 241), but such a
+ thing was not understood in France. Without being as backward as Italy on this
+ point, France is still resisting the emancipation of rhythm
+ (<i>M&eacute;moires</i>, II, 196). But during the last ten years great progress in
+ music has been made in France.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_89_89" id="Footnote_89_89"></a><a href="#FNanchor_89_89"><span
+ class="label">[89]</span></a> <i>Ibid</i>. "A rare peculiarity," adds Schumann,
+ "which distinguishes nearly all his melodies." Schumann understands why Berlioz
+ often gives as an accompaniment to his melodies a simple bass, or chords of the
+ augmented and diminished fifth&mdash;ignoring the intermediate parts.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_90_90" id="Footnote_90_90"></a><a href="#FNanchor_90_90"><span
+ class="label">[90]</span></a> "What will then remain of actual art? Perhaps Berlioz
+ will be its sole representative. Not having studied the pianoforte, he had an
+ instinctive aversion to counterpoint. He is in this respect the opposite of Wagner,
+ who was the embodiment of counterpoint, and drew the utmost he could from its laws"
+ (Saint-Sa&euml;ns).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_91_91" id="Footnote_91_91"></a><a href="#FNanchor_91_91"><span
+ class="label">[91]</span></a> Jacques Passy notes that with Berlioz the most
+ frequent phrases consist of twelve, sixteen, eighteen, or twenty bars. With Wagner,
+ phrases of eight bars are rare, those of four more common, those of two still more
+ so, while those of one bar are most frequent of all (<i>Berlioz et Wagner</i>,
+ article published in <i>Le Correspondant</i>, 10 June, 1888).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_92_92" id="Footnote_92_92"></a><a href="#FNanchor_92_92"><span
+ class="label">[92]</span></a> One must make mention here of the poorness and
+ awkwardness of Berlioz's harmony&mdash;which is incontestable&mdash;since some
+ critics and composers have been able to see (Am I saying something
+ ridiculous?&mdash;Wagner would say it for me) nothing but "faults of orthography"
+ in his genius. To these terrible grammarians&mdash;who, two hundred years ago,
+ criticised Moli&egrave;re on account of his "jargon"&mdash;I shall reply by quoting
+ Schumann.</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"Berlioz's harmonies, in spite of the diversity of their effect, obtained from
+ very scanty material, are distinguished by a sort of simplicity, and even by a
+ solidity and conciseness, which one only meets with in Beethoven.... One may find
+ here and there harmonies that are commonplace and trivial, and others that are
+ incorrect&mdash;at least according to the old rules. In some places his harmonies
+ have a fine effect, and in others their result is vague and indeterminate, or it
+ sounds badly, or is too elaborate and far-fetched. Yet with Berlioz all this
+ somehow takes on a certain distinction. If one attempted to correct it, or even
+ slightly to modify it&mdash;for a skilled musician it would be child's
+ play&mdash;the music would become dull" (Article on the <i>Symphonie
+ fantastique</i>).</p>
+ </div>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+ <p>But let us leave that "grammatical discussion" as well as what Wagner wrote on
+ "the childish question as to whether it is permitted or not to introduce
+ 'neologisms' in matters of harmony and melody" (Wagner to Berlioz, 22 February,
+ 1860). As Schumann has said, "Look out for fifths, and then leave us in peace."</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_93_93" id="Footnote_93_93"></a><a href="#FNanchor_93_93"><span
+ class="label">[93]</span></a> <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, I, 155.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_94_94" id="Footnote_94_94"></a><a href="#FNanchor_94_94"><span
+ class="label">[94]</span></a> These words are taken from Berlioz's directions on
+ the score of his arrangement of the <i>Marseillaise</i> for full orchestra and
+ double choir.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_95_95" id="Footnote_95_95"></a><a href="#FNanchor_95_95"><span
+ class="label">[95]</span></a> "From Beethoven," says Berlioz, "dates the advent in
+ art of colossal forms" (<i>M&eacute;moires</i>, II, 112). But Berlioz forgot one of
+ Beethoven's models&mdash;H&auml;ndel. One must also take into account the musicians
+ of the French revolution: Mehul, Gossec, Cherubini, and Lesueur, whose works,
+ though they may not equal their intentions, are not without grandeur, and often
+ disclose the intuition of a new and noble and popular art.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_96_96" id="Footnote_96_96"></a><a href="#FNanchor_96_96"><span
+ class="label">[96]</span></a> Letter to Morel, 1855. Berlioz thus describes the
+ <i>Tibiomnes</i> and the <i>Judex</i> of his <i>Te Deum</i>. Compare Heine's
+ judgment: "Berlioz's music makes me think of gigantic kinds of extinct animals, of
+ fabulous empires.... Babylon, the hanging gardens of Semiramis, the wonders of
+ Nineveh, the daring buildings of Mizraim."</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_97_97" id="Footnote_97_97"></a><a href="#FNanchor_97_97"><span
+ class="label">[97]</span></a> <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, I, 17.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_98_98" id="Footnote_98_98"></a><a href="#FNanchor_98_98"><span
+ class="label">[98]</span></a> Letter to an unknown person, written probably about
+ 1855, in the collection of Siegfried Ochs, and published in the <i>Geschichte der
+ franz&ouml;sischen Musik</i> of Alfred Bruneau, 1904. That letter contains a rather
+ curious analytical catalogue of Berlioz's works, drawn up by himself. He notes
+ there his predilection for compositions of a "colossal nature," such as the
+ <i>Requiem</i>, the <i>Symphonie fun&egrave;bre et triomphale</i>, and the <i>Te
+ Deum</i>, or those of "an immense style," such as the <i>Imp&eacute;riale</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_99_99" id="Footnote_99_99"></a><a href="#FNanchor_99_99"><span
+ class="label">[99]</span></a> <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, II, 364. See also the letter
+ quoted above.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_100_100" id="Footnote_100_100"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_100_100"><span class="label">[100]</span></a>
+ <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, II, 363. See also II, 163, and the description of the great
+ festival of 1844, with its 1,022 performers.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_101_101" id="Footnote_101_101"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_101_101"><span class="label">[101]</span></a> Hermann Kretzschmar,
+ <i>F&uuml;hrer durch den Konzertsaal</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_102_102" id="Footnote_102_102"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_102_102"><span class="label">[102]</span></a>
+ <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, I, 312.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_103_103" id="Footnote_103_103"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_103_103"><span class="label">[103]</span></a> Letter to some young
+ Hungarians, 14 February, 1861. See the <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, II, 212, for the
+ incredible emotion which the <i>Marche de Rakoczy</i> roused in the audience at
+ Budapest, and, above all, for the astonishing scene at the end:&mdash;</p>
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <p>"I saw a man enter unexpectedly. He was miserably clad, but his face shone
+ with a strange rapture. When he saw me, he threw himself upon me and embraced me
+ with fervour; his eyes filled with tears, and he was hardly able to get out the
+ words, 'Ah, monsieur, monsieur! moi Hongrois ... pauvre diable ... pas parler
+ Fran&ccedil;ais ... un poco Italiano. Pardonnez mon extase.... Ah! ai compris
+ votre canon.... Oui, oui, la grande-bataille.... Allemands chiens!' And then
+ striking his breast violently: 'Dans le coeur, moi ... je vous porte.... <i>Ah!
+ Fran&ccedil;ais ... r&eacute;volutionnaire ... savoir faire la musique des
+ r&eacute;volutions</i>!'"</p>
+ </div></div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_104_104" id="Footnote_104_104"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_104_104"><span class="label">[104]</span></a> Written 5 May,
+ 1841.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_105_105" id="Footnote_105_105"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_105_105"><span class="label">[105]</span></a> Berlioz never
+ ceased to inveigh against the Revolution of 1848&mdash;which should have had his
+ sympathies. Instead of finding material, like Wagner, in the excitement of that
+ time for impassioned compositions, he worked at <i>L'Enfance du Christ</i>. He
+ affected absolute indifference&mdash;he who was so little made for indifference.
+ He approved the State's action, and despised its visionary hopes.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_106_106" id="Footnote_106_106"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_106_106"><span class="label">[106]</span></a> "My musical career
+ would finish very pleasingly if only I could live for a hundred and forty years"
+ <i>(M&eacute;moires</i>, II, 390).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_107_107" id="Footnote_107_107"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_107_107"><span class="label">[107]</span></a> This solitude
+ struck Wagner. "Berlioz's loneliness is not only one of external circumstances;
+ its origin is in his temperament. Though he is a Frenchman, with quick sympathies
+ and interests like those of his fellow-citizens, yet he is none the less alone.
+ He sees no one before him who will hold out a helping hand, there is no one by
+ his side on whom he may lean" (Article written 5 May, 1841). As one reads these
+ words, one feels it was Wagner's lack of sympathy and not his intelligence that
+ prevented him from understanding Berlioz. In his heart I do not doubt that he
+ knew well who was his great rival. But he never said anything about
+ it&mdash;unless perhaps one counts an odd document, certainly not intended for
+ publication, where he (even he) compares him to Beethoven and to Bonaparte
+ (Manuscript in the collection of Alfred Bovet, published by Mottl in German
+ magazines, and by M. Georges de Massougnes in the <i>Revue d'art dramatique</i>,
+ 1 January, 1902).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_108_108" id="Footnote_108_108"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_108_108"><span class="label">[108]</span></a> F. Nietzsche,
+ <i>Der Fall Wagner</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_109_109" id="Footnote_109_109"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_109_109"><span class="label">[109]</span></a> The quotations from
+ Wagner are taken from his letters to Roeckel, Uhlig, and Liszt, between 1851 and
+ 1856.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_110_110" id="Footnote_110_110"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_110_110"><span class="label">[110]</span></a></p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i5">Of applause<br />
+ </span> <span>I still hear the noise; and, strangely enough,<br />
+ </span> <span>In my childish shyness it seemed like mire<br />
+ </span> <span>About to spot me; I feared<br />
+ </span> <span>Its touch, and secretly shunned it,<br />
+ </span> <span>Affecting obstinacy.<br />
+ </span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+ <p>These verses were read by M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns at a concert given on 10 June,
+ 1896, in the Salle Pleyel, to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of his
+ <i>d&eacute;but</i>, which he made in 1846. It was in this same Salle Pleyel that
+ he gave his first concert.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_111_111" id="Footnote_111_111"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_111_111"><span class="label">[111]</span></a> C.
+ Saint-Sa&euml;ns, <i>Harmonie et M&eacute;lodie</i>, 1885.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_112_112" id="Footnote_112_112"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_112_112"><span class="label">[112]</span></a> C.
+ Saint-Sa&euml;ns, <i>Rimes famili&egrave;res</i>, 1890.</p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span>You will know the lying eyes, the insincerity<br />
+ </span> <span>Of pressures of the hand,<br />
+ </span> <span>The mask of friendship that hides jealousy.<br />
+ </span> <span>The tame to-morrows<br />
+ </span> <span><br />
+ </span>
+ <p><span><br />
+ </span> <span>Of these days of triumph, when the vulgar herd<br />
+ </span> <span>Crowns you with honour;<br />
+ </span> <span>Judging rare genius to be<br />
+ </span> <span>Equal in merit to the wit of clowns.<br />
+ </span></p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_113_113" id="Footnote_113_113"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_113_113"><span class="label">[113]</span></a> Letter written to
+ M. Levin, the correspondent of the <i>Boersen-Courier</i> of Berlin, 9 September,
+ 1901.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_114_114" id="Footnote_114_114"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_114_114"><span class="label">[114]</span></a> C.
+ Saint-Sa&euml;ns, <i>Charles Gounod et le Don Juan de Mozart</i>, 1894.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_115_115" id="Footnote_115_115"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_115_115"><span class="label">[115]</span></a></p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span>But ten years old, slightly built and pale,<br />
+ </span> <span>Yet full of simple confidence and joy (<i>Rimes
+ famili&egrave;res</i>).<br />
+ </span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_116_116" id="Footnote_116_116"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_116_116"><span class="label">[116]</span></a> Charles Gounod,
+ <i>M&eacute;moires d'un Artiste</i>, 1896.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_117_117" id="Footnote_117_117"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_117_117"><span class="label">[117]</span></a> Quoted from
+ Saint-Sa&euml;ns by Edmond Hippeau in <i>Henry VIII et L'Op&eacute;ra
+ fran&ccedil;ais</i>, 1883. M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns speaks elsewhere of "these works,
+ well written, but heavy and unattractive, and reflecting in a tiresome way the
+ narrow and pedantic spirit of certain little towns in Germany" (<i>Harmonie et
+ M&eacute;lodie</i>).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_118_118" id="Footnote_118_118"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_118_118"><span class="label">[118]</span></a> Charles Gounod,
+ <i>"Ascanio" de Saint-Sa&euml;ns</i>, 1890.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_119_119" id="Footnote_119_119"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_119_119"><span class="label">[119]</span></a> <i>Id.,
+ ibid.</i></p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_120_120" id="Footnote_120_120"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_120_120"><span class="label">[120]</span></a> C.
+ Saint-Sa&euml;ns, <i>Probl&egrave;mes et Myst&egrave;res</i>, 1894.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_121_121" id="Footnote_121_121"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_121_121"><span class="label">[121]</span></a> <i>Harmonie et
+ M&eacute;lodie</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_122_122" id="Footnote_122_122"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_122_122"><span class="label">[122]</span></a> C.
+ Saint-Sa&euml;ns, <i>Portraits et Souvenirs</i>, 1900.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_123_123" id="Footnote_123_123"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_123_123"><span class="label">[123]</span></a></p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span>I know that a vain dream of virtue<br />
+ </span> <span>Has always cast a shadow on your soul (<i>Rimes
+ famili&egrave;res</i>).<br />
+ </span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <br />
+ <br />
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_124_124" id="Footnote_124_124"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_124_124"><span class="label">[124]</span></a> C.
+ Saint-Sa&euml;ns, <i>Note sur les d&eacute;cors de th&eacute;&acirc;tre dans
+ l'antiquit&eacute; romaine</i>, 1880, where he discusses the mural paintings of
+ Pompeii.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_125_125" id="Footnote_125_125"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_125_125"><span class="label">[125]</span></a> Lecture on the
+ Phenomena of Mirages, given to the Astronomical Society of France in 1905.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_126_126" id="Footnote_126_126"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_126_126"><span class="label">[126]</span></a> C.
+ Saint-Sa&euml;ns, <i>La Crampe des &Eacute;crivains</i>, a comedy in one act,
+ 1892.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_127_127" id="Footnote_127_127"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_127_127"><span class="label">[127]</span></a> <i>Harmonie et
+ M&eacute;lodie</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_128_128" id="Footnote_128_128"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_128_128"><span class="label">[128]</span></a> Charles Gounod,
+ <i>M&eacute;moires d'un Artiste</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_129_129" id="Footnote_129_129"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_129_129"><span class="label">[129]</span></a> <i>Les Heures;
+ Mors; Modestie (Rimes famili&egrave;res</i>).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_130_130" id="Footnote_130_130"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_130_130"><span class="label">[130]</span></a> "Thanks to Berlioz,
+ all my generation has been shaped, and well shaped" <i>(Portraits et
+ Souvenirs</i>).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_131_131" id="Footnote_131_131"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_131_131"><span class="label">[131]</span></a> "I like Liszt's
+ music so much, because he does not bother about other people's opinions; he says
+ what he wants to say; and the only thing that he troubles about is to say it as
+ well as he possibly can" (Quoted by Hippeau).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_132_132" id="Footnote_132_132"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_132_132"><span class="label">[132]</span></a> The quotations are
+ taken from <i>Harmonie et M&eacute;lodie</i> and <i>Portraits et
+ Souvenirs</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_133_133" id="Footnote_133_133"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_133_133"><span class="label">[133]</span></a> In <i>Harmonie et
+ M&eacute;lodie</i> M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns tells us that he organised and directed a
+ concert in the Th&eacute;&acirc;tre-Italien where only Liszt's compositions were
+ played. But all his efforts to make the French musical public appreciate Liszt
+ were a failure.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_134_134" id="Footnote_134_134"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_134_134"><span class="label">[134]</span></a> The admiration was
+ mutual. M. Saint-Sa&euml;ns even said that without Liszt he could not have
+ written <i>Samson et Dalila</i>. "Not only did Liszt have <i>Samson et Dalila</i>
+ performed at Weimar, but without him that work would never have come into being.
+ My suggestions on the subject had met with such hostility that I had given up the
+ idea of writing it; and all that existed were some illegible notes.... Then at
+ Weimar one day I spoke to Liszt about it, and he said to me, quite trustingly and
+ without having heard a note, 'Finish your work; I will have it performed here.'
+ The events of 1870 delayed its performance for several years." (<i>Revue
+ Musicale</i>, 8 November, 1901).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_135_135" id="Footnote_135_135"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_135_135"><span class="label">[135]</span></a> <i>Portraits et
+ Souvenirs</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_136_136" id="Footnote_136_136"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_136_136"><span class="label">[136]</span></a> <i>Harmonie et
+ M&eacute;lodie</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_137_137" id="Footnote_137_137"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_137_137"><span class="label">[137]</span></a> C.
+ Saint-Sa&euml;ns, <i>Portraits et Souvenirs</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_138_138" id="Footnote_138_138"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_138_138"><span class="label">[138]</span></a> <i>Portraits et
+ Souvenirs</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_139_139" id="Footnote_139_139"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_139_139"><span class="label">[139]</span></a> <i>Revue d'Art
+ dramatique</i>, 5 February, 1899.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_140_140" id="Footnote_140_140"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_140_140"><span class="label">[140]</span></a> Vincent d'Indy:
+ <i>Cours de Composition musicale</i>, Book I, drawn up from notes taken in
+ Composition classes at the <i>Schola Cantorum</i>, 1897-1898, p. 16 (Durand,
+ 1902). See also the inaugural speech given at the school, and published by the
+ <i>Tribune de Saint-Gervais</i>, November, 1900.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_141_141" id="Footnote_141_141"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_141_141"><span class="label">[141]</span></a> Vincent d'Indy,
+ <i>Cours de Composition musicale</i>, p. 132.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_142_142" id="Footnote_142_142"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_142_142"><span class="label">[142]</span></a> <i>Id.</i>,
+ <i>ibid.</i>, p. 13.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_143_143" id="Footnote_143_143"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_143_143"><span class="label">[143]</span></a> <i>Id., ibid.</i>,
+ p. 25. In the thirteenth century, Philippe de Vitry, Bishop of Meaux, called
+ triple time "perfect," because "it hath its name from the Trinity, that is to
+ say, from the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, in whom is divine
+ perfection."</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_144_144" id="Footnote_144_144"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_144_144"><span class="label">[144]</span></a> <i>Id., ibid.</i>,
+ pp. 66, 83, and <i>passim</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_145_145" id="Footnote_145_145"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_145_145"><span class="label">[145]</span></a> <i>Id.,
+ ibid.</i></p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_146_146" id="Footnote_146_146"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_146_146"><span class="label">[146]</span></a> "Make war against
+ Particularism, that unwholesome fruit of the Protestant heresy!" (Speech to the
+ <i>Schola</i>, taken from the <i>Tribune de Saint-Gervais</i>, November,
+ 1900.)</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_147_147" id="Footnote_147_147"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_147_147"><span class="label">[147]</span></a> At least Judaism
+ has the honour of giving its name to a whole period of art, the "Judaic period."
+ "The modern style is the last phase of the Judaic school...." etc.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_148_148" id="Footnote_148_148"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_148_148"><span class="label">[148]</span></a> In the <i>Cours de
+ Composition musicale</i> M. d'Indy speaks of "the admirable initial T in the
+ <i>Rouleau mortuaire</i> of Saint-Vital (twelfth century), which represents Satan
+ vomiting two Jews ... an expressive and symbolic work of art, if ever there was
+ one." I should not mention this but for the fact that there are only two
+ illustrations in the whole book.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_149_149" id="Footnote_149_149"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_149_149"><span class="label">[149]</span></a> <i>Cours de
+ Composition musicale</i>, p. 160.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_150_150" id="Footnote_150_150"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_150_150"><span class="label">[150]</span></a> <i>L'Oratorio
+ moderne</i> (<i>Tribune de Saint-Gervais</i>, March, 1899).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_151_151" id="Footnote_151_151"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_151_151"><span class="label">[151]</span></a> <i>Ibid.</i> As
+ much as to say he was a Catholic without knowing it. And that is what a friend of
+ the <i>Schola</i>, M. Edgar Tinel, declares: "Bach is a truly Christian artist
+ and, without doubt, <i>a Protestant by mistake</i>, since in his immortal
+ <i>Credo</i> he confesses his faith in one holy, catholic, and apostolic Church"
+ (<i>Tribune de Saint-Gervais</i>, August-September, 1902). M. Edgar Tinel was, as
+ you know, one of the principal masters of Belgian oratorio.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_152_152" id="Footnote_152_152"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_152_152"><span class="label">[152]</span></a> <i>Revue
+ musicale</i>, November, 1902.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_153_153" id="Footnote_153_153"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_153_153"><span class="label">[153]</span></a> "The only documents
+ extant on ancient music are either criticisms or appreciations, and not musical
+ texts" (<i>Cours de Composition</i>).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_154_154" id="Footnote_154_154"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_154_154"><span class="label">[154]</span></a> "The influence of
+ the Renaissance, with its pretension and vanity, caused a check in all the
+ arts&mdash;the effect of which we are still feeling" (<i>Trait&eacute; de
+ Composition</i>, p. 89. See also the passage quoted before on Pride).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_155_155" id="Footnote_155_155"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_155_155"><span class="label">[155]</span></a> <i>Tribune de
+ Saint-Gervais</i>, November, 1900.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_156_156" id="Footnote_156_156"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_156_156"><span class="label">[156]</span></a> I speak of the
+ passages where he expresses himself freely, and is not interpreting a dramatic
+ situation necessary to his subject, as in that fine symphonic part of the
+ <i>R&eacute;demption</i>, where he describes the triumph of Christ. But even
+ there we find traces of sadness and suffering.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_157_157" id="Footnote_157_157"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_157_157"><span class="label">[157]</span></a> Through a break in
+ the clouds, revealing Celestial joy shining above the deeps.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_158_158" id="Footnote_158_158"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_158_158"><span class="label">[158]</span></a> <i>Tribune de
+ Saint-Gervais</i> November, 1900.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_159_159" id="Footnote_159_159"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_159_159"><span class="label">[159]</span></a> <i>Id.</i>,
+ September, 1899.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_160_160" id="Footnote_160_160"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_160_160"><span class="label">[160]</span></a>
+ <i>L'&Eacute;tranger</i>, "action musicale" in two acts. Poem and music by M.
+ Vincent d'Indy. Played for the first time at Brussels in the Th&eacute;&acirc;tre
+ de la Monnaie, 7 January, 1903. The quotations from the drama, whose poetry is
+ not as good as its music, are taken from the score.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_161_161" id="Footnote_161_161"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_161_161"><span class="label">[161]</span></a> There is a certain
+ likeness in the subject to Herr Richard Strauss's <i>Feuersnot</i>. There, too,
+ the hero is a stranger who is persecuted, and treated as a sorcerer in the very
+ town to which he has brought honour. But the <i>d&eacute;nouement</i> is not the
+ same; and the fundamental difference of temperament between the two artists is
+ strongly marked. M. d'Indy finishes with the renouncement of a Christian, and
+ Herr Richard Strauss by a proud and joyous affirmation of independence.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_162_162" id="Footnote_162_162"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_162_162"><span class="label">[162]</span></a> Found by M. d'Indy
+ in his own province, as he tells us in his <i>Chansons populaires du
+ Vivarais</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_163_163" id="Footnote_163_163"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_163_163"><span class="label">[163]</span></a> In his criticisms
+ his heart is not always in agreement with his mind. His mind denounces the
+ Renaissance, but his instinct obliges him to appreciate the great Florentine
+ painters of the Renaissance and the musicians of the sixteenth century. He only
+ gets out of the difficulty by the most extraordinary compromises, by saying that
+ Ghirlandajo and Filippo Lippi were Gothic, or by stating that the Renaissance in
+ music did not begin till the seventeenth century! (<i>Cours de Composition</i>,
+ pp. 214 and 216.)</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_164_164" id="Footnote_164_164"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_164_164"><span class="label">[164]</span></a> Act III, scene 3.
+ The power of that evocation is so strong that it carries the poet along with it.
+ It would seem that part of the action had only been conceived with a view to the
+ final effect of the sudden colouring of the waves.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_165_165" id="Footnote_165_165"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_165_165"><span class="label">[165]</span></a> <i>Cours de
+ Composition</i>, and <i>Tribune de Saint-Gervais</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_166_166" id="Footnote_166_166"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_166_166"><span class="label">[166]</span></a> <i>Cours de
+ Composition</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_167_167" id="Footnote_167_167"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_167_167"><span class="label">[167]</span></a> This essay was
+ written in 1899.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_168_168" id="Footnote_168_168"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_168_168"><span class="label">[168]</span></a> Nietzsche.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_169_169" id="Footnote_169_169"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_169_169"><span class="label">[169]</span></a> <i>Beyond Good and
+ Evil</i>, 1886. I hope I may be excused for introducing Nietzsche here, but his
+ thoughts seem constantly to be reflected in Strauss, and to throw much light on
+ the soul of modern Germany.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_170_170" id="Footnote_170_170"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_170_170"><span class="label">[170]</span></a> This article was
+ written in 1899. Since then the <i>Sinfonia Domestica</i>, has been produced, and
+ will be noticed in the essay <i>French and German Music</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_171_171" id="Footnote_171_171"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_171_171"><span class="label">[171]</span></a> Composed in 1889,
+ and performed for the first time at Eisenach in 1890.</p>
+ </div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_171a_171a" id="Footnote_171a_171a"></a>
+<a href="#FNanchor_171a_171a"><span class="label">[171a]</span></a><i>Richard Strauss, eine Charakterskizze</i>, 1896,
+ Prague.</p></div>
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_171b_171b" id="Footnote_171b_171b"></a>
+<a href="#FNanchor_171b_171b"><span class="label">[171b]</span></a><i>R. Strauss, Essai critique et biologique</i>, 1898,
+ Brussels.</p></div>
+<div class="footnote">
+<p><a name="Footnote_171c_171c" id="Footnote_171c_171c"></a>
+<a href="#FNanchor_171c_171c"><span class="label">[171c]</span></a><i>Der Musikf&uuml;hrer: Tod und Verkl&auml;rung</i>,
+ Frankfort.</p></div>
+
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_172_172" id="Footnote_172_172"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_172_172"><span class="label">[172]</span></a> Some people have
+ tried to see Alexander Ritter's thoughts in Friedhold, as they have seen
+ Strauss's thoughts in Guntram.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_173_173" id="Footnote_173_173"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_173_173"><span class="label">[173]</span></a> Composed in
+ 1894-95, and played for the first time at Cologne in 1895.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_174_174" id="Footnote_174_174"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_174_174"><span class="label">[174]</span></a> Composed in
+ 1895-96, and performed for the first time at Frankfort-On-Main in November,
+ 1896.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_175_175" id="Footnote_175_175"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_175_175"><span class="label">[175]</span></a> Nietzsche.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_176_176" id="Footnote_176_176"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_176_176"><span class="label">[176]</span></a> Nietzsche,
+ <i>Zarathustra</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_177_177" id="Footnote_177_177"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_177_177"><span class="label">[177]</span></a> Arthur Hahn, <i>Der
+ Musikf&uuml;hrer: Don Quixote</i>, Frankfort.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_178_178" id="Footnote_178_178"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_178_178"><span class="label">[178]</span></a> At the head of each
+ variation Strauss has marked on the score the chapter of "Don Quixote" that he is
+ interpreting.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_179_179" id="Footnote_179_179"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_179_179"><span class="label">[179]</span></a> Finished in
+ December, 1898. Performed for the first time at Frankfort-On-Main on 3 March,
+ 1899. Published by Leuckart, Leipzig.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_180_180" id="Footnote_180_180"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_180_180"><span class="label">[180]</span></a> The composition of
+ the orchestra in Strauss's later works is as follows: In <i>Zarathustra</i>: one
+ piccolo, three flutes, three oboes, one English horn, one clarinet in E flat, two
+ clarinets in B, one bass-clarinet in B, three bassoons, one double-bassoon, six
+ horns in F, four trumpets in C, three trombones, three bass-tuba, kettledrums,
+ big drum, cymbals, triangle, chime of bells, bell in E, organ, two harps, and
+ strings. In <i>Heldenleben</i>: eight horns instead of six, five trumpets instead
+ of four (two in E flat, three in B); and, in addition, military drums.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_181_181" id="Footnote_181_181"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_181_181"><span class="label">[181]</span></a> In <i>Guntram</i>
+ one could even believe that he had made up his mind to use a phrase in
+ <i>Tristan</i>, as if he could not find anything better to express passionate
+ desire.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_182_182" id="Footnote_182_182"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_182_182"><span class="label">[182]</span></a> "The German spirit,
+ which but a little while back had the will to dominate Europe, the force to
+ govern Europe, has finally made up its mind to abandon it."&mdash;Nietzsche.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_183_183" id="Footnote_183_183"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_183_183"><span class="label">[183]</span></a> A large number of
+ works on Hugo Wolf have been published in Germany since his death. The chief is
+ the great biography of Herr Ernst Decsey&mdash;<i>Hugo Wolf</i> (Berlin, 1903-4).
+ I have found this book of great service; it is a work full of knowledge and
+ sympathy. I have also consulted Herr Paul M&uuml;ller's excellent little
+ pamphlet, <i>Hugo Wolf (Moderne essays</i>, Berlin, 1904), and the collections of
+ Wolf's letters, in particular his letters to Oskar Grohe, Emil Kaufmann, and Hugo
+ Faisst.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_184_184" id="Footnote_184_184"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_184_184"><span class="label">[184]</span></a> Joseph Schalk was
+ one of the founders of the <i>Wagner-Verein</i> at Vienna, and devoted his life
+ to propagating the cult of Bruckner (who called him his "<i>Herr
+ Generalissimus</i> "), and to fighting for Wolf.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_185_185" id="Footnote_185_185"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_185_185"><span class="label">[185]</span></a> Letter of H. von
+ B&uuml;low to Detlev von Liliencron.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_186_186" id="Footnote_186_186"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_186_186"><span class="label">[186]</span></a> Wolf's letters to
+ Strasser are of great value in giving us an insight into his artist's eager and
+ unhappy soul.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_187_187" id="Footnote_187_187"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_187_187"><span class="label">[187]</span></a> Wolf was living
+ there with a friend. He had not a lodging of his own until 1896, and that was due
+ to the generosity of his friends.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_188_188" id="Footnote_188_188"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_188_188"><span class="label">[188]</span></a> The writing of an
+ opera was Wolf's great dream and intention for many years.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_189_189" id="Footnote_189_189"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_189_189"><span class="label">[189]</span></a> Detlev von
+ Liliencron offered him an American subject. "But in spite of my admiration for
+ Buffalo Bill and his unwashed crew," said Wolf sarcastically, "I prefer my native
+ soil and people who appreciate the advantages of soap."</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_190_190" id="Footnote_190_190"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_190_190"><span class="label">[190]</span></a></p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span>All that is begun must end,<br />
+ </span> <span>All around will sometime perish.<br />
+ </span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_191_191" id="Footnote_191_191"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_191_191"><span class="label">[191]</span></a></p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span>Once we were also men<br />
+ </span> <span>Happy or sad like you;<br />
+ </span> <span>Now life is taken from us,<br />
+ </span> <span>We are only of earth, as you see.<br />
+ </span> <span><br />
+ </span>
+ <p><span><br />
+ </span> <span><i>Chiunque nasce a morte arriva<br />
+ </i></span> Nel fuggir del tempo, e'l sole<br />
+ <span>Niuna cosa lascia viva....<br />
+ </span> <span>Come voi, uomini fummo,<br />
+ </span> <span>Lieti e tristi, come siete;<br />
+ </span> <span>E or siam, come vedete,<br />
+ </span> <span>Terra al sol, di vita priva</span>.<br />
+ </p>
+ <p><br />
+ <span>(Poems of Michelangelo, CXXXVI.)<br />
+ </span></p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_192_192" id="Footnote_192_192"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_192_192"><span class="label">[192]</span></a> This article was
+ written in 1899, on the occasion of Lorenzo Perosi's coming to Paris to direct
+ his oratorio <i>La R&eacute;surrection</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_193_193" id="Footnote_193_193"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_193_193"><span class="label">[193]</span></a> This essay was
+ written in 1905.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_194_194" id="Footnote_194_194"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_194_194"><span class="label">[194]</span></a> Man lies in
+ greatest misery; Man lies in greatest pain; I would I were in Heaven!</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_195_195" id="Footnote_195_195"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_195_195"><span class="label">[195]</span></a> I come from God,
+ and shall to God return.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_196_196" id="Footnote_196_196"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_196_196"><span class="label">[196]</span></a> Thou wilt rise
+ again, thou wilt rise again, O my dust, after a little rest.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_197_197" id="Footnote_197_197"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_197_197"><span class="label">[197]</span></a> What is born must
+ pass away; What has passed away must rise again.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_198_198" id="Footnote_198_198"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_198_198"><span class="label">[198]</span></a></p>
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span>O Man! O Man! Have care! Have care!<br />
+ </span> <span>What says dark midnight?<br />
+ </span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_199_199" id="Footnote_199_199"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_199_199"><span class="label">[199]</span></a> May I be allowed to
+ say that I am trying to write this study from a purely historical point of view,
+ by eliminating all personal feeling&mdash;which would be of no value here. As a
+ matter of fact, I am not a Debussyite; my sympathies are with quite another kind
+ of art. But I feel impelled to give homage to a great artist, whose work I am
+ able to judge with some impartiality.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_200_200" id="Footnote_200_200"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_200_200"><span class="label">[200]</span></a> That is for
+ musicians. But I am convinced that with the mass of the public the other reasons
+ have more weight&mdash;as is always the case.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_201_201" id="Footnote_201_201"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_201_201"><span class="label">[201]</span></a> We must also note
+ that during the first half of the seventeenth century people of taste objected to
+ the very theatrical declamation of French opera. "Our singers believe," wrote
+ Mersenne, in 1636, "that the exclamations and emphasis used by the Italians in
+ singing savour too much of tragedies and comedies, and so they do not wish to
+ employ them."</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_202_202" id="Footnote_202_202"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_202_202"><span class="label">[202]</span></a> No other critic
+ has, I think, discerned so shrewdly Debussy's art and genius. Some of his
+ analyses are models of clever intuition. The thought of the critic seems to be
+ one with that of the musician.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_203_203" id="Footnote_203_203"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_203_203"><span class="label">[203]</span></a> <i>Jean-Christophe
+ &agrave; Paris</i>, 1904.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_204_204" id="Footnote_204_204"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_204_204"><span class="label">[204]</span></a> One must at least
+ do Hugo the justice of saying that he always spoke of Beethoven with admiration,
+ although he did not know him. But he rather exalts him in order to take away from
+ the importance of a poet&mdash;the only one in the nineteenth century&mdash;whose
+ fame was shading his own; and when he wrote in his <i>William Shakespeare</i>
+ that "the great man of Germany is Beethoven" it was understood by all to mean
+ "the great man of Germany is not Goethe."</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_205_205" id="Footnote_205_205"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_205_205"><span class="label">[205]</span></a> Written in a letter
+ to his sister, Nanci, on 3 April, 1850.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_206_206" id="Footnote_206_206"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_206_206"><span class="label">[206]</span></a> We remark,
+ nevertheless, that that did not prevent Gautier from being a musical critic.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_207_207" id="Footnote_207_207"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_207_207"><span class="label">[207]</span></a> I wish to make
+ known from the beginning that I am only noticing here the greater musical doings
+ of the nation, and making no mention of works which have not had an important
+ influence on this movement.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_208_208" id="Footnote_208_208"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_208_208"><span class="label">[208]</span></a> In the meanwhile
+ France saw the brilliant rise and extinction of a great artist&mdash;the most
+ spontaneous of all her musicians&mdash;Georges Bizet, who died in 1875, aged
+ thirty-seven. "Bizet was the last genius to discover a new beauty," said
+ Nietzsche; "Bizet discovered new lands&mdash;the Southern lands of music,"
+ <i>Carmen</i> (1875) and <i>L'Arl&eacute;sienne</i> (1872) are masterpieces of
+ the lyrical Latin drama. Their style is luminous, concise, and well-defined; the
+ figures are outlined with incisive precision. The music is full of light and
+ movement, and is a great contrast to Wagner's philosophical symphonies, and its
+ popular subject only serves to strengthen its aristocratic distinction. By its
+ nature and its clear perception of the spirit of the race it was well in advance
+ of its time. What a place Bizet might have taken in our art if he had only lived
+ twenty years longer!</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_209_209" id="Footnote_209_209"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_209_209"><span class="label">[209]</span></a> Its influence is
+ shown, in varying degrees, in works such as M. Reyer's <i>Sigurd</i> (1884),
+ Chabrier's <i>Gwendoline</i> (1886), and M. Vincent d'Indy's <i>Le Chant de la
+ Cloche</i> (1886).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_210_210" id="Footnote_210_210"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_210_210"><span class="label">[210]</span></a> One knows that the
+ Conservatoire originated in <i>L'&Eacute;cole gratuite de musique de la garde
+ nationale parisienne</i>, founded in 1792 by Sarrette, and directed by Gossec. It
+ was then a civic and military school, but, according to Ch&eacute;nier, was
+ changed into the <i>Institut national de musique</i> on 8 November, 1793, and
+ into the <i>Conservatoire</i> on 3 August, 1795. This Republican Conservatoire
+ made it its business to keep in contact with the spirit of the country, and was
+ directly opposed to the Opera, which was of monarchical origin. See M. Constant
+ Pierre's work <i>Le Conservatoire national de musique</i> (1900), and M. Julien
+ Tiersot's very interesting book <i>Les F&ecirc;tes et les Chants de la
+ R&eacute;volution fran&ccedil;aise</i> (1908).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_211_211" id="Footnote_211_211"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_211_211"><span class="label">[211]</span></a> You must remember
+ that I am speaking here of <i>official</i> action only; for there have always
+ been masters among the Conservatoire teaching staff who have united a fine
+ musical culture with a broad-minded and liberal spirit. But the influence of
+ these independent minds is, generally speaking, small; for they have not the
+ disposing of academic successes; and when, by exception, they have a wide
+ influence, like that of C&eacute;sar Franck, it is the result of personal work
+ outside the Conservatoire&mdash;work that is, as often as not, opposed to
+ Conservatoire principles.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_212_212" id="Footnote_212_212"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_212_212"><span class="label">[212]</span></a> It is to be noted
+ that since 1807 the Conservatoire pupils have made Beethoven's symphonies
+ familiar to Parisians. The <i>Symphony in C minor</i> was performed by them in
+ 1808; the <i>Heroic</i> in 1811. It was in connection with one of these
+ performances that the <i>Tablettes de Polymnie</i> gave a curious appreciation of
+ Beethoven, which is quoted by M. Constant Pierre: "This composer is often
+ grotesque and uncouth, and sometimes flies majestically like an eagle and
+ sometimes crawls along stony paths. It is as though one had shut up doves and
+ crocodiles together."</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_213_213" id="Footnote_213_213"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_213_213"><span class="label">[213]</span></a> This is according
+ to M. Rivet's report on the <i>Beaux-Arts</i> in 1906. The Opera employs 1370
+ people, and its expenses are about 3,988,000 francs. The annual grant of the
+ State comes to about 800,000 francs.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_214_214" id="Footnote_214_214"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_214_214"><span class="label">[214]</span></a> On the occasion of
+ the revival of <i>Don Juan</i> in 1902, the <i>Revue Musicale</i> counted up the
+ pages that had been added to the original score. They came to two hundred and
+ twenty-eight.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_215_215" id="Footnote_215_215"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_215_215"><span class="label">[215]</span></a> The facts which
+ follow are taken from the archives of the <i>Soci&eacute;t&eacute; Nationale de
+ Musique</i>, and have been given me by M. Pierre de Br&eacute;ville, the
+ Society's secretary.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_216_216" id="Footnote_216_216"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_216_216"><span class="label">[216]</span></a> It must be
+ remembered that the prices of the seats were much cheaper than they are to-day;
+ the best were only three francs.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_217_217" id="Footnote_217_217"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_217_217"><span class="label">[217]</span></a> There were about
+ 340 performances of Saint-Sa&euml;ns' works, 380 of Wagner's, 390 of Beethoven's,
+ and 470 of Berlioz's. I owe these details to the kind information of M. Charles
+ Malherbe and M. L&eacute;on Petitjean, the secretary of the Colonne concerts.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_218_218" id="Footnote_218_218"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_218_218"><span class="label">[218]</span></a> The <i>Damnation de
+ Faust</i> alone was given in its entirety a hundred and fifty times in thirty
+ years.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_219_219" id="Footnote_219_219"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_219_219"><span class="label">[219]</span></a> It is known that M.
+ Colonne has now a helper in M. Gabriel Piern&eacute;, who will succeed him when
+ he retires.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_220_220" id="Footnote_220_220"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_220_220"><span class="label">[220]</span></a> My statements may
+ be verified by the account published in the <i>Revue &Eacute;olienne</i> of
+ January, 1902, by M. L&eacute;on Bourgeois, secretary of the Committee of the
+ <i>Association des Concerts-Lamoureux</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_221_221" id="Footnote_221_221"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_221_221"><span class="label">[221]</span></a> It published, in
+ eleven volumes, the ancient works that it performed. Before this experiment there
+ had been the <i>Concerts historiques de F&eacute;tis</i>, preceded by lectures,
+ which were inaugurated in 1832, and failed; and these were followed by
+ Am&eacute;d&eacute;e M&eacute;r&eacute;aux's <i>Concerts historiques</i> in
+ 1842-1844.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_222_222" id="Footnote_222_222"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_222_222"><span class="label">[222]</span></a> The following
+ information was given by M. Vincent d'Indy at a lecture held on 20 February,
+ 1903, at the <i>&Eacute;cole des Hautes &Eacute;tudes sociales</i>&mdash;a
+ lecture which later became a chapter in M. d'Indy's book, <i>C&eacute;sar
+ Franck</i> (1906).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_223_223" id="Footnote_223_223"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_223_223"><span class="label">[223]</span></a> A complete list may
+ be found in M. d'Indy's book.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_224_224" id="Footnote_224_224"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_224_224"><span class="label">[224]</span></a><i>Tribune de
+ Saint-Gervais</i>, November, 1900.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_225_225" id="Footnote_225_225"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_225_225"><span class="label">[225]</span></a> See the Essay on
+ <i>Vincent d'Indy</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_226_226" id="Footnote_226_226"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_226_226"><span class="label">[226]</span></a> <i>Revue d'histoire
+ et de critique musicale</i>, August-September, 1901.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_227_227" id="Footnote_227_227"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_227_227"><span class="label">[227]</span></a> "The <i>Schola
+ Cantorum</i> aims at creating a modern music truly worthy of the Church" (First
+ number of the <i>Tribune de Saint-Gervais</i>, the monthly bulletin of the
+ <i>Schola Cantorum</i>, January, 1895).</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_228_228" id="Footnote_228_228"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_228_228"><span class="label">[228]</span></a> The Schola had in
+ mind here the vigorous work of the French Benedictines, which had been done in
+ silence for the past fifty years; it was thinking, too, of the restoration of the
+ Gregorian chant during 1850 and 1860 by Dom Gu&eacute;ranger, the first abbot of
+ Solesmes, a work continued by Dom Jausions and Dom Pothier, the abbot of
+ Saint-Wandrille, who published in 1883 the <i>M&eacute;lodies
+ Gr&eacute;goriennes</i>, the <i>Liber Gradualis</i>, and the <i>Liber
+ Antiphonarius</i>. This work was finally brought to a happy conclusion by Dom
+ Schmitt, and Dom Mocqucreau, the prior of Solesmes, who in 1889 began his
+ monumental work, the <i>Pal&eacute;o-graphie Musicals</i>, of which nine volumes
+ had appeared in 1906. This great Benedictine school is an honour to France by the
+ scientific work it has lately done in music. The school is at present exiled from
+ France.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_229_229" id="Footnote_229_229"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_229_229"><span class="label">[229]</span></a> When Charles Bordes
+ opened the first <i>Schola Cantorum</i> in the Rue Stanislas he was without help
+ or resources, and had exactly thirty-seven francs and fifty centimes in hand. I
+ mention this detail to give an idea of the splendidly courageous and confident
+ spirit that Charles Bordes possessed.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_230_230" id="Footnote_230_230"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_230_230"><span class="label">[230]</span></a> <i>Tribune de
+ Saint-Gervais</i>, November, 1900.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_231_231" id="Footnote_231_231"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_231_231"><span class="label">[231]</span></a> There are actually
+ nine courses of Composition at the <i>Schola</i>&mdash;five for men and four for
+ women. M. d'Indy takes eight of them, as well as a mixed class for orchestra.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_232_232" id="Footnote_232_232"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_232_232"><span class="label">[232]</span></a> The orchestra is
+ mainly composed of pupils; and, by a generous arrangement, the financial profits
+ from rehearsals and performances are divided among the pupils who take part in
+ them, and credited to their account. And so besides the exhibitioners the
+ <i>Schola</i> has a great number of pupils who are not well off, but who manage
+ by these concerts to defray almost the entire expenses of their education there.
+ "The concerts serve more especially as aesthetic exercises for the pupils, and as
+ a means of according them teaching at small expense to themselves." I owe this
+ information and all that precedes it to the kindness of M. J. de la Laurencie,
+ the general secretary of the <i>Schola</i>, whom I should like to thank.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_233_233" id="Footnote_233_233"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_233_233"><span class="label">[233]</span></a> The <i>Schola</i>
+ has even performed, in an open-air theatre, Ramcau's <i>La Guirlande</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_234_234" id="Footnote_234_234"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_234_234"><span class="label">[234]</span></a> One may add to this
+ list the choral societies of Nantes and Besan&ccedil;on, which are bodies of the
+ same order as the <i>Chanteurs de Saint-Gervais</i>. And we may also attribute to
+ the influence of the <i>Schola</i> an independent society, the
+ <i>Soci&eacute;t&eacute; J.S. Bach</i>, started in Paris by an old <i>Schola</i>
+ pupil, M. Gustave Bret, which, since 1905, has devoted itself to the performance
+ of the great works of Bach. It is not one of the least merits of the
+ <i>Schola</i> that it has helped to form good amateur choirs of the same type as
+ the choral societies of Germany.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_235_235" id="Footnote_235_235"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_235_235"><span class="label">[235]</span></a> M. Charles Bordes
+ did not even then give up his labours altogether. Though obliged to retire to the
+ south of France for his health's sake, he founded, in November, 1905, the
+ <i>Schola</i> of Montpellier. This <i>Schola</i> has given about fifteen concerts
+ a year, and has performed some of Bach's cantatas, scenes from Rameau's and
+ Gluck's operas, Franck's oratorios, and Monteverde's <i>Orfeo</i>. In 1906 M.
+ Bordes organised an open-air performance of Rameau's <i>Guirlande</i>. In
+ January, 1908, he produced <i>Castor et Pollux</i> at the Montpellier theatre.
+ The man's activity was incredible, and nothing seemed to tire him. He was
+ planning to start a dramatic training-school at Montpellier for the production of
+ seventeenth and eighteenth century operas, when he died, in November, 1909, at
+ the age of forty-four, and so deprived French art of one of its best and most
+ unselfish servants.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_236_236" id="Footnote_236_236"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_236_236"><span class="label">[236]</span></a> The quality of the
+ audience atoned, it is true, for its small numbers. Berlioz used to come to these
+ concerts with his friends, Damcke and Stephen Heller; and it was after one of
+ these performances, when he had been very stirred by an <i>adagio</i> in the E
+ flat quartette, that he burst out with, "What a man! He could do everything, and
+ the others nothing!"</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_237_237" id="Footnote_237_237"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_237_237"><span class="label">[237]</span></a> The name, <i>La
+ Trompette</i>, was also the pretext for embellishing chamber-music, by
+ introducing the trumpet among the other instruments. To this end M.
+ Saint-Sa&euml;ns wrote his fine septette for piano, trumpet, two violins, viola,
+ violoncello, and double bass; and M. Vincent d'Indy his romantic suite in D for
+ trumpet, two flutes, and string instruments.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_238_238" id="Footnote_238_238"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_238_238"><span class="label">[238]</span></a> On 12 September,
+ 1871, at the suggestion of Ambroise Thomas. The first lecturer was Barbereau,
+ who, however, only lectured for a year. He was succeeded by Gautier, Professor of
+ Harmony and Accompaniment, who in turn was replaced, in 1878, by M.
+ Bourgault-Ducoudray.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_239_239" id="Footnote_239_239"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_239_239"><span class="label">[239]</span></a> The first three
+ theses on Music accepted at the Sorbonne were those of M. Jules Combarieu on
+ <i>The Relationship of Poetry and Music</i>, of M. Romain Holland on <i>The
+ Beginnings of Opera before Lully and Scarlatti</i>, and of M. Maurice Emmanuel on
+ <i>Greek Orchestics</i>. There followed, several years afterwards, M. Louis
+ Laloy's <i>Aristoxenus of Tarento and Greek Music</i> and M. Jules
+ &Eacute;corcheville's <i>Musical Aesthetics, from Lully to Rameau</i> and
+ <i>French Instrumental Music of the Seventeenth Century</i>, M. Andr&eacute;
+ Pirro's <i>Aesthetics of Johann Sebastian Bach</i>, and M. Charles Lalo's
+ <i>Sketch of Scientific Musical Aesthetics</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_240_240" id="Footnote_240_240"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_240_240"><span class="label">[240]</span></a> There are ninety
+ violins, fifteen violas, and fifteen violoncellos. Unfortunately it is much more
+ difficult to get recruits for the wood wind and brass.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_241_241" id="Footnote_241_241"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_241_241"><span class="label">[241]</span></a> They have performed
+ classical music of composers like Bach, H&auml;ndel, Gluck, Rameau, and
+ Beethoven; and modern music of composers like Berlioz, Saint-Sa&euml;ns, Dukas,
+ etc. This Society has just installed itself in the ancient chapel of the
+ Dominicans of the Faubourg-Saint-Honor&eacute;, who have given them the use of
+ it.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_242_242" id="Footnote_242_242"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_242_242"><span class="label">[242]</span></a> Of late years there
+ has been a veritable outburst of concerts at popular prices&mdash;some of them in
+ imitation of the German <i>Restaurationskonzerte</i>, such as the Concerts-Rouge,
+ the Concerts-Touche, etc., where classical and modern symphony music may be
+ heard. These concerts are increasing fast, and have great success among a public
+ that is almost exclusively <i>bourgeois</i>, but they are yet a long way behind
+ the popular performances of H&auml;ndel in London, where places may be had for
+ sixpence and threepence.</p>
+ <p>I do not attach very much importance to the courageous, though not always very
+ intelligent movement of the Universit&eacute;s Populaires, where since 1886 a
+ collection of amateurs, of fashionable people and artists, meet to make
+ themselves heard, and pretend to initiate the people into what are sometimes the
+ most complicated and aristocratic works of a classic or decadent art. While
+ honouring this propaganda&mdash;whose ardour has now abated somewhat&mdash;one
+ must say that it has shown more good-will than common-sense. The people do not
+ need amusing, still less should they be bored; what they need is to learn
+ something about music. This is not always easy; for it is not noisy deeds we
+ want, but patience and self-sacrifice. Good intentions are not enough. One knows
+ the final failure of the <i>Conservatoire populaire de Mimi Pinson</i>, started
+ by Gustave Charpentier, for giving musical education to the work-girls of
+ Paris.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_243_243" id="Footnote_243_243"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_243_243"><span class="label">[243]</span></a> M. Maurice Buchor
+ relates an anecdote which typifies what I mean. "I begged the conductor of a good
+ men's choral society," he says, "to have one of H&auml;ndel's choruses sung. But
+ he seemed to hesitate. I had made the suggestion tentatively, and then tried to
+ enlarge on the sincerity and breadth of its musical idea. 'Ah, very good,' he
+ said, 'if you really want to hear it, it is easily done; but I was afraid that
+ perhaps it was rather too popular.'" (<i>Po&egrave;me de la Vie Humaine</i>:
+ Introduction to the Second Series, 1905.) One may add to this the words of a
+ professor of singing in a primary school for Higher Education in Paris:
+ "Folk-music&mdash;well, it is very good for the provinces." (Quoted by Buchor in
+ the Introduction to the Second Series of the <i>Po&egrave;me</i>, 1902.)</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_244_244" id="Footnote_244_244"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_244_244"><span class="label">[244]</span></a> Taken from the
+ <i>Supplement &agrave; la Correspondance g&eacute;n&eacute;rale de l'Instruction
+ primaire</i>, 15 December, 1894.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_245_245" id="Footnote_245_245"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_245_245"><span class="label">[245]</span></a> Three series of
+ these <i>Chants populaires pour les &Eacute;coles</i> have already been
+ published.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_246_246" id="Footnote_246_246"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_246_246"><span class="label">[246]</span></a> I reserve my
+ opinion, from an artist's point of view, on this plagiarising of the words of
+ songs. On principle I condemn it absolutely. But, in this case, it is Hobson's
+ choice. <i>Primum vivere, deinde philosophari</i>. If our contemporary musicians
+ really wished the people to sing, they would have written songs for them; but
+ they seem to have no desire to achieve honour that way. So there is nothing else
+ to be done but to have recourse to the musicians of other days; and even there
+ the choice is very limited. For France formerly, like the France of to-day, had
+ very few musicians who had any understanding of a great popular art. Berlioz came
+ nearest to understanding the meaning of it; and he is not yet public property, so
+ his airs cannot be used. It is curious, and rather sad, that out of eighty pieces
+ chosen by M. Buchor only nine of them are French; and this is reckoning the
+ Italians, Lully and Cherubini, as Frenchmen. M. Buchor has had to go to German
+ classical musicians almost entirely, and, generally speaking, his choice has been
+ a happy one. With a sure instinct he has given the preference to popular geniuses
+ like H&auml;ndel and Beethoven. We may ask why he did not keep their words; but
+ we must remember that at any rate they had to be translated; and though it may
+ seem rash to change the subject of a musical masterpiece, it is certain that M.
+ Buchor's clever adaptations have resulted in driving the fine thoughts of
+ H&auml;ndel and Schubert and Mozart and Beethoven into the memories of the French
+ people, and making them part of their lives. Had they heard the same music at a
+ concert they would probably not have been very much moved. And that makes M.
+ Buchor in the right. Let the French people enrich themselves with the musical
+ treasures of Germany until the time comes when they are able to create a music of
+ their own! This is a kind of peaceful conquest to which our art is accustomed.
+ "Now then, Frenchmen," as Du Bellay used to say, "walk boldly up to that fine old
+ Roman city, and decorate (as you have done more than once) your temples and
+ altars with its spoils." Besides, let us remember that the German masters of the
+ eighteenth century, whose words M. Buchor has plagiarised, did not hesitate to
+ plagiarise themselves; and in turning the Berceuse of the <i>Oratorio de
+ No&euml;l</i> into a <i>Sainte famille humaine</i>, M. Buchor has respected the
+ musical ideas of Bach much more than Bach himself did when he turned it into a
+ <i>Dialogue between Hercules and Pleasure</i>.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_247_247" id="Footnote_247_247"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_247_247"><span class="label">[247]</span></a> The
+ <i>Po&egrave;me</i> has been published in four parts:&mdash;I. <i>De la naissance
+ au mariage</i> ("From Birth to Marriage"); II. <i>La Cit&eacute;</i> ("The
+ City"); III. <i>De l'age viril jusqu'&agrave; la mort</i> ("From Manhood to
+ Death"); IV. <i>L'Id&eacute;al</i> ("Ideals"). 1900-1906.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_248_248" id="Footnote_248_248"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_248_248"><span class="label">[248]</span></a> The last chorus of
+ <i>Fidelio</i> has been recently sung by one hundred and seventy school-children
+ at Douai; a grand chorus from <i>The Messiah</i> by the &Eacute;coles Normales of
+ Angoul&ecirc;me and Valence; and the great choral scene and the last part of
+ Schumann's <i>Faust</i> by the two &Eacute;coles Normales of Limoges. At Valence,
+ performances are given every year in the theatre there before an audience of
+ between eight hundred and a thousand teachers.</p>
+ <p>Outside the schools, especially in the North, a certain number of teachers of
+ both sexes have formed choral societies among work-girls and co-operative
+ societies, such as <i>La Fraternelle</i> at Saint Quentin.</p>
+ <p>In a general way one may say that M. Maurice Buchor's campaign has especially
+ succeeded in departments like that of Aisne and Dr&ocirc;me, where the ground has
+ been prepared by the Academy Inspector. Unhappily in many districts the movement
+ receives a lively opposition from music-teachers, who do not approve of this
+ mnemotechnical way of learning poetry with music, without any instruction in
+ solfeggio or musical science. And it is quite evident that this method would have
+ its defects if it were a question of training musicians. But it is really a
+ matter of training people who have some music in them; and so the musicians must
+ not be too fastidious. I hope that great musicians will one day spring from this
+ good ground&mdash;musicians more human than those of our own time, musicians
+ whose music will be rooted in their hearts and in their country.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_249_249" id="Footnote_249_249"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_249_249"><span class="label">[249]</span></a> We must not forget
+ M. Bourgault-Ducoudray, who was his forerunner with his <i>Chants de
+ Fontenoy</i>, collections of songs for the &Eacute;coles Normales.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_250_250" id="Footnote_250_250"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_250_250"><span class="label">[250]</span></a> Mention must
+ especially be made of little groups of young students, pupils of the Universities
+ or the larger schools, who are devoting themselves at present to the moral and
+ musical instruction of the people. Such an effort, made more than a year ago at
+ Vaugirard, resulted in the <i>Man&eacute;canterie des petits chanteurs de la
+ Croix de bois</i>, a small choir of the children of the people, who in the poor
+ parishes go from one church to another singing Gregorian and Palestrinian
+ music.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_251_251" id="Footnote_251_251"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_251_251"><span class="label">[251]</span></a> It is hardly
+ necessary to recall the unfortunate statute of 15 March, 1850, which says:
+ "Primary instruction <i>may</i> comprise singing."</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_252_252" id="Footnote_252_252"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_252_252"><span class="label">[252]</span></a> By the decree of 4
+ August, 1905. At the same time, a programme and pedagogic instructions were
+ issued. The importance of musical dictation and the usefulness of the Galin
+ methods for beginners were urged. Let us hope that the State will decide
+ officially to support M. Buchor's endeavours, and that it will gradually
+ introduce into schools M. Jacques-Delacroze's methods of rhythmic gymnastics,
+ which have produced such astonishing results in Switzerland.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_253_253" id="Footnote_253_253"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_253_253"><span class="label">[253]</span></a> M. Chaumi&eacute;'s
+ suggestion. See the <i>Revue Musicale</i>, 15 July, 1903.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_254_254" id="Footnote_254_254"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_254_254"><span class="label">[254]</span></a> <i>Revue
+ Musicale</i>, December 15, 1903, and 1 and 15 January, 1904.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_255_255" id="Footnote_255_255"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_255_255"><span class="label">[255]</span></a> "In this," says M.
+ Buchor, "as in many other things, the children of the people set an example to
+ the children of the middle classes." That is true; but one must not blame the
+ middle-class children so much as those in authority, who, "in this, as in many
+ other things," have not fulfilled their duties.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_256_256" id="Footnote_256_256"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_256_256"><span class="label">[256]</span></a> <i>The Passion
+ according to St. Matthew</i> was given first of all by two little choirs,
+ consisting of from twelve to sixteen students, including the soloists.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_257_257" id="Footnote_257_257"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_257_257"><span class="label">[257]</span></a> It is hardly
+ necessary to mention the curious attraction that some of our musicians are
+ beginning to feel for the art of civilisations that are quite opposed to those of
+ the West. Slowly and quietly the spirit of the Far East is insinuating itself
+ into European music.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_258_258" id="Footnote_258_258"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_258_258"><span class="label">[258]</span></a> There is no need to
+ say that Rameau's genius justified all this enthusiasm; but one cannot help
+ believing that it was aroused, not so much on account of his musical genius as on
+ account of his supposed championship of the French music of the past against
+ foreign art; though that art was well adapted to the laws of French opera, as we
+ may see for ourselves in Gluck's case.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_259_259" id="Footnote_259_259"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_259_259"><span class="label">[259]</span></a> <i>La Tribune de
+ Saint-Gervais</i>, September, 1903.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div class="footnote">
+ <p><a name="Footnote_260_260" id="Footnote_260_260"></a><a
+ href="#FNanchor_260_260"><span class="label">[260]</span></a> At any rate,
+ certain forms of music&mdash;the highest. See the discussions at the Chambre des
+ D&eacute;put&eacute;s on the budget of the Beaux-Arts in February, 1906; and the
+ speeches of MM. Th&eacute;odore Denis, Beauquier, and Dujardin-Beaumetz, on
+ Religious Music, the Niedermeyer School, and the civic value of the organ.</p>
+ </div>
+ <p>WILLIAM BRENDON AND SON, LTD PRINTERS, PLYMOUTH</p>
+ <p>THE MUSICIAN'S BOOKSHELF.</p>
+ <p>A NEW SERIES.</p>
+ <p><i>Crown 8vo. Occasionally Illustrated.</i></p>
+ <p>EDITED BY CLAUDE LANDI, L.R.A.M., A.R.C.M.</p>
+ <p>MUSICIANS OF TO-DAY. By ROMAIN ROLLAND, Author of "Jean-Christophe." Translated
+ by MARY BLAIKLOCK. PRACTICAL SINGING. By CLIFTON COOKE and CLAUDE LANDI.</p>
+ <p>THE UNREST IN THE MUSIC WORLD. By SYDNEY BLAKISTON.</p>
+ <p>THE SONATA IN MUSIC. By A. EAGLEFIELD HULL, Mus. Doc.</p>
+ <p>THE SYMPHONY IN MUSIC. By the same.</p>
+ <p>ON LISTENING TO MUSIC. By E. MARKHAM LEE, M.A., Mus. Doc.</p>
+ <p>COUNTERPOINT. By G.G. BERNARDI. Translated by C. LANDI.</p>
+ <p>OPERA. By HARRY BURGESS.</p>
+ <p><i>Other Volumes in preparation</i>.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Musicians of To-Day, by Romain Rolland
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Musicians of To-Day, by Romain Rolland
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Musicians of To-Day
+
+Author: Romain Rolland
+
+Commentator: Claude Landi
+
+Translator: Mary Blaiklock
+
+Release Date: August 7, 2005 [EBook #16467]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MUSICIANS OF TO-DAY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Newman, Chuck Greif and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MUSICIANS OF TO-DAY
+
+BY
+
+ROMAIN ROLLAND
+
+AUTHOR OF "JEAN-CHRISTOPHE"
+
+TRANSLATED BY
+
+MARY BLAIKLOCK
+
+WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY
+
+CLAUDE LANDI
+
+[Illustration: Decorative]
+
+NEW YORK
+
+HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY
+
+1915
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+BERLIOZ
+
+WAGNER:
+
+"Siegfried"
+
+"Tristan"
+
+CAMILLE SAINT-SAENS
+
+VINCENT D'INDY
+
+RICHARD STRAUSS
+
+HUGO WOLF
+
+DON LORENZO PEROSI
+
+FRENCH AND GERMAN MUSIC
+
+CLAUDE DEBUSSY:
+
+"Pelleas et Melisande"
+
+THE AWAKENING: A SKETCH OF THE MUSICAL MOVEMENT IN PARIS SINCE 1870
+
+Paris and Music
+
+Musical Institutions before 1870
+
+New Musical Institutions
+
+The Present Condition of French Music
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+
+It is perhaps fitting that the series of volumes comprising _The
+Musician's Bookshelf_ should be inaugurated by the present collection of
+essays. To the majority of English readers the name of that strange and
+forceful personality, Romain Rolland, is known only through his
+magnificent, intimate record of an artist's life and aspirations,
+embracing ten volumes, _Jean-Christophe_. This is not the place in which
+to discuss that masterpiece. A few biographical facts concerning the
+author may not, however, be out of place here.
+
+Romain Rolland is forty-eight years old. He was born on January 29,
+1866, at Clamecy (Nievre), France. He came very early under the
+influence of Tolstoy and Wagner and displayed a remarkable critical
+faculty. In 1895 (at the age of twenty-nine) we find him awarded the
+coveted Grand Prix of the Academie Francaise for his work _Histoire de
+l'Opera en Europe avant Lulli et Scarlatti_, and in the same year he
+sustained, before the faculty of the Sorbonne--where he now occupies the
+chair of musical criticism--a remarkable dissertation on _The Origin
+of_ _the Modern Lyrical Drama_--his thesis for the Doctorate. This, in
+reality, is a vehement protest against the indifference for the Art of
+Music which, up to that time, had always been displayed by the
+University. In 1903 he published a remarkable _Life of Beethoven_,
+followed by a _Life of Hugo Wolf_ in 1905. The present volume, together
+with its companion, _Musiciens d'Autrefois_, appeared in 1908. Both
+form remarkable essays and reveal a consummate and most intimate
+knowledge of the life and works of our great contemporaries. A just
+estimate of a composer's work is not to be arrived at without a study of
+his works and of the conditions under which these were produced. To
+take, for instance, the case of but one of the composers treated in this
+volume, Hector Berlioz. No composer has been so misunderstood, so
+vilified as he, simply because those who have written about him, either
+wilfully or through ignorance, have grossly misrepresented him.
+
+The essay on Berlioz, in the present volume, reveals a true insight into
+the personality of this unfortunate and great artist, and removes any
+false misconceptions which unsympathetic and superficial handling may
+have engendered. Indeed, the same introspective faculty is displayed in
+all the other essays which form this volume, which, it is believed, will
+prove of the greatest value not only to the professional student, but
+also to the _intelligent listener_, for whom the present series of
+volumes has been primarily planned. We hear much, nowadays, of the value
+of "Musical Appreciation." It is high time that something was done to
+educate our audiences and to dispel the hitherto prevalent fallacy that
+Music need not be regarded seriously. We do not want more creative
+artists, more executants; the world is full of them--good, bad and
+indifferent--but we _do_ want more _intelligent listeners_.
+
+I do not think it is an exaggeration to assert that the majority of
+listeners at a high-class concert or recital are absolutely bored. How
+can it be otherwise, when the composers represented are mere names to
+them? Why should the general public appreciate a Bach fugue, an
+intricate symphony or a piece of chamber-music? Do we professional
+musicians appreciate the technique of a wonderful piece of sculpture, of
+an equally wonderful feat of engineering or even of a miraculous
+surgical operation? It may be argued that an analogy between sculpture,
+engineering, surgery and music is absurd, because the three former do
+not appeal to the masses in the same manner as music does. Precisely: it
+is because of this universal appeal on the part of music that the public
+should be educated to _listen_ to _good_ music; that they should be
+given, in a general way, a chance to acquaint themselves with the laws
+underlying the "Beautiful in Music" and should be shown the demands
+which a right appreciation of the Art makes upon the Intellect and the
+Emotions.
+
+And, surely, such a "desideratum" may best be effected by a careful
+perusal of the manuals to be included in the present series. It is
+incontestable that the reader of the following pages--apart from a
+knowledge of the various musical forms, of orchestration, etc.--all of
+which will be duly treated in successive volumes--will be in a better
+position to appreciate the works of the several composers to which he
+may be privileged to listen. The last essay, especially, will be read
+with interest to-day, when we may hope to look forward to a cessation of
+race-hatred and distrust, and to what a writer in the _Musical Times_
+(September, 1914) has called, "a new sense of the emotional solidarity
+of mankind. From that sense alone," he adds, "can the real music of the
+future be born."
+
+ CLAUDE LANDI.
+
+
+
+
+MUSICIANS OF TO-DAY
+
+BERLIOZ
+
+I
+
+
+It may seem a paradox to say that no musician is so little known as
+Berlioz. The world thinks it knows him. A noisy fame surrounds his
+person and his work. Musical Europe has celebrated his centenary.
+Germany disputes with France the glory of having nurtured and shaped his
+genius. Russia, whose triumphal reception consoled him for the
+indifference and enmity of Paris,[1] has said, through the voice of
+Balakirew, that he was "the only musician France possessed." His chief
+compositions are often played at concerts; and some of them have the
+rare quality of appealing both to the cultured and the crowd; a few have
+even reached great popularity. Works have been dedicated to him, and he
+himself has been described and criticised by many writers. He is popular
+even to his face; for his face, like his music, was so striking and
+singular that it seemed to show you his character at a glance. No clouds
+hide his mind and its creations, which, unlike Wagner's, need no
+initiation to be understood; they seem to have no hidden meaning, no
+subtle mystery; one is instantly their friend or their enemy, for the
+first impression is a lasting one.
+
+[Footnote 1: "And you, Russia, who have saved me...." (Berlioz,
+_Memoires_, II, 353, Calmann-Levy's edition, 1897).]
+
+That is the worst of it; people imagine that they understand Berlioz
+with so very little trouble. Obscurity of meaning may harm an artist
+less than a seeming transparency; to be shrouded in mist may mean
+remaining long misunderstood, but those who wish to understand will at
+least be thorough in their search for the truth. It is not always
+realised how depth and complexity may exist in a work of clear design
+and strong contrasts--in the obvious genius of some great Italian of the
+Renaissance as much as in the troubled heart of a Rembrandt and the
+twilight of the North.
+
+That is the first pitfall; but there are many more that will beset us in
+the attempt to understand Berlioz. To get at the man himself one must
+break down a wall of prejudice and pedantry, of convention and
+intellectual snobbery. In short, one must shake off nearly all current
+ideas about his work if one wishes to extricate it from the dust that
+has drifted about it for half a century.
+
+Above all, one must not make the mistake of contrasting Berlioz with
+Wagner, either by sacrificing Berlioz to that Germanic Odin, or by
+forcibly trying to reconcile one to the other. For there are some who
+condemn Berlioz in the name of Wagner's theories; and others who, not
+liking the sacrifice, seek to make him a forerunner of Wagner, or kind
+of elder brother, whose mission was to clear a way and prepare a road
+for a genius greater than his own. Nothing is falser. To understand
+Berlioz one must shake off the hypnotic influence of Bayreuth. Though
+Wagner may have learnt something from Berlioz, the two composers have
+nothing in common; their genius and their art are absolutely opposed;
+each one has ploughed his furrow in a different field.
+
+The Classical misunderstanding is quite as dangerous. By that I mean the
+clinging to superstitions of the past, and the pedantic desire to
+enclose art within narrow limits, which still flourish among critics.
+Who has not met these censors of music? They will tell you with solid
+complacence how far music may go, and where it must stop, and what it
+may express and what it must not. They are not always musicians
+themselves. But what of that? Do they not lean on the example of the
+past? The past! a handful of works that they themselves hardly
+understand. Meanwhile, music, by its unceasing growth, gives the lie to
+their theories, and breaks down these weak barriers. But they do not see
+it, do not wish to see it; since they cannot advance themselves, they
+deny progress. Critics of this kind do not think favourably of Berlioz's
+dramatic and descriptive symphonies. How should they appreciate the
+boldest musical achievement of the nineteenth century? These dreadful
+pedants and zealous defenders of an art that they only understand after
+it has ceased to live are the worst enemies of unfettered genius, and
+may do more harm than a whole army of ignorant people. For in a country
+like ours, where musical education is poor, timidity is great in the
+presence of a strong, but only half-understood, tradition; and anyone
+who has the boldness to break away from it is condemned without
+judgment. I doubt if Berlioz would have obtained any consideration at
+all from lovers of classical music in France if he had not found allies
+in that country of classical music, Germany--"the oracle of Delphi,"
+"Germania alma parens,"[2] as he called her. Some of the young German
+school found inspiration in Berlioz. The dramatic symphony that he
+created flourished in its German form under Liszt; the most eminent
+German composer of to-day, Richard Strauss, came under his influence;
+and Felix Weingartner, who with Charles Malherbe edited Berlioz's
+complete works, was bold enough to write, "In spite of Wagner and Liszt,
+we should not be where we are if Berlioz had not lived." This unexpected
+support, coming from a country of traditions, has thrown the partisans
+of Classic tradition into confusion, and rallied Berlioz's friends.
+
+[Footnote 2: _Memoires_, II, 149.]
+
+But here is a new danger. Though it is natural that Germany, more
+musical than France, should recognise the grandeur and originality of
+Berlioz's music before France, it is doubtful whether the German nature
+could ever fully understand a soul so French in its essence. It is,
+perhaps, what is exterior in Berlioz, his positive originality, that the
+Germans appreciate. They prefer the _Requiem_ to _Romeo_. A Richard
+Strauss would be attracted by an almost insignificant work like the
+_Ouverture du roi Lear_; a Weingartner would single out for notice
+works like the _Symphonic fantastique_ and _Harold_, and exaggerate
+their importance. But they do not feel what is intimate in him. Wagner
+said over the tomb of Weber, "England does you justice, France admires
+you, but only Germany loves you; you are of her own being, a glorious
+day of her life, a warm drop of her blood, a part of her heart...." One
+might adapt his words to Berlioz; it is as difficult for a German really
+to love Berlioz as it is for a Frenchman to love Wagner or Weber. One
+must, therefore, be careful about accepting unreservedly the judgment of
+Germany on Berlioz; for in that would lie the danger of a new
+misunderstanding. You see how both the followers and opponents of
+Berlioz hinder us from getting at the truth. Let us dismiss them.
+
+Have we now come to the end of our difficulties? Not yet; for Berlioz is
+the most illusive of men, and no one has helped more than he to mislead
+people in their estimate of him. We know how much he has written about
+music and about his own life, and what wit and understanding he shows in
+his shrewd criticisms and charming _Memoires_.[3]
+
+[Footnote 3: The literary work of Berlioz is rather uneven. Beside
+passages of exquisite beauty we find others that are ridiculous in their
+exaggerated sentiment, and there are some that even lack good taste. But
+he had a natural gift of style, and his writing is vigorous, and full of
+feeling, especially towards the latter half of his life. The _Procession
+des Rogations_ is often quoted from the _Memoires_; and some of his
+poetical text, particularly that in _L'Enfance du Christ_ and in _Les
+Troyens_, is written in beautiful language and with a fine sense of
+rhythm. His _Memoires_ as a whole is one of the most delightful books
+ever written by an artist. Wagner was a greater poet, but as a prose
+writer Berlioz is infinitely superior. See Paul Morillot's essay on
+_Berlioz ecrivain_, 1903, Grenoble.] One would think that such an
+imaginative and skilful writer, accustomed in his profession of critic
+to express every shade of feeling, would be able to tell us more exactly
+his ideas of art than a Beethoven or a Mozart. But it is not so. As too
+much light may blind the vision, so too much intellect may hinder the
+understanding. Berlioz's mind spent itself in details; it reflected
+light from too many facets, and did not focus itself in one strong beam
+which would have made known his power. He did not know how to dominate
+either his life or his work; he did not even try to dominate them. He
+was the incarnation of romantic genius, an unrestrained force,
+unconscious of the road he trod. I would not go so far as to say that he
+did not understand himself, but there are certainly times when he is
+past understanding himself. He allows himself to drift where chance will
+take him,[4] like an old Scandinavian pirate laid at the bottom of his
+boat, staring up at the sky; and he dreams and groans and laughs and
+gives himself up to his feverish delusions. He lived with his emotions
+as uncertainly as he lived with his art. In his music, as in his
+criticisms of music, he often contradicts himself, hesitates, and turns
+back; he is not sure either of his feelings or his thoughts. He has
+poetry in his soul, and strives to write operas; but his admiration
+wavers between Gluck and Meyerbeer. He has a popular genius, but
+despises the people. He is a daring musical revolutionary, but he
+allows the control of this musical movement to be taken from him by
+anyone who wishes to have it. Worse than that: he disowns the movement,
+turns his back upon the future, and throws himself again into the past.
+For what reason? Very often he does not know. Passion, bitterness,
+caprice, wounded pride--these have more influence with him than the
+serious things of life. He is a man at war with himself.
+
+[Footnote 4: "Chance, that unknown god, who plays such a great part in
+my life" (_Memoires_, II, 161).]
+
+Then contrast Berlioz with Wagner. Wagner, too, was stirred by violent
+passions, but he was always master of himself, and his reason remained
+unshaken by the storms of his heart or those of the world, by the
+torments of love or the strife of political revolutions. He made his
+experiences and even his errors serve his art; he wrote about his
+theories before he put them into practice; and he only launched out when
+he was sure of himself, and when the way lay clear before him. And think
+how much Wagner owes to this written expression of his aims and the
+magnetic attraction of his arguments. It was his prose works that
+fascinated the King of Bavaria before he had heard his music; and for
+many others also they have been the key to that music. I remember being
+impressed by Wagner's ideas when I only half understood his art; and
+when one of his compositions puzzled me, my confidence was not shaken,
+for I was sure that the genius who was so convincing in his reasoning
+would not blunder; and that if his music baffled me, it was I who was at
+fault. Wagner was really his own best friend, his own most trusty
+champion; and his was the guiding hand that led one through the thick
+forest and over the rugged crags of his work.
+
+Not only do you get no help from Berlioz in this way, but he is the
+first to lead you astray and wander with you in the paths of error. To
+understand his genius you must seize hold of it unaided. His genius was
+really great, but, as I shall try to show you, it lay at the mercy of a
+weak character.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Everything about Berlioz was misleading, even his appearance. In
+legendary portraits he appears as a dark southerner with black hair and
+sparkling eyes. But he was really very fair and had blue eyes,[5] and
+Joseph d'Ortigue tells us they were deep-set and piercing, though
+sometimes clouded by melancholy or languor.[6] He had a broad forehead
+furrowed with wrinkles by the time he was thirty, and a thick mane of
+hair, or, as E. Legouve puts it, "a large umbrella of hair, projecting
+like a movable awning over the beak of a bird of prey."[7]
+
+
+[Footnote 5: "I was fair," wrote Berlioz to Buelow (unpublished letters,
+1858). "A shock of reddish hair," he wrote in his _Memoires_, I, 165.
+"Sandy-coloured hair," said Reyer. For the colour of Berlioz's hair I
+rely upon the evidence of Mme. Chapot, his niece.]
+
+[Footnote 6: Joseph d'Ortigue, _Le Balcon de l'Opera_, 1833.]
+
+[Footnote 7: E. Legouve, _Soixante ans de souvenirs_. Legouve describes
+Berlioz here as he saw him for the first time.]
+
+His mouth was well cut, with lips compressed and puckered at the
+corners in a severe fold, and his chin was prominent. He had a deep
+voice,[8] but his speech was halting and often tremulous with emotion;
+he would speak passionately of what interested him, and at times be
+effusive in manner, but more often he was ungracious and reserved. He
+was of medium height, rather thin and angular in figure, and when seated
+he seemed much taller than he really was.[9] He was very restless, and
+inherited from his native land, Dauphine, the mountaineer's passion for
+walking and climbing, and the love of a vagabond life, which remained
+with him nearly to his death.[10] He had an iron constitution, but he
+wrecked it by privation and excess, by his walks in the rain, and by
+sleeping out-of-doors in all weathers, even when there was snow on the
+ground.[11]
+
+[Footnote 8: "A passable baritone," says Berlioz _(Memoires_, I, 58). In
+1830, in the streets of Paris, he sang "a bass part" _(Memoires_, I,
+156). During his first visit to Germany the Prince of Hechingen made him
+sing "the part of the violoncello" in one of his compositions
+(_Memoires_, II, 32).]
+
+[Footnote 9: There are two good portraits of Berlioz. One is a
+photograph by Pierre Petit, taken in 1863, which he sent to Mme. Estelle
+Fornier. It shows him leaning on his elbow, with his head bent, and his
+eyes fixed on the ground as if he were tired. The other is the
+photograph which he had reproduced in the first edition of his
+_Memoires_, and which shows him leaning back, his hands in his pockets,
+his head upright, with an expression of energy in his face, and a fixed
+and stern look in his eyes.]
+
+[Footnote 10: He would go on foot from Naples to Rome in a straight line
+over the mountains, and would walk at one stretch from Subiaco to
+Tivoli.]
+
+[Footnote 11: This brought on several attacks of bronchitis and frequent
+sore throats, as well as the internal affection from which he died.]
+
+But in this strong and athletic frame lived a feverish and sickly soul
+that was dominated and tormented by a morbid craving for love and
+sympathy: "that imperative need of love which is killing me...."[12] To
+love, to be loved--he would give up all for that.
+
+[Footnote 12: "Music and love are the two wings of the soul," he wrote
+in his _Memoires_.]
+
+But his love was that of a youth who lives in dreams; it was never the
+strong, clear-eyed passion of a man who has faced the realities of life,
+and who sees the defects as well as the charms of the woman he loves,
+Berlioz was in love with love, and lost himself among visions and
+sentimental shadows. To the end of his life he remained "a poor little
+child worn out by a love that was beyond him."[13] But this man who
+lived so wild and adventurous a life expressed his passions with
+delicacy; and one finds an almost girlish purity in the immortal love
+passages of _Les Troyens_ or the "_nuit sereine"_ of _Romeo et
+Juliette_. And compare this Virgilian affection with Wagner's sensual
+raptures. Does it mean that Berlioz could not love as well as Wagner? We
+only know that Berlioz's life was made up of love and its torments. The
+theme of a touching passage in the Introduction of the _Symphonic
+fantastique_ has been recently identified by M. Julien Tiersot, in his
+interesting book,[14] with a romance composed by Berlioz at the age of
+twelve, when he loved a girl of eighteen "with large eyes and pink
+shoes"--Estelle, _Stella mentis, Stella matutina_. These words--perhaps
+the saddest he ever wrote--might serve as an emblem of his life, a life
+that was a prey to love and melancholy, doomed to wringing of the heart
+and awful loneliness; a life lived in a hollow world, among worries that
+chilled the blood; a life that was distasteful and had no solace to
+offer him in its end.[15] He has himself described this terrible "_mal
+de l'isolement_," which pursued him all his life, vividly and
+minutely.[16] He was doomed to suffering, or, what was worse, to make
+others suffer.
+
+[Footnote 13: _Memoires_, I, 11.]
+
+[Footnote 14: Julien Tiersot, _Hector Berlioz et la societe de son
+temps_, 1903, Hachette.]
+
+[Footnote 15: See the _Memoires_, I, 139.]
+
+[Footnote 16: "I do not know how to describe this terrible sickness....
+My throbbing breast seems to be sinking into space; and my heart,
+drawing in some irresistible force, feels as though it would expand
+until it evaporated and dissolved away. My skin becomes hot and tender,
+and flushes from head to foot. I want to cry out to my friends (even
+those I do not care for) to help and comfort me, to save me from
+destruction, and keep in the life that is ebbing from me. I have no
+sensation of impending death in these attacks, and suicide seems
+impossible; I do not want to die--far from it, I want very much to live,
+to intensify life a thousandfold. It is an excessive appetite for
+happiness, which becomes unbearable when it lacks food; and it is only
+satisfied by intense delights, which give this great overflow of feeling
+an outlet. It is not a state of spleen, though that may follow later ...
+spleen is rather the congealing of all these emotions--the block of ice.
+Even when I am calm I feel a little of this '_isolement_' on Sundays in
+summer, when our towns are lifeless, and everyone is in the country; for
+I know that people are enjoying themselves away from me, and I feel
+their absence. The _adagio_ of Beethoven's symphonies, certain scenes
+from Gluck's _Alceste_ and _Armide_, an air from his Italian opera
+_Telemacco_, the Elysian fields of his _Orfeo_, will bring on rather bad
+attacks of this suffering; but these masterpieces bring with them also
+an antidote--they make one's tears flow, and then the pain is eased. On
+the other hand, the _adagio_ of some of Beethoven's sonatas and Gluck's
+_Iphigenie en Tauride_ are full of melancholy, and therefore provoke
+spleen ... it is then cold within, the sky is grey and overcast with
+clouds, the north wind moans dully...." _(Memoires_, I, 246).]
+
+Who does not know his passion for Henrietta Smithson? It was a sad
+story. He fell in love with an English actress who played Juliet (Was it
+she or Juliet whom he loved?). He caught but a glance of her, and it was
+all over with him. He cried out, "Ah, I am lost!" He desired her; she
+repulsed him. He lived in a delirium of suffering and passion; he
+wandered about for days and nights like a madman, up and down Paris and
+its neighbourhood, without purpose or rest or relief, until sleep
+overcame him wherever it found him--among the sheaves in a field near
+Villejuif, in a meadow near Sceaux, on the bank of the frozen Seine near
+Neuilly, in the snow, and once on a table in the Cafe Cardinal, where he
+slept for five hours, to the great alarm of the waiters, who thought he
+was dead.[17] Meanwhile, he was told slanderous gossip about Henrietta,
+which he readily believed. Then he despised her, and dishonoured her
+publicly in his _Symphonie fantastique_, paying homage in his bitter
+resentment to Camille Moke, a pianist, to whom he lost his heart without
+delay.
+
+[Footnote 17: _Memoires_, I, 98.]
+
+After a time Henrietta reappeared. She had now lost her youth and her
+power; her beauty was waning, and she was in debt. Berlioz's passion was
+at once rekindled. This time Henrietta accepted his advances. He made
+alterations in his symphony, and offered it to her in homage of his
+love. He won her, and married her, with fourteen thousand francs debt.
+He had captured his dream--Juliet! Ophelia! What was she really? A
+charming Englishwoman, cold, loyal, and sober-minded, who understood
+nothing of his passion; and who, from the time she became his wife,
+loved him jealously and sincerely, and thought to confine him within the
+narrow world of domestic life. But his affections became restive, and he
+lost his heart to a Spanish actress (it was always an actress, a
+virtuoso, or a part) and left poor Ophelia, and went off with Marie
+Recio, the Ines of _Favorite_, the page of _Comte Ory_--a practical,
+hardheaded woman, an indifferent singer with a mania for singing. The
+haughty Berlioz was forced to fawn upon the directors of the theatre in
+order to get her parts, to write flattering notices in praise of her
+talents, and even to let her make his own melodies discordant at the
+concerts he arranged.[18] It would all be dreadfully ridiculous if this
+weakness of character had not brought tragedy in its train.
+
+So the one he really loved, and who always loved him, remained alone,
+without friends, in Paris, where she was a stranger. She drooped in
+silence and pined slowly away, bedridden, paralysed, and unable to speak
+during eight years of suffering. Berlioz suffered too, for he loved her
+still and was torn with pity--"pity, the most painful of all
+emotions."[19] But of what use was this pity? He left Henrietta to
+suffer alone and to die just the same. And, what was worse, as we learn
+from Legouve, he let his mistress, the odious Recio, make a scene before
+poor Henrietta.[20] Recio told him of it and boasted about what she had
+done.
+
+[Footnote 18: "Isn't it really devilish," he said to Legouve, "tragic
+and silly at the same time? I should deserve to go to hell if I wasn't
+there already."]
+
+[Footnote 19: _Memoires_, II, 335. See the touching passages he wrote on
+Henrietta Smithson's death.]
+
+[Footnote 20: "One day, Henrietta, who was living alone at Montmartre,
+heard someone ring the bell, and went to open the door.
+
+"'Is Mme. Berlioz at home?'
+
+"'I am Mme. Berlioz.'
+
+"'You are mistaken; I asked for Mme. Berlioz.'
+
+"'And I tell you, I am Mme. Berlioz.'
+
+"'No, you are not. You are speaking of the old Mme. Berlioz, the one who
+was abandoned; I am speaking of the young and pretty and loved one.
+Well, that is myself!'
+
+"And Recio went out and banged the door after her.
+
+"Legouve said to Berlioz, 'Who told you this abominable thing? I suppose
+she who did it; and then she boasted about it into the bargain. Why
+didn't you turn her out of the house?' 'How could I?' said Berlioz in
+broken tones, 'I love her'" _(Soixante ans de souvenirs_).]
+
+And Berlioz did nothing--"How could I? I love her."
+
+One would be hard upon such a man if one was not disarmed by his own
+sufferings. But let us go on. I should have liked to pass over these
+traits, but I have no right to; I must show you the extraordinary
+feebleness of the man's character. "Man's character," did I say? No, it
+was the character of a woman without a will, the victim of her
+nerves.[21]
+
+[Footnote 21: From this woman's nature came his love of revenge, "a
+thing needless, and yet necessary," he said to his friend Hiller, who,
+after having made him write the _Symphonie fantastique_ to spite
+Henrietta Smithson, next made him write the wretched fantasia _Euphonia_
+to spite Camille Moke, now Mme. Pleyel. One would feel obliged to draw
+more attention to the way he often adorned or perverted the truth if one
+did not feel it arose from his irrepressible and glowing imagination far
+more than from any intention to mislead; for I believe his real nature
+to have been a-very straightforward one. I will quote the story of his
+friend Crispino, a young countryman from Tivoli, as a characteristic
+example. Berlioz says in his _Memoires_ (I, 229): "One day when Crispino
+was lacking in respect I made-him a present of two shirts, a pair of
+trousers, and three good kicks behind." In a note he added, "This is a
+lie, and is the result of an artist's tendency to aim at effect. I never
+kicked Crispino." But Berlioz took care afterwards to omit this note.
+One attaches as little importance to his other small boasts as to this
+one. The errors in the _Memoires_ have been greatly exaggerated; and
+besides, Berlioz is the first to warn his readers that he only wrote
+what pleased him, and in his preface says that he is not writing his
+Confessions. Can one blame him for that?]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Such people are destined to unhappiness; and if they make other people
+suffer, one may be sure that it is only half of what they suffer
+themselves. They have a peculiar gift for attracting and gathering up
+trouble; they savour sorrow like wine, and do not lose a drop of it.
+Life seemed desirous that Berlioz should be steeped in suffering; and
+his misfortunes were so real that it would be unnecessary to add to them
+any exaggerations that history has handed down to us.
+
+People find fault with Berlioz's continual complaints; and I, too, find
+in them a lack of virility and almost a lack of dignity. To all
+appearances, he had far fewer material reasons for unhappiness than--I
+won't say Beethoven--Wagner and other great men, past, present, and
+future. When thirty-five years old he had achieved glory; and Paganini
+proclaimed him Beethoven's successor. What more could he want? He was
+discussed by the public, disparaged by a Scudo and an Adolphus Adam, and
+the theatre only opened its doors to him with difficulty. It was really
+splendid!
+
+But a careful examination of facts, such as that made by M. Julien
+Tiersot, shows the stifling mediocrity and hardship of his life. There
+were, first of all, his material cares. When thirty-six years old
+"Beethoven's successor" had a fixed salary of fifteen hundred francs as
+assistant keeper of the Conservatoire Library, and not quite as much for
+his contributions to the _Debits_-contributions which exasperated and
+humiliated him, and were one of the crosses of his life, as they obliged
+him to speak anything but the truth.[22]
+
+[Footnote 22: _Memoires_, II, 158. The heartaches expressed in this
+chapter will be felt by every artist.]
+
+That made a total of three thousand francs, hardly gained on which he
+had to keep a wife and child--"_meme deux_," as M. Tiersot says. He
+attempted a festival at the Opera; the result was three hundred and
+sixty francs loss. He organised a festival at the 1844 Exhibition; the
+receipts were thirty-two thousand francs, out of which he got eight
+hundred francs. He had the _Damnation de Faust_ performed; no one came
+to it, and he was ruined. Things went better in Russia; but the manager
+who brought him to England became bankrupt. He was haunted by thoughts
+of rents and doctors' bills. Towards the end of his life his financial
+affairs mended a little, and a year before his death he uttered these
+sad words: "I suffer a great deal, but I do not want to die now--I have
+enough to live upon."
+
+One of the most tragic episodes of his life is that of the symphony
+which he did not write because of his poverty. One wonders why the page
+that finishes his _Memoires_ is not better known, for it touches the
+depths of human suffering.
+
+At the time when his wife's health was causing him most anxiety, there
+came to him one night an inspiration for a symphony. The first part of
+it--an allegro in two-four time in A minor--was ringing in his head. He
+got up and began to write, and then he thought,
+
+ "If I begin this bit, I shall have to write the whole symphony. It
+ will be a big thing, and I shall have to spend three or four months
+ over it. That means I shall write no more articles and earn no
+ money. And when the symphony is finished I shall not be able to
+ resist the temptation of having it copied (which will mean an
+ expense of a thousand or twelve hundred francs), and then of having
+ it played. I shall give a concert, and the receipts will barely
+ cover half the cost. I shall lose what I have not got; the poor
+ invalid will lack necessities; and I shall be able to pay neither
+ my personal expenses nor my son's fees when he goes on board
+ ship.... These thoughts made me shudder, and I threw down my pen,
+ saying, 'Bah! to-morrow I shall have forgotten the symphony.' The
+ next night I heard the allegro clearly, and seemed to see it
+ written down. I was filled with feverish agitation; I sang the
+ theme; I was going to get up ... but the reflections of the day
+ before restrained me; I steeled myself against the temptation, and
+ clung to the thought of forgetting it. At last I went to sleep; and
+ the next day, on waking, all remembrance of it had, indeed, gone
+ for ever."[23]
+
+That page makes one shudder. Suicide is less distressing. Neither
+Beethoven nor Wagner suffered such tortures. What would Wagner have done
+on a like occasion? He would have written the symphony without
+doubt--and he would have been right. But poor Berlioz, who was weak
+enough to sacrifice his duty to love, was, alas! also heroic enough to
+sacrifice his genius to duty.[24]
+
+[Footnote 23: _Memoires_, II, 349.]
+
+[Footnote 24: Berlioz has already touchingly replied to any reproaches
+that might be made in the words that follow the story I have quoted.
+"'Coward!' some young enthusiast will say, 'you ought to have written
+it; you should have been bold.' Ah, young man, you who call me coward
+did not have to look upon what I did; had you done so you, too, would
+have had no choice. My wife was there, half dead, only able to moan; she
+had to have three nurses, and a doctor every day to visit her; and I was
+sure of the disastrous result of any musical adventure. No, I was not a
+coward; I know I was only human. I like to believe that I honoured art
+in proving that she had left me enough reason to distinguish between
+courage and cruelty" (_Memoires_, II, 350).]
+
+And in spite of all this material misery and the sorrow of being
+misunderstood, people speak of the glory he enjoyed. What did his
+compeers think of him--at least, those who called themselves such? He
+knew that Mendelssohn, whom he loved and esteemed, and who styled
+himself his "good friend," despised him and did not recognise his
+genius.[25] The large-hearted Schumann, who was, with the exception of
+Liszt,[26] the only person who intuitively felt his greatness, admitted
+that he used sometimes to wonder if he ought to be looked upon as "a
+genius or a musical adventurer."[27]
+
+[Footnote 25: In a note in the _Memoires_, Berlioz publishes a letter of
+Mendelssohn's which protests his "good friendship," and he writes these
+bitter words: "I have just seen in a volume of Mendelssohn's Letters
+what his friendship for me consisted of. He says to his mother, in what
+is plainly a description of myself, '---- is a perfect caricature,
+without a spark of talent ... there are times when I should like to
+swallow him up'" (_Memoires_, II, 48). Berlioz did not add that
+Mendelssohn also said: "They pretend that Berlioz seeks lofty ideals in
+art. I don't think so at all. What he wants is to get himself married."
+The injustice of these insulting words will disgust all those who
+remember that when Berlioz married Henrietta Smithson she brought as
+dowry nothing but debts; and that he had only three hundred francs
+himself, which a friend had lent him.]
+
+[Footnote 26: Liszt repudiated him later.]
+
+[Footnote 27: Written in an article on the _Ouverture de Waverley_
+(_Neue Zeitschrift fuer Musik_).]
+
+Wagner, who treated his symphonies with scorn before he had even read
+them,[28] who certainly understood his genius, and who deliberately
+ignored him, threw himself into Berlioz's arms when he met him in London
+in 1855. "He embraced him with fervour, and wept; and hardly had he left
+him when _The Musical World_ published passages from his book, _Oper und
+Drama_, where he pulls Berlioz to pieces mercilessly."[29] In France,
+the young Gounod, _doli fabricator Epeus_, as Berlioz called him,
+lavished flattering words upon him, but spent his time in finding fault
+with his compositions,[30] or in trying to supplant him at the theatre.
+At the Opera he was passed over in favour of a Prince Poniatowski.
+
+[Footnote 28: Wagner, who had criticised Berlioz since 1840, and who
+published a detailed study of his works in his _Oper und Drama_ in 1851,
+wrote to Liszt in 1855: "I own that it would interest me very much to
+make the acquaintance of Berlioz's symphonies, and I should like to see
+the scores. If you have them, will you lend them to me?"]
+
+[Footnote 29: See Berlioz's letter, cited by J. Tiersot, _Hector Berlioz
+et la societe de son temps_, p. 275.]
+
+[Footnote 30: _Romeo, Faust, La Nonne sanglante_.]
+
+He presented himself three times at the Academy, and was beaten the
+first time by Onslow, the second time by Clapisson, and the third time
+he conquered by a majority of one vote against Panseron, Vogel, Leborne,
+and others, including, as always, Gounod. He died before the _Damnation
+de Faust_ was appreciated in France, although it was the most remarkable
+musical composition France had produced. They hissed its performance?
+Not at all; "they were merely indifferent"--it is Berlioz who tells us
+this. It passed unnoticed. He died before he had seen _Les Troyens_
+played in its entirety, though it was one of the noblest works of the
+French lyric theatre that had been composed since the death of
+Gluck.[31] But there is no need to be astonished. To hear these works
+to-day one must go to Germany. And although the dramatic work of Berlioz
+has found its Bayreuth--thanks to Mottl, to Karlsruhe and Munich--and
+the marvellous _Benvenuto Cellini_ has been played in twenty German
+towns,[32] and regarded as a masterpiece by Weingartner and Richard
+Strauss, what manager of a French theatre would think of producing such
+works?
+
+But this is not all. What was the bitterness of failure compared with
+the great anguish of death? Berlioz saw all those he loved die one after
+the other: his father, his mother, Henrietta Smithson, Marie Recio. Then
+only his son Louis remained.
+
+[Footnote 31: I shall content myself here with noting a fact, which I
+shall deal with more fully in another essay at the end of this book: it
+is the decline of musical taste in France--and, I rather think, in all
+Europe--since 1835 or 1840. Berlioz says in his _Memoires_: "Since the
+first performance of _Romeo et Juliette_ the indifference of the French
+public for all that concerns art and literature has grown incredibly"
+(_Memoires_, II, 263). Compare the shouts of excitement and the tears
+that were drawn from the dilettanti of 1830 (_Memoires_, I, 81), at the
+performances of Italian operas or Gluck's works, with the coldness of
+the public between 1840 and 1870. A mantle of ice covered art then. How
+much Berlioz must have suffered. In Germany the great romantic age was
+dead. Only Wagner remained to give life to music; and he drained all
+that was left in Europe of love and enthusiasm for music. Berlioz died
+truly of asphyxia.]
+
+[Footnote 32: Here is an official list of the towns where _Benvenuto_
+has been played since 1879 (I am indebted for this information to M.
+Victor Chapot, Berlioz's grandnephew). They are, in alphabetical order:
+Berlin, Bremen, Brunswick, Dresden, Frankfort-On-Main,
+Freiburg-im-Breisgau, Hamburg, Hanover, Karlsruhe, Leipzig, Mannheim,
+Metz, Munich, Prague, Schwerin, Stettin, Strasburg, Stuttgart, Vienna,
+and Weimar.]
+
+He was the captain of a merchant vessel; a clever, good-hearted boy,
+but restless and nervous, irresolute and unhappy, like his father. "He
+has the misfortune to resemble me in everything," said Berlioz; "and we
+love each other like a couple of twins."[33] "Ah, my poor Louis," he
+wrote to him, "what should I do without you?" A few months afterwards he
+learnt that Louis had died in far-away seas.
+
+He was now alone.[34] There were no more friendly voices; all that he
+heard was a hideous duet between loneliness and weariness, sung in his
+ear during the bustle of the day and in the silence of the night.[35] He
+was wasted with disease. In 1856, at Weimar, following great fatigue, he
+was seized with an internal malady. It began with great mental distress;
+he used to sleep in the streets. He suffered constantly; he was like "a
+tree without leaves, streaming with rain." At the end of 1861, the
+disease was in an acute stage. He had attacks of pain sometimes lasting
+thirty hours, during which he would writhe in agony in his bed. "I live
+in the midst of my physical pain, overwhelmed with weariness. Death is
+very slow."[36]
+
+[Footnote 33: _Memoires_, II, 420.]
+
+[Footnote 34: "I do not know how Berlioz has managed to be cut off like
+this. He has neither friends nor followers; neither the warm sun of
+popularity nor the pleasant shade of friendship" (Liszt to the Princess
+of Wittgenstein, 16 May, 1861).]
+
+[Footnote 35: In a letter to Bennet he says, "I am weary, I am
+weary...." How often does this piteous cry sound in his letters towards
+the end of his life. "I feel I am going to die.... I am weary unto
+death" (21 August, 1868--six months before his death).]
+
+[Footnote 36: Letter to Asger Hammerick, 1865.]
+
+Worst of all, in the heart of his misery, there was nothing that
+comforted him. He believed in nothing--neither in God nor immortality.
+
+ "I have no faith.... I hate all philosophy and everything that
+ resembles it, whether religious or otherwise.... I am as incapable
+ of making a medicine of faith as of having faith in medicine."[37]
+
+ "God is stupid and cruel in his complete indifference."[38]
+
+He did not believe in beauty or honour, in mankind or himself.
+
+ "Everything passes. Space and time consume beauty, youth, love,
+ glory, genius. Human life is nothing; death is no better. Worlds
+ are born and die like ourselves. All is nothing. Yes, yes, yes! All
+ is nothing.... To love or hate, enjoy or suffer, admire or sneer,
+ live or die--what does it matter? There is nothing in greatness or
+ littleness, beauty or ugliness. Eternity is indifferent;
+ indifference is eternal."[39]
+
+ "I am weary of life; and I am forced to see that belief in
+ absurdities is necessary to human minds, and that it is born in
+ them as insects are born in swamps."[40]
+
+[Footnote 37: Letters to the Princess of Wittgenstein, 22 July, 21
+September, 1862; and August, 1864.]
+
+[Footnote 38: _Memoires_, II, 335. He shocked Mendelssohn, and even
+Wagner, by his irreligion. (See Berlioz's letter to Wagner, 10
+September, 1855.)]
+
+[Footnote 39: _Les Grotesques de la Musique_, pp. 295-6.]
+
+[Footnote 40: Letter to the Abbe Girod. See Hippeau, _Berlioz intime_,
+p. 434.]
+
+ "You make me laugh with your old words about a mission to fulfil.
+ What a missionary! But there is in me an inexplicable mechanism
+ which works in spite of all arguments; and I let it work because I
+ cannot stop it. What disgusts me most is the certainty that beauty
+ does not exist for the majority of these human monkeys."[41]
+
+ "The unsolvable enigma of the world, the existence of evil and
+ pain, the fierce madness of mankind, and the stupid cruelty that it
+ inflicts hourly and everywhere on the most inoffensive beings and
+ on itself--all this has reduced me to the state of unhappy and
+ forlorn resignation of a scorpion surrounded by live coals. The
+ most I can do is not to wound myself with my own dart."[42]
+
+ "I am in my sixty-first year; and I have no more hopes or illusions
+ or aspirations. I am alone; and my contempt for the stupidity and
+ dishonesty of men, and my hatred for their wicked cruelty, are at
+ their height. Every hour I say to Death, 'When you like!' What is
+ he waiting for?"[43]
+
+[Footnote 41: Letter to Bennet. He did not believe in patriotism.
+"Patriotism? Fetichism! Cretinism!" (_Memoires_, II, 261).]
+
+[Footnote 42: Letter to the Princess of Wittgenstein, 22 July, 1862.]
+
+[Footnote 43: _Memoires_, II, 391.]
+
+And yet he fears the death he invites. It is the strongest, the
+bitterest, the truest feeling he has. No musician since old Roland de
+Lassus has feared it with that intensity. Do you remember Herod's
+sleepless nights in _L'Enfance du Christ_, or Faust's soliloquy, or the
+anguish of Cassandra, or the burial of Juliette?--through all this you
+will find the whispered fear of annihilation. The wretched man was
+haunted by this fear, as a letter published by M. Julien Tiersot
+shows:--
+
+ "My favourite walk, especially when it is raining, really raining
+ in torrents, is the cemetery of Montmartre, which is near my house.
+ I often go there; there is much that draws me to it. The day before
+ yesterday I passed two hours in the cemetery; I found a comfortable
+ seat on a costly tomb, and I went to sleep.... Paris is to me a
+ cemetery and her pavements are tomb-stones. Everywhere are memories
+ of friends or enemies that are dead.... I do nothing but suffer
+ unceasing pain and unspeakable weariness. I wonder night and day if
+ I shall die in great pain or with little of it--I am not foolish
+ enough to hope to die without any pain at all. Why are we not
+ dead?"[44]
+
+His music is like these mournful words; it is perhaps even more
+terrible, more gloomy, for it breathes death.[45] What a contrast: a
+soul greedy of life and preyed upon by death. It is this that makes his
+life such an awful tragedy. When Wagner met Berlioz he heaved a sigh of
+relief--he had at last found a man more unhappy than himself.[46]
+
+[Footnote 44: Letters to the Princess of Wittgenstein, 22 January, 1859;
+30 August, 1864; 13 July, 1866; and to A. Morel, 21 August, 1864.]
+
+[Footnote 45: " ... Qui viderit illas
+ De lacrymis factas sentiet esse meis,"
+wrote Berlioz, as an inscription for his _Tristes_ in 1854.]
+
+[Footnote 46: "One instantly recognises a companion in misfortune; and I
+found I was a happier man than Berlioz" (Wagner to Liszt, 5 July,
+1855).]
+
+On the threshold of death he turned in despair to the one ray of light
+left him--_Stella montis_, the inspiration of his childish love;
+Estelle, now old, a grandmother, withered by age and grief. He made a
+pilgrimage to Meylan, near Grenoble, to see her. He was then sixty-one
+years old and she was nearly seventy. "The past! the past! O Time!
+Nevermore! Nevermore!"[47]
+
+Nevertheless, he loved her, and loved her desperately. How pathetic it
+is. One has little inclination to smile when one sees the depths of that
+desolate heart. Do you think he did not see, as clearly as you or I
+would see, the wrinkled old face, the indifference of age, the "_triste
+raison_," in her he idealised? Remember, he was the most ironical of
+men. But he did not wish to see these things, he wished to cling to a
+little love, which would help him to live in the wilderness of life.
+
+ "There is nothing real in this world but that which lives in the
+ heart.... My life has been wrapped up in the obscure little village
+ where she lives.... Life is only endurable when I tell myself:
+ 'This autumn I shall spend a month beside her.' I should die in
+ this hell of a Paris if she did not allow me to write to her, and
+ if from time to time I had not letters from her."
+
+So he spoke to Legouve; and he sat down on a stone in a Paris street,
+and wept. In the meantime, the old lady did not understand this
+foolishness; she hardly tolerated it, and sought to undeceive him.
+
+[Footnote 47: _Memoires_, II, 396.]
+
+ "When one's hair is white one must leave dreams--even those of
+ friendship.... Of what use is it to form ties which, though they
+ hold to-day, may break to-morrow?"
+
+What were his dreams? To live with her? No; rather to die beside her; to
+feel she was by his side when death should come.
+
+ "To be at your feet, my head on your knees, your two hands in
+ mine--so to finish."[48]
+
+He was a little child grown old, and felt bewildered and miserable and
+frightened before the thought of death.
+
+Wagner, at the same age, a victor, worshipped, flattered, and--if we are
+to believe the Bayreuth legend--crowned with prosperity; Wagner, sad and
+suffering, doubting his achievements, feeling the inanity of his bitter
+fight against the mediocrity of the world, had "fled far from the
+world"[49] and thrown himself into religion; and when a friend looked at
+him in surprise as he was saying grace at table, he answered: "Yes, I
+believe in my Saviour."[50]
+
+[Footnote 48: _Memoires_, II, 415.]
+
+[Footnote 49: "Yes, it is to that escape from the world that _Parsifal_
+owes its birth and growth. What man can, during a whole lifetime, gaze
+into the depths of this world with a calm reason and a cheerful heart?
+When he sees murder and rapine organised and legalised by a system of
+lies, impostures, and hypocrisy, will he not avert his eyes and shudder
+with disgust?" (Wagner, _Representations of the Sacred Drama of Parsifal
+at Bayreuth, in 1882_.)]
+
+[Footnote 50: The scene was described to me by his friend, Malwida von
+Meysenbug, the calm and fearless author of _Memoires d'une Idealiste_.]
+
+Poor beings! Conquerors of the world, conquered and broken!
+
+But of the two deaths, how much sadder is that of the artist who was
+without a faith, and who had neither strength nor stoicism enough to be
+happy without one; who slowly died in that little room in the rue de
+Calais amid the distracting noise of an indifferent and even hostile
+Paris;[51] who shut himself up in savage silence; who saw no loved face
+bending over him in his last moments; who had not the comfort of belief
+in his work;[52] who could not think calmly of what he had done, nor
+look proudly back over the road he had trodden, nor rest content in the
+thought of a life well lived; and who began and closed his _Memoires_
+with Shakespeare's gloomy words, and repeated them when dying:--
+
+ "Life's but a walking shadow, a poor player
+ That struts and frets his hour upon the stage
+ And then is heard no more: it is a tale
+ Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
+ Signifying nothing."[53]
+
+[Footnote 51: "I have only blank walls before my windows. On the side of
+the street a pug dog has been barking for an hour, a parrot screaming,
+and a parroqueet imitating the chirp of sparrows. On the side of the
+yard the washerwomen are singing, and another parroqueet cries
+incessantly, 'Shoulder arrms!' How long the day is!"
+
+"The maddening noise of carriages shakes the silence of the night. Paris
+wet and muddy! Parisian Paris! Now everything is quiet ... she is
+sleeping the sleep of the unjust" (Written to Ferrand, _Lettres
+intimes_, pp. 269 and 302).]
+
+[Footnote 52: He used to say that nothing would remain of his work; that
+he had deceived himself; and that he would have liked to burn his
+scores.]
+
+[Footnote 53: Blaze de Bury met him one autumn evening, on the quay,
+just before his death, as he was returning from the Institute. "His face
+was pale, his figure wasted and bent, and his expression dejected and
+nervous; one might have taken him for a walking shadow. Even his eyes,
+those large round hazel eyes, had extinguished their fire. For a second
+he clasped my hand in his own thin, lifeless one, and repeated, in a
+voice that was hardly more than a whisper, Aeschylus's words: 'Oh, this
+life of man! When he is happy a shadow is enough to disturb him; and
+when he is unhappy his trouble may be wiped away, as with a wet sponge,
+and all is forgotten'" (_Musiciens d'hier et d'aujourd'hui_).]
+
+Such was the unhappy and irresolute heart that found itself united to
+one of the most daring geniuses in the world. It is a striking example
+of the difference that may exist between genius and greatness--for the
+two words are not synonymous. When one speaks of greatness, one speaks
+of greatness of soul, nobility of character, firmness of will, and,
+above all, balance of mind. I can understand how people deny the
+existence of these qualities in Berlioz; but to deny his musical genius,
+or to cavil about his wonderful power--and that is what they do daily in
+Paris--is lamentable and ridiculous. Whether he attracts one or not, a
+thimbleful of some of his work, a single part in one of his works, a
+little bit of the _Fantastique_ or the overture of _Benvenuto_, reveal
+more genius--I am not afraid to say it--than all the French music of his
+century. I can understand people arguing about him in a country that
+produced Beethoven and Bach; but with us in France, who can we set up
+against him? Gluck and Cesar Franck were much greater men, but they were
+never geniuses of his stature. If genius is a creative force, I cannot
+find more than four or five geniuses in the world who rank above him.
+When I have named Beethoven, Mozart, Bach, Haendel, and Wagner, I do not
+know who else is superior to Berlioz; I do not even know who is his
+equal.
+
+He is not only a musician, he is music itself. He does not command his
+familiar spirit, he is its slave. Those who know his writings know how
+he was simply possessed and exhausted by his musical emotions. They were
+really fits of ecstasy or convulsions. At first "there was feverish
+excitement; the veins beat violently and tears flowed freely. Then came
+spasmodic contractions of the muscles, total numbness of the feet and
+hands, and partial paralysis of the nerves of sight and hearing; he saw
+nothing, heard nothing; he was giddy and half faint." And in the case of
+music that displeased him, he suffered, on the contrary, from "a painful
+sense of bodily disquiet and even from nausea."[54]
+
+The possession that music held over his nature shows itself clearly in
+the sudden outbreak of his genius.[55] His family opposed the idea of
+his becoming a musician; and until he was twenty-two or twenty-three
+years old his weak will sulkily gave way to their wishes. In obedience
+to his father he began his studies in medicine at Paris. One evening he
+heard _Les Danaides_ of Salieri. It came upon him like a thunderclap. He
+ran to the Conservatoire library and read Gluck's scores.
+
+[Footnote 54: _A travers chants_, pp. 8-9.]
+
+[Footnote 55: In truth, this genius was smouldering since his childhood;
+it was there from the beginning; and the proof of it lies in the fact
+that he used for his _Ouverture des Francs-Juges_ and for the _Symphonie
+fantastique_ airs and phrases of quintets which he had written when
+twelve years old (see _Memoires_, I, 16-18).]
+
+He forgot to eat and drink; he was like a man in a frenzy. A
+performance of _Iphigenie en Tauride_ finished him. He studied under
+Lesueur and then at the Conservatoire. The following year, 1827, he
+composed _Les Francs-Juges_; two years afterwards the _Huit scenes de
+Faust_, which was the nucleus of the future _Damnation_;[56] three years
+afterwards, the _Symphonie fantastique_ (commenced in 1830).[57] And he
+had not yet got the _Prix de Rome_! Add to this that in 1828 he had
+already ideas for _Romeo et Juliette_, and that he had written a part of
+_Lelio_ in 1829. Can one find elsewhere a more dazzling musical debut?
+Compare that of Wagner who, at the same age, was shyly writing _Les
+Fees, Defense d'aimer_, and _Rienzi_.
+
+[Footnote 56: The _Huit scenes de Faust_ are taken from Goethe's
+tragedy, translated by _Gerard de Nerval_, and they include: (1) _Chants
+de la fete de Paques_; (2) _Paysans sous les tilleuls_; (3) _Concert des
+Sylphes_; (4 and 5) _Taverne d'Auerbach_, with the two songs of the Rat
+and the Flea; (6) _Chanson du roi de Thule_; (7) _Romance de
+Marguerite_, "D'amour, l'ardente flamme," and _Choeur de soldats_; (8)
+_Serenade de Mephistopheles_--that is to say, the most celebrated and
+characteristic pages of the _Damnation_ (see M. Prudhomme's essays on
+_Le Cycle de Berlioz_).]
+
+[Footnote 57: One could hardly find a better manifestation of the soul
+of a youthful musical genius than that in certain letters written at
+this time; in particular the letter written to Ferrand on 28 June, 1828,
+with its feverish postscript. What a life of rich and overflowing
+vigour! It is a joy to read it; one drinks at the source of life
+itself.]
+
+He wrote them at the same age, but ten years later; for _Les Fees_
+appeared in 1833, when Berlioz had already written the _Fantastique_,
+the _Huit scenes de Faust, Lelio_, and _Harold; Rienzi_ was only played
+in 1842, after _Benvenuto_ (1835), _Le Requiem_ (1837), _Romeo_ (1839),
+_La Symphonie funebre et triomphale_ (1840)--that is to say, when
+Berlioz had finished all his great works, and after he had achieved his
+musical revolution. And that revolution was effected alone, without a
+model, without a guide. What could he have heard beyond the operas of
+Gluck and Spontini while he was at the Conservatoire? At the time when
+he composed the _Ouverture des Francs-Juges_ even the name of Weber was
+unknown to him,[58] and of Beethoven's compositions he had only heard an
+_andante_.[59]
+
+Truly, he is a miracle and the most startling phenomenon in the history
+of nineteenth-century music. His audacious power dominates all his age;
+and in the face of such a genius, who would not follow Paganini's
+example, and hail him as Beethoven's only successor?[60] Who does not
+see what a poor figure the young Wagner cut at that time, working away
+in laborious and self-satisfied mediocrity? But Wagner soon made up for
+lost ground; for he knew what he wanted, and he wanted it obstinately.
+
+[Footnote 58: _Memoires_, I, 70.]
+
+[Footnote 59: _Ibid_. To make amends for this he published, in 1829, a
+biographical notice of Beethoven, in which his appreciation of him is
+remarkably in advance of his age. He wrote there: "The _Choral Symphony_
+is the culminating point of Beethoven's genius," and he speaks of the
+Fourth Symphony in C sharp minor with great discernment.]
+
+[Footnote 60: Beethoven died in 1827, the year when Berlioz was writing
+his first important work, the _Ouverture des Francs-Juges_.]
+
+The zenith of Berlioz's genius was reached, when he was thirty-five
+years old, with the _Requiem_ and _Romeo_. They are his two most
+important works, and are two works about which one may feel very
+differently. For my part, I am very fond of the one, and I dislike the
+other; but both of them open up two great new roads in art, and both are
+placed like two gigantic arches on the triumphal way of the revolution
+that Berlioz started. I will return to the subject of these works later.
+
+But Berlioz was already getting old. His daily cares and stormy domestic
+life,[61] his disappointments and passions, his commonplace and often
+degrading work, soon wore him out and, finally, exhausted his power.
+"Would you believe it?" he wrote to his friend Ferrand, "that which used
+to stir me to transports of musical passion now fills me with
+indifference, or even disdain. I feel as if I were descending a mountain
+at a great rate. Life is so short; I notice that thoughts of the end
+have been with me for some time past." In 1848, at forty-five years old,
+he wrote in his _Memoires_: "I find myself so old and tired and lacking
+inspiration." At forty-five years old, Wagner had patiently worked out
+his theories and was feeling his power; at forty-five he was writing
+_Tristan_ and _The Music of the Future_. Abused by critics, unknown to
+the public, "he remained calm, in the belief that he would be master of
+the musical world in fifty years' time."[62]
+
+[Footnote 61: He left Henrietta Smithson in 1842; she died in 1854.]
+
+[Footnote 62: Written by Berlioz himself, in irony, in a letter of
+1855.]
+
+Berlioz was disheartened. Life had conquered him. It was not that he had
+lost any of his artistic mastery; on the contrary, his compositions
+became more and more finished; and nothing in his earlier work attained
+the pure beauty of some of the pages of _L'Enfance du Christ_ (1850-4),
+or of _Les Troyens_ (1855-63). But he was losing his power; and his
+intense feeling, his revolutionary ideas, and his inspiration (which in
+his youth had taken the place of the confidence he lacked) were failing
+him. He now lived on the past--the _Huit scenes de Faust_ (1828) held
+the germs of _La Damnation de Faust_ (1846); since 1833, he had been
+thinking of _Beatrice et Benedict_ (1862); the ideas in _Les Troyens_
+were inspired by his childish worship of Virgil, and had been with him
+all his life. But with what difficulty he now finished his task! He had
+only taken seven months to write _Romeo_, and "on account of not being
+able to write the _Requiem_ fast enough, he had adopted a kind of
+musical shorthand";[63] but he took seven or eight years to write _Les
+Troyens_, alternating between moods of enthusiasm and disgust, and
+feeling indifference and doubt about his work. He groped his way
+hesitatingly and unsteadily; he hardly understood what he was doing. He
+admired the more mediocre pages of his work: the scene of the Laocoon,
+the finale of the last act of the _Les Troyens a Troie_, the last scene
+with Aeneas in _Les Troyens a Carthage_.[64] The empty pomposities of
+Spontini mingle with the loftiest conceptions. One might say that his
+genius became a stranger to him: it was the mechanical work of an
+unconscious force, like "stalactites in a dripping grotto." He had no
+impetus. It was only a matter of time before the roof of the grotto
+would give way. One is struck with the mournful despair with which he
+works; it is his last will and testament that he is making. And when he
+has finished it, he will have finished everything. His work is ended; if
+he lived another hundred years he would not have the heart to add
+anything more to it. The only thing that remains--and it is what he is
+about to do--is to wrap himself in silence and die.
+
+[Footnote 63: _Memoires_, I, 307.]
+
+[Footnote 64: About this time he wrote to Liszt regarding _L'Enfance du
+Christ_: "I think I have hit upon something good in Herod's scena and
+air with the soothsayers; it is full of character, and will, I hope,
+please you. There are, perhaps, more graceful and pleasing things, but
+with the exception of the Bethlehem duet, I do not think they have the
+same quality of originality" (17 December, 1854).]
+
+Oh, mournful destiny! There are great men who have outlived their
+genius; but with Berlioz genius outlived desire. His genius was still
+there; one feels it in the sublime pages of the third act of _Les
+Troyens a Carthage_. But Berlioz had ceased to believe in his power; he
+had lost faith in everything. His genius was dying for want of
+nourishment; it was a flame above an empty tomb. At the same hour of his
+old age the soul of Wagner sustained its glorious flight; and, having
+conquered everything, it achieved a supreme victory in renouncing
+everything for its faith. And the divine songs of Parsifal resounded as
+in a splendid temple, and replied to the cries of the suffering Amfortas
+by the blessed words: "_Selig in Glauben! Selig in Liebe_!"
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+Berlioz's work did not spread itself evenly over his life; it was
+accomplished in a few years. It was not like the course of a great
+river, as with Wagner and Beethoven; it was a burst of genius, whose
+flames lit up the whole sky for a little while, and then died gradually
+down.[65] Let me try to tell you about this wonderful blaze.
+
+Some of Berlioz's musical qualities are so striking that it is
+unnecessary to dwell upon them here. His instrumental colouring, so
+intoxicating and exciting,[66] his extraordinary discoveries concerning
+timbre, his inventions of new nuances (as in the famous combining of
+flutes and trombones in the _Hostias et preces_ of the _Requiem_, and
+the curious use of the harmonics of violins and harps), and his huge and
+nebulous orchestra--all this lends itself to the most subtle expression
+of thought.[67]
+
+[Footnote 65: In 1830, old Rouget de Lisle called Berlioz, "a volcano in
+eruption" (_Memoires_, I, 158).]
+
+[Footnote 66: M. Camille Saint-Saens wrote in his _Portraits et
+Souvenirs_, 1900: "Whoever reads Berlioz's scores before hearing them
+played can have no real idea of their effect. The instruments appear to
+be arranged in defiance of all common sense; and it would seem, to use
+professional slang, that _cela ne dut pas sonner_, but _cela sonne_
+wonderfully. If we find here and there obscurities of style, they do not
+appear in the orchestra; light streams into it and plays there as in the
+facets of a diamond."]
+
+[Footnote 67: See the excellent essay of H. Lavoix, in his _Histoire de
+l'Instrumentation_. It should be noticed that Berlioz's observations in
+his _Traite d'instrumentation et d'orchestration modernes_ (1844) have
+not been lost upon Richard Strauss, who has just published a German
+edition of the work, and some of whose most famous orchestral effects
+are realisations of Berlioz's ideas.]
+
+Think of the effect that such works must have produced at that period.
+Berlioz was the first to be astonished when he heard them for the first
+time. At the _Ouverture des Francs-Juges_ he wept and tore his hair, and
+fell sobbing on the kettledrums. At the performance of his _Tuba mirum_,
+in Berlin, he nearly fainted. The composer who most nearly approached
+him was Weber, and, as we have already seen, Berlioz only knew him late
+in life. But how much less rich and complex is Weber's music, in spite
+of its nervous brilliance and dreaming poetry. Above all, Weber is much
+more mundane and more of a classicist; he lacks Berlioz's revolutionary
+passion and plebeian force; he is less expressive and less grand.
+
+How did Berlioz come to have this genius for orchestration almost from
+the very first? He himself says that his two masters at the
+Conservatoire taught him nothing in point of instrumentation:--
+
+ "Lesueur had only very limited ideas about the art. Reicha knew the
+ particular resources of most of the wind instruments; but I think
+ that he had not very advanced ideas on the subject of grouping
+ them."
+
+Berlioz taught himself. He used to read the score of an opera while it
+was being performed.
+
+ "It was thus," he says,[68] "that I began to get familiar with the
+ use of the orchestra, and to know its expression and timbre, as
+ well as the range and mechanism of most of the instruments. By
+ carefully comparing the effect produced with the means used to
+ produce it, I learned the hidden bond which unites musical
+ expression to the special art of instrumentation; but no one put me
+ in the way of this. The study of the methods of the three modern
+ masters, Beethoven, Weber, and Spontini, the impartial examination
+ of the traditions of instrumentation and of little-used forms and
+ combinations, conversations with virtuosi, and the effects I made
+ them try on their different instruments, together with a little
+ instinct, did the rest for me."[69]
+
+[Footnote 68: One may judge of this instinct by one fact: he wrote the
+overtures of _Les Francs-Juges_ and _Waverley_ without really knowing if
+it were possible to play them. "I was so ignorant," he says, "of the
+mechanism of certain instruments, that after having written the solo in
+D flat for the trombone in the Introduction of _Les Francs-Juges_, I
+feared it would be terribly difficult to play. So I went, very anxious,
+to one of the trombonists of the Opera orchestra. He looked at the
+passage and reassured me. 'The key of D flat is,' he said, 'one of the
+pleasantest for that instrument; and you can count on a splendid effect
+for that passage'" _(Memoires_, I, 63).]
+
+[Footnote 69: _Memoires_, I, 64.]
+
+That he was an originator in this direction no one doubts. And no one
+disputes, as a rule, "his devilish cleverness," as Wagner scornfully
+called it, or remains insensible to his skill and mastery in the
+mechanism of expression, and his power over sonorous matter, which make
+him, apart from his creative power, a sort of magician of music, a king
+of tone and rhythm. This gift is recognised even by his enemies--by
+Wagner, who seeks with some unfairness to restrict his genius within
+narrow limits, and to reduce it to "a structure with wheels of infinite
+ingenuity and extreme cunning ... a marvel of mechanism."[70]
+
+But though there is hardly anyone that Berlioz does not irritate or
+attract, he always strikes people by his impetuous ardour, his glowing
+romance, and his seething imagination, all of which makes and will
+continue to make his work one of the most picturesque mirrors of his
+age. His frenzied force of ecstasy and despair, his fulness of love and
+hatred, his perpetual thirst for life, which "in the heart of the
+deepest sorrow lights the Catherine wheels and crackers of the wildest
+joy"[71]--these are the qualities that stir up the crowds in _Benvenuto_
+and the armies in the _Damnation_, that shake earth, heaven, and hell,
+and are never quenched, but remain devouring and "passionate even when
+the subject is far removed from passion, and yet also express sweet and
+tender sentiments and the deepest calm."[72]
+
+[Footnote 70: "Berlioz displayed, in calculating the properties of
+mechanism, a really astounding scientific knowledge. If the inventors of
+our modern industrial machinery are to be considered benefactors of
+humanity to-day, Berlioz deserves to be considered as the true saviour
+of the musical world; for, thanks to him, musicians can produce
+surprising effects in music by the varied use of simple mechanical
+means.... Berlioz lies hopelessly buried beneath the ruins of his own
+contrivances" (_Oper und Drama_, 1851).]
+
+[Footnote 71: Letter from Berlioz to Ferrand.]
+
+[Footnote 72: "The chief characteristics of my music are passionate
+expression, inward warmth, rhythmic in pulses, and unforeseen effects.
+When I speak of passionate expression, I mean an expression that
+desperately strives to reproduce the inward feeling of its subject, even
+when the theme is contrary to passion, and deals with gentle emotions or
+the deepest calm. It is this kind of expression that may be found in
+_L'Enfance du Christ_, and, above all, in the scene of _Le Ciel_ in the
+_Damnation de Faust_ and in the _Sanctus_ of the _Requiem_" (_Memoires_,
+II, 361).]
+
+Whatever one may think of this volcanic force, of this torrential stream
+of youth and passion, it is impossible to deny them; one might as well
+deny the sun.
+
+And I shall not dwell on Berlioz's love of Nature, which, as M.
+Prudhomme shows us, is the soul of a composition like the _Damnation_
+and, one might say, of all great compositions. No musician, with the
+exception of Beethoven, has loved Nature so profoundly. Wagner himself
+did not realise the intensity of emotion which she roused in
+Berlioz,[73] and how this feeling impregnated the music of the
+_Damnation_, of _Romeo_, and of _Les Troyens_.
+
+[Footnote 73: "So you are in the midst of melting glaciers in your
+_Niebelungen_! To be writing in the presence of Nature herself must be
+splendid. It is an enjoyment which I am denied. Beautiful landscapes,
+lofty peaks, or great stretches of sea, absorb me instead of evoking
+ideas in me. I feel, but I cannot express what I feel. I can only paint
+the moon when I see its reflection in the bottom of a well" (Berlioz to
+Wagner, 10 September, 1855).]
+
+But this genius had other characteristics which are less well known,
+though they are not less unusual. The first is his sense of pure beauty.
+Berlioz's exterior romanticism must not make us blind to this. He had a
+Virgilian soul; and if his colouring recalls that of Weber, his design
+has often an Italian suavity. Wagner never had this love of beauty in
+the Latin sense of the word. Who has understood the Southern nature,
+beautiful form, and harmonious movement like Berlioz? Who, since Gluck,
+has recognised so well the secret of classical beauty? Since _Orfeo_ was
+composed, no one has carved in music a bas-relief so perfect as the
+entrance of Andromache in the second act of _Les Troyens a Troie_. In
+_Les Troyens a Carthage_, the fragrance of the Aeneid is shed over the
+night of love, and we see the luminous sky and hear the murmur of the
+sea. Some of his melodies are like statues, or the pure lines of
+Athenian friezes, or the noble gesture of beautiful Italian girls, or
+the undulating profile of the Albanian hills filled with divine
+laughter. He has done more than felt and translated into music the
+beauty of the Mediterranean--he has created beings worthy of a Greek
+tragedy. His Cassandre alone would suffice to rank him among the
+greatest tragic poets that music has ever known. And Cassandre is a
+worthy sister of Wagner's Bruennhilde; but she has the advantage of
+coming of a nobler race, and of having a lofty restraint of spirit and
+action that Sophocles himself would have loved.
+
+Not enough attention has been drawn to the classical nobility from which
+Berlioz's art so spontaneously springs. It is not fully acknowledged
+that he was, of all nineteenth-century musicians, the one who had in the
+highest degree the sense of plastic beauty. Nor do people always
+recognise that he was a writer of sweet and flowing melodies.
+Weingartner expressed the surprise he felt when, imbued with current
+prejudice against Berlioz's lack of melodic invention, he opened, by
+chance, the score of the overture of _Benvenuto_ and found in that short
+composition, which barely takes ten minutes to play, not one or two, but
+four or five melodies of admirable richness and originality:--
+
+"I began to laugh, both with pleasure at having discovered such a
+treasure, and with annoyance at finding how narrow human judgment is.
+Here I counted five themes, all of them plastic and expressive of
+personality; of admirable workmanship, varied in form, working up by
+degrees to a climax, and then finishing with strong effect. And this
+from a composer who was said by critics and the public to be devoid of
+creative power! From that day on there has been for me another great
+citizen in the republic of art."[74]
+
+[Footnote 74: _Musikfuehrer_, 29 November, 1903.]
+
+Before this, Berlioz had written in 1864:--
+
+ "It is quite easy for others to convince themselves that, without
+ even limiting me to take a very short melody as the theme of a
+ composition--as the greatest musicians have often done--I have
+ always endeavoured to put a wealth of melody into my compositions.
+ One may, of course, dispute the worth of these melodies, their
+ distinction, originality, or charm--it is not for me to judge
+ them--but to deny their existence is either unfair or foolish. They
+ are often on a large scale; and an immature or short-sighted
+ musical vision may not clearly distinguish their form; or, again,
+ they may be accompanied by secondary melodies which, to a limited
+ vision, may veil the form of the principal ones. Or, lastly,
+ shallow musicians may find these melodies so unlike the funny
+ little things that they call melodies, that they cannot bring
+ themselves to give the same name to both."[75]
+
+And what a splendid variety there is in these melodies: there is the
+song in Gluck's style (Cassandre's airs), the pure German _lied_
+(Marguerite's song, "D'amour l'ardente flamme"), the Italian melody,
+after Bellini, in its most limpid and happy form (arietta of Arlequin in
+_Benvenuto_), the broad Wagnerian phrase (finale of _Romeo_), the
+folk-song (chorus of shepherds in _L'Enfance du Christ_), and the freest
+and most modern recitative (the monologues of Faust), which was
+Berlioz's own invention, with its full development, its pliant outline,
+and its intricate nuances.[76]
+
+[Footnote 75: _Memoires_, II, 361.]
+
+[Footnote 76: M. Jean Marnold has remarked this genius for monody in
+Berlioz in his article on _Hector Berlioz, musicien (Mercure de France_,
+15 January, and 1 February, 1905).]
+
+I have said that Berlioz had a matchless gift for expressing tragic
+melancholy, weariness of life, and the pangs of death. In a general way,
+one may say that he was a great elegist in music. Ambros, who was a very
+discerning and unbiassed critic, said: "Berlioz feels with inward
+delight and profound emotion what no musician, except Beethoven, has
+felt before." And Heinrich Heine had a keen perception of Berlioz's
+originality when he called him "a colossal nightingale, a lark the size
+of an eagle." The simile is not only picturesque, but of remarkable
+aptness. For Berlioz's colossal force is at the service of a forlorn and
+tender heart; he has nothing of the heroism of Beethoven, or Haendel, or
+Gluck, or even Schubert. He has all the charm of an Umbrian painter, as
+is shown in _L'Enfance du Christ_, as well as sweetness and inward
+sadness, the gift of tears, and an elegiac passion.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now I come to Berlioz's great originality, an originality which is
+rarely spoken of, though it makes him more than a great musician, more
+than the successor of Beethoven, or, as some call him, the forerunner of
+Wagner. It is an originality that entitles him to be known, even more
+fitly than Wagner himself, as the creator of "an art of the future," the
+apostle of a new music, which even to-day has hardly made itself felt.
+
+Berlioz is original in a double sense. By the extraordinary complexity
+of his genius he touched the two opposite poles of his art, and showed
+us two entirely different aspects of music--that of a great popular art,
+and that of music made free.
+
+We are all enslaved by the musical tradition of the past. For
+generations we have been so accustomed to carry this yoke that we
+scarcely notice it. And in consequence of Germany's monopoly of music
+since the end of the eighteenth century, musical traditions--which had
+been chiefly Italian in the two preceding centuries--now became almost
+entirely German. We think in German forms: the plan of phrases, their
+development, their balance, and all the rhetoric of music and the
+grammar of composition comes to us from foreign thought, slowly
+elaborated by German masters. That domination has never been more
+complete or more heavy since Wagner's victory. Then reigned over the
+world this great German period--a scaly monster with a thousand arms,
+whose grasp was so extensive that it included pages, scenes, acts, and
+whole dramas in its embrace. We cannot say that French writers have ever
+tried to write in the style of Goethe or Schiller; but French composers
+have tried and are still trying to write music after the manner of
+German musicians.
+
+Why be astonished at it? Let us face the matter plainly. In music we
+have not, so to speak, any masters of French style. All our greatest
+composers are foreigners. The founder of the first school of French
+opera, Lulli, was Florentine; the founder of the second school, Gluck,
+was German; the two founders of the third school were Rossini, an
+Italian, and Meyerbeer, a German; the creators of _opera-comique_ were
+Duni, an Italian, and Gretry, a Belgian; Franck, who revolutionised our
+modern school of opera, was also Belgian. These men brought with them a
+style peculiar to their race; or else they tried to found, as Gluck did,
+an "international" style,[77] by which they effaced the more individual
+characteristics of the French spirit. The most French of all these
+styles is the _opera-comique_, the work of two foreigners, but owing
+much more to the _opera-bouffe_ than is generally admitted, and, in any
+case, representing France very insufficiently.
+
+[Footnote 77: Gluck himself said this in a letter to the _Mercure de
+France_, February, 1773.]
+
+Some more rational minds have tried to rid themselves of this Italian
+and German influence, but have mostly arrived at creating an
+intermediate Germano-Italian style, of which the operas of Auber and
+Ambroise Thomas are a type.
+
+Before Berlioz's time there was really only one master of the first rank
+who made a great effort to liberate French music: it was Rameau; and,
+despite his genius, he was conquered by Italian art.[78]
+
+By force of circumstance, therefore, French music found itself moulded
+in foreign musical forms. And in the same way that Germany in the
+eighteenth century tried to imitate French architecture and literature,
+so France in the nineteenth century acquired the habit of speaking
+German in music. As most men speak more than they think, even thought
+itself became Germanised; and it was difficult then to discover, through
+this traditional insincerity, the true and spontaneous form of French
+musical thought.
+
+But Berlioz's genius found it by instinct. From the first he strove to
+free French music from the oppression of the foreign tradition that was
+suffocating it.[79]
+
+[Footnote 78: I am not speaking of the Franco-Flemish masters at the end
+of the sixteenth century: of Jannequin, Costeley, Claude le Jeune, or
+Mauduit, recently discovered by M. Henry Expert, who are possessed of so
+original a flavour, and have yet remained almost entirely unknown from
+their own time to ours. Religious wars bruised France's musical
+traditions and denied some of the grandeur of her art.]
+
+[Footnote 79: It is amusing to find Wagner comparing Berlioz with Auber,
+as the type of a true French musician--Auber and his mixed Italian and
+German opera. That shows how Wagner, like most Germans, was incapable of
+grasping the real originality of French music, and how he saw only its
+externals. The best way to find out the musical characteristics of a
+nation is to study its folk-songs. If only someone would devote himself
+to the study of French folk-song (and there is no lack of material),
+people would realise perhaps how much it differs from German folk-song,
+and how the temperament of the French race shows itself there as being
+sweeter and freer, more vigorous and more expressive.]
+
+He was fitted in every way for the part, even by his deficiencies and
+his ignorance. His classical education in music was incomplete. M.
+Saint-Saens tells us that "the past did not exist for him; he did not
+understand the old composers, as his knowledge of them was limited to
+what he had read about them." He did not know Bach. Happy ignorance! He
+was able to write oratorios like _L'Enfance du Christ_ without being
+worried by memories and traditions of the German masters of oratorio.
+There are men like Brahms who have been, nearly all their life, but
+reflections of the past. Berlioz never sought to be anything but
+himself. It was thus that he created that masterpiece, _La Fuite en
+Egypte_, which sprang from his keen sympathy with the people.
+
+He had one of the most untrammelled spirits that ever breathed. Liberty
+was for him a desperate necessity. "Liberty of heart, of mind, of
+soul--of everything.... Real liberty, absolute and immense!"[80] And
+this passionate love of liberty, which was his misfortune in life, since
+it deprived him of the comfort of any faith, refused him any refuge for
+his thoughts, robbed him of peace, and even of the soft pillow of
+scepticism--this "real liberty" formed the unique originality and
+grandeur of his musical conceptions.
+
+[Footnote 80: _Memoires_, I, 221.]
+
+ "Music," wrote Berlioz to C. Lobe, in 1852, "is the most poetic,
+ the most powerful, the most living of all arts. She ought to be the
+ freest, but she is not yet.... Modern music is like the classic
+ Andromeda, naked and divinely beautiful. She is chained to a rock
+ on the shores of a vast sea, and awaits the victorious Perseus who
+ shall loose her bonds and break in pieces the chimera called
+ Routine."
+
+The business was to free music from its limited rhythms and from the
+traditional forms and rules that enclosed it;[81] and, above all, it
+needed to be free from the domination of speech, and to be released from
+its humiliating bondage to poetry. Berlioz wrote to the Princess of
+Wittgenstein, in 1856:--
+
+[Footnote 81: "Music to-day, in the vigour of her youth, is emancipated
+and free and can do what she pleases. Many old rules have no longer any
+vogue; they were made by unreflecting minds, or by lovers of routine for
+other lovers of routine. New needs of the mind, of the heart, and of the
+sense of hearing, make necessary new endeavours and, in some cases, the
+breaking of ancient laws. Many forms have become too hackneyed to be
+still adopted. The same thing may be entirely good or entirely bad,
+according to the use one makes of it, or the reasons one has for making
+use of it. Sound and sonority are secondary to thought, and thought is
+secondary to feeling and passion." (These opinions were given with
+reference to Wagner's concerts in Paris, in 1860, and are taken from _A
+travers chants_, p. 312.)
+
+Compare Beethoven's words: "There is no rule that one may not break for
+the advancement of beauty."]
+
+ "I am for free music. Yes, I want music to be proudly free, to be
+ victorious, to be supreme. I want her to take all she can, so that
+ there may be no more Alps or Pyrenees for her. But she must
+ achieve her victories by fighting in person, and not rely upon her
+ lieutenants. I should like her to have, if possible, good verse
+ drawn up in order of battle; but, like Napoleon, she must face the
+ fire herself, and, like Alexander, march in the front ranks of the
+ phalanx. She is so powerful that in some cases she would conquer
+ unaided; for she has the right to say with Medea: 'I, myself, am
+ enough.'"
+
+Berlioz protested vigorously against Gluck's impious theory[82] and
+Wagner's "crime" in making music the slave of speech. Music is the
+highest poetry and knows no master.[83] It was for Berlioz, therefore,
+continually to increase the power of expression in pure music.
+
+[Footnote 82: Is it necessary to recall the _epitre dedicatoire_ of
+_Alceste_ in 1769, and Gluck's declaration that he "sought to bring
+music to its true function--that of helping poetry to strengthen the
+expression of the emotions and the interest of a situation ... and to
+make it what fine colouring and the happy arrangement of light and shade
+are to a skilful drawing"?]
+
+[Footnote 83: This revolutionary theory was already Mozart's: "Music
+should reign supreme and make one forget everything else.... In an opera
+it is absolutely necessary that Poetry should be Music's obedient
+daughter" (Letter to his father, 13 October, 1781). Despairing probably
+at being unable to obtain this obedience, Mozart thought seriously of
+breaking up the form of opera, and of putting in its place, in 1778, a
+sort of melodrama (of which Rousseau had given an example in 1773),
+which he called "duodrama," where music and poetry were loosely
+associated, yet not dependent on each other, but went side by side on
+two parallel roads (Letter of 12 November, 1778).]
+
+And while Wagner, who was more moderate and a closer follower of
+tradition, sought to establish a compromise (perhaps an impossible one)
+between music and speech, and to create the new lyric drama, Berlioz,
+who was more revolutionary, achieved the dramatic symphony, of which the
+unequalled model to-day is still _Romeo et Juliette_.
+
+The dramatic symphony naturally fell foul of all formal theories. Two
+arguments were set up against it: one derived from Bayreuth, and by now
+an act of faith; the other, current opinion, upheld by the crowd that
+speaks of music without understanding it.
+
+The first argument, maintained by Wagner, is that music cannot really
+express action without the help of speech and gesture. It is in the name
+of this opinion that so many people condemn _a priori_ Berlioz's
+_Romeo_. They think it childish to try and _translate_ action into
+music. I suppose they think it less childish to _illustrate_ an action
+by music. Do they think that gesture associates itself very happily with
+music? If only they would try to root up this great fiction, which has
+bothered us for the last three centuries; if only they would open their
+eyes and see--what great men like Rousseau and Tolstoy saw so
+clearly--the silliness of opera; if only they would see the anomalies of
+the Bayreuth show. In the second act of _Tristan_ there is a celebrated
+passage, where Ysolde, burning with desire, is waiting for Tristan; she
+sees him come at last, and from afar she waves her scarf to the
+accompaniment of a phrase repeated several times by the orchestra. I
+cannot express the effect produced on me by that _imitation_ (for it is
+nothing else) of a series of sounds by a series of gestures; I can never
+see it without indignation or without laughing. The curious thing is
+that when one hears this passage at a concert, one sees the gesture. At
+the theatre either one does not "see" it, or it appears childish. The
+natural action becomes stiff when clad in musical armour, and the
+absurdity of trying to make the two agree is forced upon one. In the
+music of _Rheingold_ one pictures the stature and gait of the giants,
+and one sees the lightning gleam and the rainbow reflected on the
+clouds. In the theatre it is like a game of marionettes; and one feels
+the impassable gulf between music and gesture. Music is a world apart.
+When music wishes to depict the drama, it is not real action which is
+reflected in it, it is the ideal action transfigured by the spirit, and
+perceptible only to the inner vision. The worst foolishness is to
+present two visions--one for the eyes and one for the spirit. Nearly
+always they kill each other.
+
+The other argument urged against the symphony with a programme is the
+pretended classical argument (it is not really classical at all).
+"Music," they say, "is not meant to express definite subjects; it is
+only fitted for vague ideas. The more indefinite it is, the greater its
+power, and the more it suggests." I ask, What is an indefinite art? What
+is a vague art? Do not the two words contradict each other? Can this
+strange combination exist at all? Can an artist write anything that he
+does not clearly conceive? Do people think he composes at random as his
+genius whispers to him? One must at least say this: A symphony of
+Beethoven's is a "definite" work down to its innermost folds; and
+Beethoven had, if not an exact knowledge, at least a clear intuition of
+what he was about. His last quartets are descriptive symphonies of his
+soul, and very differently carried out from Berlioz's symphonies. Wagner
+was able to analyse one of the former under the name of "A Day with
+Beethoven." Beethoven was always trying to translate into music the
+depths of his heart, the subtleties of his spirit, which are not to be
+explained clearly by words, but which are as definite as words--in fact,
+more definite; for a word, being an abstract thing, sums up many
+experiences and comprehends many different meanings. Music is a hundred
+times more expressive and exact than speech; and it is not only her
+right to express particular emotions and subjects, it is her duty. If
+that duty is not fulfilled, the result is not music--it is nothing at
+all.
+
+Berlioz is thus the true inheritor of Beethoven's thought. The
+difference between a work like _Romeo_ and one of Beethoven's symphonies
+is that the former, it would seem, endeavours to express objective
+emotions and subjects in music. I do not see why music should not follow
+poetry in getting away from introspection and trying to paint the drama
+of the universe. Shakespeare is as good as Dante. Besides, one may add,
+it is always Berlioz himself that is discovered in his music: it is his
+soul starving for love and mocked at by shadows which is revealed
+through all the scenes of _Romeo_.
+
+I will not prolong a discussion where so many things must be left
+unsaid. But I would suggest that, once and for all, we get rid of these
+absurd endeavours to fence in art. Do not let us say: Music can....
+Music cannot express such-and-such a thing. Let us say rather, If genius
+pleases, everything is possible; and if music so wishes, she may be
+painting and poetry to-morrow. Berlioz has proved it well in his
+_Romeo_.
+
+This _Romeo_ is an extraordinary work: "a wonderful isle, where a temple
+of pure art is set up." For my part, not only do I consider it equal to
+the most powerful of Wagner's creations, but I believe it to be richer
+in its teaching and in its resources for art--resources and teaching
+which contemporary French art has not yet fully turned to account. One
+knows that for several years the young French school has been making
+efforts to deliver our music from German models, to create a language of
+recitative that shall belong to France and that the _leitmotif_ will not
+overwhelm; a more exact and less heavy language, which in expressing the
+freedom of modern thought will not have to seek the help of the
+classical or Wagnerian forms. Not long ago, the _Schola Cantorum_
+published a manifesto that proclaimed "the liberty of musical
+declamation ... free speech in free music ... the triumph of natural
+music with the free movement of speech and the plastic rhythm of the
+ancient dance"--thus declaring war on the metrical art of the last three
+centuries.[84]
+
+[Footnote 84: _Tribune de Saint Gervais_, November, 1903.]
+
+Well, here is that music; you will nowhere find a more perfect model. It
+is true that many who profess the principles of this music repudiate
+the model, and do not hide their disdain for Berlioz. That makes me
+doubt a little, I admit, the results of their efforts. If they do not
+feel the wonderful freedom of Berlioz's music, and do not see that it
+was the delicate veil of a very living spirit, then I think there will
+be more of archaism than real life in their pretensions to "free music."
+Study, not only the most celebrated pages of his work, such as the
+_Scene d'amour_ (the one of all his compositions that Berlioz himself
+liked best),[85] _La Tristesse de Romeo_, or _La Fete des Capulet_
+(where a spirit like Wagner's own unlooses and subdues again tempests of
+passion and joy), but take less well-known pages, such as the
+_Scherzetto chante de la reine Mab_, or the _Reveil de Juliette_, and
+the music describing the death of the two lovers.[86] In the one what
+light grace there is, in the other what vibrating passion, and in both
+of them what freedom and apt expression of ideas. The language is
+magnificent, of wonderful clearness and simplicity; not a word too much,
+and not a word that does not reveal an unerring pen. In nearly all the
+big works of Berlioz before 1845 (that is up to the _Damnation_) you
+will find this nervous precision and sweeping liberty.
+
+[Footnote 85: _Memoires_, II, 365.]
+
+[Footnote 86: "This composition contains a dose of sublimity much too
+strong for the ordinary public; and Berlioz, with the splendid insolence
+of genius, advises the conductor, in a note, to turn the page and pass
+it over" (Georges de Massougnes, _Berlioz_). This fine study by Georges
+de Massougnes appeared in 1870, and is very much in advance of its
+time.]
+
+Then there is the freedom of his rhythms. Schumann, who was nearest to
+Berlioz of all musicians of that time, and, therefore, best able to
+understand him, had been struck by this since the composition of the
+_Symphonic fantastique_,[87] He wrote:--
+
+ "The present age has certainly not produced a work in which similar
+ times and rhythms combined with dissimilar times and rhythms have
+ been more freely used. The second part of a phrase rarely
+ corresponds with the first, the reply to the question. This anomaly
+ is characteristic of Berlioz, and is natural to his southern
+ temperament."
+
+Far from objecting to this, Schumann sees in it something necessary to
+musical evolution.
+
+ "Apparently music is showing a tendency to go back to its
+ beginnings, to the time when the laws of rhythm did not yet trouble
+ her; it seems that she wishes to free herself, to regain an
+ utterance that is unconstrained, and raise herself to the dignity
+ of a sort of poetic language."
+
+And Schumann quotes these words of Ernest Wagner: "He who shakes off the
+tyranny of time and delivers us from it will, as far as one can see,
+give back freedom to music."[88]
+
+[Footnote 87: "Oh, how I love, honour, and reverence Schumann for having
+written this article alone" (Hugo Wolf, 1884).]
+
+[Footnote 88: _Neue Zeitschrift fuer Musik_. See _Hector Berlioz und
+Robert Schumann_. Berlioz was constantly righting for this freedom of
+rhythm--for "those harmonies of rhythm," as he said. He wished to form a
+Rhythm class at the Conservatoire (_Memoires_, II, 241), but such a
+thing was not understood in France. Without being as backward as Italy
+on this point, France is still resisting the emancipation of rhythm
+(_Memoires_, II, 196). But during the last ten years great progress in
+music has been made in France.]
+
+Remark also Berlioz's freedom of melody. His musical phrases pulse and
+flow like life itself. "Some phrases taken separately," says Schumann,
+"have such an intensity that they will not bear harmonising--_as in many
+ancient folk-songs_--and often even an accompaniment spoils their
+fulness."[89] These melodies so correspond with the emotions, that they
+reproduce the least thrills of body and mind by their vigorous
+workings-up and delicate reliefs, by splendid barbarities of modulation
+and strong and glowing colour, by gentle gradations of light and shade
+or imperceptible ripples of thought, which flow over the body like a
+steady tide. It is an art of peculiar sensitiveness, more delicately
+expressive than that of Wagner; not satisfying itself with the modern
+tonality, but going back to old modes--a rebel, as M. Saint-Saens
+remarks, to the polyphony which had governed music since Bach's day, and
+which is perhaps, after all, "a heresy destined to disappear."[90]
+
+[Footnote 89: _Ibid_. "A rare peculiarity," adds Schumann, "which
+distinguishes nearly all his melodies." Schumann understands why Berlioz
+often gives as an accompaniment to his melodies a simple bass, or chords
+of the augmented and diminished fifth--ignoring the intermediate parts.]
+
+[Footnote 90: "What will then remain of actual art? Perhaps Berlioz will
+be its sole representative. Not having studied the pianoforte, he had an
+instinctive aversion to counterpoint. He is in this respect the opposite
+of Wagner, who was the embodiment of counterpoint, and drew the utmost
+he could from its laws" (Saint-Saens).]
+
+How much finer, to my idea, are Berlioz's recitatives, with their long
+and winding rhythms,[91] than Wagner's declamations, which--apart from
+the climax of a subject, where the air breaks into bold and vigorous
+phrases, whose influence elsewhere is often weak--limit themselves to
+the quasi-notation of spoken inflections, and jar noisily against the
+fine harmonies of the orchestra. Berlioz's orchestration, too, is of a
+more delicate temper, and has a freer life than Wagner's, flowing in an
+impetuous stream, and sweeping away everything in its course; it is also
+less united and solid, but more flexible; its nature is undulating and
+varied, and the thousand imperceptible impulses of the spirit and of
+action are reflected there. It is a marvel of spontaneity and caprice.
+
+[Footnote 91: Jacques Passy notes that with Berlioz the most frequent
+phrases consist of twelve, sixteen, eighteen, or twenty bars. With
+Wagner, phrases of eight bars are rare, those of four more common, those
+of two still more so, while those of one bar are most frequent of all
+(_Berlioz et Wagner_, article published in _Le Correspondant_, 10 June,
+1888).]
+
+In spite of appearances, Wagner is a classicist compared with Berlioz;
+he carried on and perfected the work of the German classicists; he made
+no innovations; he is the pinnacle and the close of one evolution of
+art. Berlioz began a new art; and one finds in it all the daring and
+gracious ardour of youth. The iron laws that bound the art of Wagner are
+not to be found in Berlioz's early works, which give one the illusion of
+perfect freedom.[92]
+
+
+
+[Footnote 92: One must make mention here of the poorness and awkwardness
+of Berlioz's harmony--which is incontestable--since some critics and
+composers have been able to see (Am I saying something
+ridiculous?--Wagner would say it for me) nothing but "faults of
+orthography" in his genius. To these terrible grammarians--who, two
+hundred years ago, criticised Moliere on account of his "jargon"--I
+shall reply by quoting Schumann.
+
+ "Berlioz's harmonies, in spite of the diversity of their effect,
+ obtained from very scanty material, are distinguished by a sort of
+ simplicity, and even by a solidity and conciseness, which one only
+ meets with in Beethoven.... One may find here and there harmonies
+ that are commonplace and trivial, and others that are incorrect--at
+ least according to the old rules. In some places his harmonies have
+ a fine effect, and in others their result is vague and
+ indeterminate, or it sounds badly, or is too elaborate and
+ far-fetched. Yet with Berlioz all this somehow takes on a certain
+ distinction. If one attempted to correct it, or even slightly to
+ modify it--for a skilled musician it would be child's play--the
+ music would become dull" (Article on the _Symphonie fantastique_).
+
+But let us leave that "grammatical discussion" as well as what Wagner
+wrote on "the childish question as to whether it is permitted or not to
+introduce 'neologisms' in matters of harmony and melody" (Wagner to
+Berlioz, 22 February, 1860). As Schumann has said, "Look out for fifths,
+and then leave us in peace."]
+
+As soon as the profound originality of Berlioz's music has been grasped,
+one understands why it encountered, and still encounters, so much secret
+hostility. How many accomplished musicians of distinction and learning,
+who pay honour to artistic tradition, are incapable of understanding
+Berlioz because they cannot bear the air of liberty breathed by his
+music. They are so used to thinking in German, that Berlioz's speech
+upsets and shocks them. I can well believe it. It is the first time a
+French musician has dared to think in French; and that is the reason why
+I warned you of the danger of accepting too meekly German ideas about
+Berlioz. Men like Weingartner, Richard Strauss, and Mottl--thoroughbred
+musicians--are, without doubt, able to appreciate Berlioz's genius
+better and more quickly than we French musicians. But I rather mistrust
+the kind of appreciation they feel for a spirit so opposed to their own.
+It is for France and French people to learn to read his thoughts; they
+are intimately theirs, and one day will give them their salvation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Berlioz's other great originality lay in his talent for music that was
+suited to the spirit of the common people, recently raised to
+sovereignty, and the young democracy. In spite of his aristocratic
+disdain, his soul was with the masses. M. Hippeau applies to him Taine's
+definition of a romantic artist: "the plebeian of a new race, richly
+gifted, and filled with aspirations, who, having attained for the first
+time the world's heights, noisily displays the ferment of his mind and
+heart." Berlioz grew up in the midst of revolutions and stories of
+Imperial achievement. He wrote his cantata for the _Prix de Rome_ in
+July, 1830, "to the hard, dull noise of stray bullets, which whizzed
+above the roofs, and came to flatten themselves against the wall near
+his window."[93] When he had finished this cantata, he went, "pistol in
+hand, to play the blackguard in Paris with the _sainte canaille_." He
+sang the _Marseillaise_, and made "all who had a voice and heart and
+blood in their veins"[94] sing it too. On his journey to Italy he
+travelled from Marseilles to Livourne with Mazzinian conspirators, who
+were going to take part in the insurrection of Modena and Bologna.
+Whether he was conscious of it or not, he was the musician of
+revolutions; his sympathies were with the people.
+
+[Footnote 93: _Memoires_, I, 155.]
+
+[Footnote 94: These words are taken from Berlioz's directions on the
+score of his arrangement of the _Marseillaise_ for full orchestra and
+double choir.] Not only did he fill his scenes in the theatre with
+swarming and riotous crowds, like those of the Roman Carnival in the
+second act of _Benvenuto_ (anticipating by thirty years the crowds of
+_Die Meistersinger_), but he created a music of the masses and a
+colossal style. His model here was Beethoven; Beethoven of the Eroica,
+of the C minor, of the A, and, above all, of the Ninth Symphony. He was
+Beethoven's follower in this as well as other things, and the apostle
+who carried on his work.[95] And with his understanding of material
+effects and sonorous matter, he built edifices, as he says, that were
+"Babylonian and Ninevitish,"[96] "music after Michelangelo,"[97] "on an
+immense scale."[98]
+
+[Footnote 95: "From Beethoven," says Berlioz, "dates the advent in art
+of colossal forms" (_Memoires_, II, 112). But Berlioz forgot one of
+Beethoven's models--Haendel. One must also take into account the
+musicians of the French revolution: Mehul, Gossec, Cherubini, and
+Lesueur, whose works, though they may not equal their intentions, are
+not without grandeur, and often disclose the intuition of a new and
+noble and popular art.]
+
+[Footnote 96: Letter to Morel, 1855. Berlioz thus describes the
+_Tibiomnes_ and the _Judex_ of his _Te Deum_. Compare Heine's judgment:
+"Berlioz's music makes me think of gigantic kinds of extinct animals, of
+fabulous empires.... Babylon, the hanging gardens of Semiramis, the
+wonders of Nineveh, the daring buildings of Mizraim."]
+
+[Footnote 97: _Memoires_, I, 17.]
+
+[Footnote 98: Letter to an unknown person, written probably about 1855,
+in the collection of Siegfried Ochs, and published in the _Geschichte
+der franzoesischen Musik_ of Alfred Bruneau, 1904. That letter contains a
+rather curious analytical catalogue of Berlioz's works, drawn up by
+himself. He notes there his predilection for compositions of a "colossal
+nature," such as the _Requiem_, the _Symphonie funebre et triomphale_,
+and the _Te Deum_, or those of "an immense style," such as the
+_Imperiale_.]
+
+It was the _Symphonie funebre et triomphale_ for two orchestras and a
+choir, and the _Te Deum_ for orchestra, organ, and three choirs, which
+Berlioz loved (whose finale _Judex crederis_ seemed to him the most
+effective thing he had ever written[99]), as well as the _Imperiale_,
+for two orchestras and two choirs, and the famous _Requiem_, with its
+"four orchestras of brass instruments, placed round the main orchestra
+and the mass of voices, but separated and answering one another at a
+distance." Like the _Requiem_, these compositions are often crude in
+style and of rather commonplace sentiment, but their grandeur is
+overwhelming. This is not due only to the hugeness of the means
+employed, but also to "the breadth of the style and to the formidable
+slowness of some of the progressions--whose final aim one cannot
+guess--which gives these compositions a strangely gigantic
+character."[100] Berlioz has left in these compositions striking
+examples of the beauty that may reveal itself in a crude mass of music.
+Like the towering Alps, they move one by their very immensity. A German
+critic says: "In these Cyclopean works the composer lets the elemental
+and brute forces of sound and pure rhythm have their fling."[101] It is
+scarcely music, it is the force of Nature herself. Berlioz himself calls
+his _Requiem_ "a musical cataclysm."[102]
+
+
+
+[Footnote 99: _Memoires_, II, 364. See also the letter quoted above.]
+
+[Footnote 100: _Memoires_, II, 363. See also II, 163, and the
+description of the great festival of 1844, with its 1,022 performers.]
+
+[Footnote 101: Hermann Kretzschmar, _Fuehrer durch den Konzertsaal_.]
+
+[Footnote 102: _Memoires_, I, 312.]
+
+These hurricanes are let loose in order to speak to the people, to stir
+and rouse the dull ocean of humanity. The _Requiem_ is a Last Judgment,
+not meant, like that of the Sixtine Chapel (which Berlioz did not care
+for at all) for great aristocracies, but for a crowd, a surging,
+excited, and rather savage crowd. The _Marche de Rakoczy_ is less an
+Hungarian march than the music for a revolutionary fight; it sounds the
+charge; and Berlioz tells us it might bear Virgil's verses for a
+motto:--
+
+ " ... Furor iraque mentes
+ Praecipitant, pulchrumque mori succurrit in armis."[103]
+
+When Wagner heard the _Symphonic funebre et triomphale_ he was forced to
+admit Berlioz's "skill in writing compositions that were popular in the
+best sense of the word."
+
+ "In listening to that symphony I had a lively impression that any
+ little street boy in a blue blouse and red bonnet would understand
+ it perfectly. I have no hesitation in giving precedence to that
+ work over Berlioz's other works; it is big and noble from the first
+ note to the last; a fine and eager patriotism rises from its first
+ expression of compassion to the final glory of the apotheosis, and
+ keeps it from any unwholesome exaggeration. I want gladly to
+ express my conviction that that symphony will fire men's courage
+ and will live as long as a nation bears the name of France."[104]
+
+[Footnote 103: Letter to some young Hungarians, 14 February, 1861. See
+the _Memoires_, II, 212, for the incredible emotion which the _Marche de
+Rakoczy_ roused in the audience at Budapest, and, above all, for the
+astonishing scene at the end:--
+
+ "I saw a man enter unexpectedly. He was miserably clad, but his
+ face shone with a strange rapture. When he saw me, he threw himself
+ upon me and embraced me with fervour; his eyes filled with tears,
+ and he was hardly able to get out the words, 'Ah, monsieur,
+ monsieur! moi Hongrois ... pauvre diable ... pas parler Francais
+ ... un poco Italiano. Pardonnez mon extase.... Ah! ai compris votre
+ canon.... Oui, oui, la grande-bataille.... Allemands chiens!' And
+ then striking his breast violently: 'Dans le coeur, moi ... je vous
+ porte.... _Ah! Francais ... revolutionnaire ... savoir faire la
+ musique des revolutions_!'"]
+
+[Footnote 104: Written 5 May, 1841.]
+
+How do such works come to be neglected by our Republic? How is it they
+have not a place in our public life? Why are they not part of our great
+ceremonies? That is what one would wonderingly ask oneself if one had
+not seen, for the last century, the indifference of the State to Art.
+What might not Berlioz have done if the means had been given him, or if
+his works had found a place in the fetes of the Revolution? Unhappily,
+one must add that here again his character was the enemy of his genius.
+As this apostle of musical freedom, in the second part of his life,
+became afraid of himself and recoiled before the results of his own
+principles, and returned to classicism, so this revolutionary fell to
+sullenly disparaging the people and revolutions; and he talks about "the
+republican cholera," "the dirty and stupid republic," "the republic of
+street-porters and rag-gatherers," "the filthy rabble of humanity a
+hundred times more stupid and animal in its twitchings and revolutionary
+grimacings than the baboons and orang-outangs of Borneo."[105]
+
+[Footnote 105: Berlioz never ceased to inveigh against the Revolution of
+1848--which should have had his sympathies. Instead of finding material,
+like Wagner, in the excitement of that time for impassioned
+compositions, he worked at _L'Enfance du Christ_. He affected absolute
+indifference--he who was so little made for indifference. He approved
+the State's action, and despised its visionary hopes.] What
+ingratitude! He owed to these revolutions, to these democratic storms,
+to these human tempests, the best of all his genius--and he disowned it
+all. This musician of a new era took refuge in the past.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Well, what did it matter? Whether he wished it or not, he opened out
+some magnificent roads for Art. He has shown the music of France the way
+in which her genius should tread; he has shown her possibilities she had
+never before dreamed of. He has given us a musical utterance at once
+truthful and expressive, free from foreign traditions, coming from the
+depths of our being, and reflecting our spirit; an utterance which
+responded to his imagination, to his instinct for what was picturesque,
+to his fleeting impressions, and his delicate shades of feeling. He has
+laid the strong foundation of a national and popular music for the
+greatest republic in Europe.
+
+These are shining qualities. If Berlioz had had Wagner's reasoning power
+and had made the utmost use of his intuitions, if he had had Wagner's
+will and had shaped the inspirations of his genius and welded them into
+a solid whole, I venture to say that he would have made a revolution in
+music greater than Wagner's own; for Wagner, though stronger and more
+master of himself, was less original and, at bottom, but the close of a
+glorious past.
+
+Will that revolution still be accomplished? Perhaps; but it has suffered
+half a century's delay. Berlioz bitterly calculated that people would
+begin to understand him about the year 1940.[106]
+
+After all, why be astonished that his mighty mission was too much for
+him? He was so alone.[107] As people forsook him, his loneliness stood
+out in greater relief. He was alone in the age of Wagner, Liszt,
+Schumann, and Franck; alone, yet containing a whole world in himself, of
+which his enemies, his friends, his admirers, and he himself, were not
+quite conscious; alone, and tortured by his loneliness. Alone--the word
+is repeated by the music of his youth and his old age, by the _Symphonie
+fantastique_ and _Les Troyens_. It is the word I read in the portrait
+before me as I write these lines--the beautiful portrait of the
+_Memoires_, where his face looks out in sad and stern reproach on the
+age that so misunderstood him.
+
+[Footnote 106: "My musical career would finish very pleasingly if only I
+could live for a hundred and forty years" _(Memoires_, II, 390).]
+
+[Footnote 107: This solitude struck Wagner. "Berlioz's loneliness is not
+only one of external circumstances; its origin is in his temperament.
+Though he is a Frenchman, with quick sympathies and interests like those
+of his fellow-citizens, yet he is none the less alone. He sees no one
+before him who will hold out a helping hand, there is no one by his side
+on whom he may lean" (Article written 5 May, 1841). As one reads these
+words, one feels it was Wagner's lack of sympathy and not his
+intelligence that prevented him from understanding Berlioz. In his heart
+I do not doubt that he knew well who was his great rival. But he never
+said anything about it--unless perhaps one counts an odd document,
+certainly not intended for publication, where he (even he) compares him
+to Beethoven and to Bonaparte (Manuscript in the collection of Alfred
+Bovet, published by Mottl in German magazines, and by M. Georges de
+Massougnes in the _Revue d'art dramatique_, 1 January, 1902).]
+
+
+
+
+WAGNER
+
+"SIEGFRIED"
+
+
+There is nothing so thrilling as first impressions. I remember when, as
+a child, I heard fragments of Wagner's music for the first time at one
+of old Pasdeloup's concerts in the Cirque d'Hiver. I was taken there one
+dull and foggy Sunday afternoon; and as we left the yellow fog outside
+and entered the hall we were met by an overpowering warmth, a dazzling
+blaze of light, and the murmuring voice of the crowd. My eyes were
+blinded, I breathed with difficulty, and my limbs soon became cramped;
+for we sat on wooden benches, crushed in a narrow space between solid
+walls of human beings. But with the first note of the music all was
+forgotten, and one fell into a state of painful yet delicious torpor.
+Perhaps one's very discomfort made the pleasure keener. Those who know
+the intoxication of climbing a mountain know also how closely it is
+associated with the discomforts of the climb--with fatigue and the
+blinding light of the sun, with out-of-breathness, and all the other
+sensations that rouse and stimulate life and make the body tingle, so
+that the remembrance of it all is carved indelibly on the mind. The
+comfort of a playhouse adds nothing to the illusion of a play; and it
+may even be due to the entire inconvenience of the old concert-rooms
+that I owe my vivid recollection of my first meeting with Wagner's work.
+
+How mysterious it was, and what a strange agitation it filled me with!
+There were new effects of orchestration, new timbres, new rhythms, and
+new subjects; it held the wild poetry of the far-away Middle Ages and
+old legends, it throbbed with the fever of our hidden sorrows and
+desires. I did not understand it very well. How should I? The music was
+taken from works quite unknown to me. It was almost impossible to seize
+the connection of the ideas on account of the poor acoustics of the
+room, the bad arrangement of the orchestra, and the unskilled
+players--all of which served to break up the musical design and spoil
+the harmony of its colouring. Passages that should have been made
+prominent were slurred over, and others were distorted by faulty time or
+want of precision. Even to-day, when our orchestras are seasoned by
+years of study, I should often be unable to follow Wagner's thought
+throughout a whole scene if I did not happen to know the score, for the
+outline of a melody is often smothered by the accompaniment, and so its
+sentiment is lost. If we still find obscurity of meaning in Wagner's
+works you can imagine how much worse it was then. But what did it
+matter? I used to feel myself stirred with passions that were not human:
+some magnetic influence seemed to thrill me with both pleasure and pain,
+and I felt invigorated and happy, for it brought me strength. It seemed
+as if my child's heart were torn from me and the heart of a hero put in
+its place.
+
+Nor was I alone in the experience. On the faces of the people round
+about me I saw the reflection of my own emotions. What was the meaning
+of it? The audience consisted chiefly of poor and commonplace people,
+whose faces were lined with the wear and tear of a life without interest
+or ideals; their minds were dull and heavy, and yet here they responded
+to the divine spirit of the music. There is no more impressive sight
+than that of thousands of people held spellbound by a melody; it is by
+turns sublime, grotesque, and touching.
+
+What a place in my life those Sunday concerts held! All the week I lived
+for those two hours; and when they were over I thought about them until
+the following Sunday. The fascination of Wagner's music for youth has
+often troubled people; they think it poisons the thoughts and dulls the
+activities. But the generation that was then intoxicated by Wagner does
+not seem to have shown signs of demoralisation since. Why do not people
+understand that if we had need of that music it was not because it was
+death to us, but life. Cramped by the artificiality of a town, far from
+action, or nature, or any strong or real life, we expanded under the
+influence of this noble music--music which flowed from a heart filled
+with understanding of the world and the breath of Nature. In _Die
+Meistersinger_, in _Tristan_, and in _Siegfried_, we went to find the
+joy, the love, and the vigour that we so lacked.
+
+At the time when I was feeling Wagner's seductiveness so strongly there
+were always some carping people among my elders ready to quench my
+admiration and say with a superior smile: "That is nothing. One can't
+judge Wagner at a concert. You must hear him in the opera-house at
+Bayreuth." Since then I have been several times to Bayreuth; I have seen
+Wagner's works performed in Berlin, in Dresden, in Munich, and in other
+German towns, but I have never again felt the old intoxication. People
+are wrong to pretend that closer acquaintance with a fine work adds to
+one's enjoyment of it. It may throw light upon it, but it nips one's
+imagination and dispels the mystery. The puzzling fragments one hears at
+concerts will take on splendid proportions on account of all the mind
+adds to them. That epic poem of the _Niebelungen_ was once like a forest
+in our dreams, where strange and awful beings flashed before our vision
+and then vanished. Later on, when we had explored all its paths, we
+discovered that order and reason reigned in the midst of this apparent
+jungle; and when we came to know the least wrinkle on the faces of its
+inhabitants, the confusion and emotion of other days no longer filled
+us.
+
+But this may be the result of growing older; and if I do not recognise
+the Wagner of other days, it is perhaps because I do not recognise my
+former self. A work of art, and above all a work of musical art, changes
+with ourselves. _Siegfried_, for example, is for me no longer full of
+mystery. The qualities in it that strike me to-day are its cheerful
+vigour, its clearness of form, its virile force and freedom, and the
+extraordinary healthiness of the hero, and, indeed, of the whole work.
+
+I sometimes think of poor Nietzsche and his passion for destroying the
+things he loved, and how he sought in others the decadence that was
+really in himself. He tried to embody this decadence in Wagner, and, led
+away by his flights of fancy and his mania for paradox (which would be
+laughable if one did not remember that his whims were not hatched in
+hours of happiness), he denied Wagner his most obvious qualities--his
+vigour, his determination, his unity, his logic, and his power of
+progress. He amused himself by comparing Wagner's style with that of
+Goncourt, by making him--with amusing irony--a great miniaturist
+painter, a poet of half-tones, a musician of affectations and
+melancholy, so delicate and effeminate in style that "after him all
+other musicians seemed too robust."[108] He has painted Wagner and his
+time delightfully. We all enjoy these little pictures of the Tetralogy,
+delicately drawn and worked up by the aid of a
+magnifying-glass--pictures of Wagner, languishing and beautiful, in a
+mournful salon, and pictures of the athletic meetings of the other
+musicians, who were "too robust"! The amusing part is that this piece of
+wit has been taken seriously by certain arbiters of elegance, who are
+only too happy to be able to run counter to any current opinion,
+whatever it may be.
+
+[Footnote 108: F. Nietzsche, _Der Fall Wagner_.]
+
+I do not say that there may not be a decadent side in Wagner, revealing
+super-sensitiveness or even hysteria and other modern nervous
+affections. And if this side was lacking he would not be representative
+of his time, and that is what every great artist ought to be. But there
+is certainly something more in him than decadence; and if women and
+young men cannot see anything beyond it, it only proves their inability
+to get outside themselves. A long time ago Wagner himself complained to
+Liszt that neither the public nor artists knew how to listen to or
+understand any side of his music but the effeminate side: "They do not
+grasp its strength," he said. "My supposed successes," he also tells us,
+"are founded on misunderstanding. My public reputation isn't worth a
+walnut-shell." And it is true he has been applauded, patronised, and
+monopolised for a quarter of a century by all the decadents of art and
+literature. Scarcely anyone has seen in him a vigorous musician and a
+classic writer, or has recognised him as Beethoven's direct successor,
+the inheritor of his heroic and pastoral genius, of his epic
+inspirations and battlefield rhythms, of his Napoleonic phrases and
+atmosphere of stirring trumpet-calls.
+
+Nowhere is Wagner nearer to Beethoven than in _Siegfried_. In _Die
+Walkuere_ certain characters, certain phrases of Wotan, of Bruennhilde,
+and, especially, of Siegmund, bear a close relationship to Beethoven's
+symphonies and sonatas. I can never play the recitative _con espressione
+e semplice_ of the seventeenth sonata for the piano (Op. 31, No. 2)
+without being reminded of the forests of _Die Walkuere_ and the fugitive
+hero. But in _Siegfried_ I find, not only a likeness to Beethoven in
+details, but the same spirit running through the work--both the poem and
+the music. I cannot help thinking that Beethoven would perhaps have
+disliked _Tristan_, but would have loved _Siegfried_; for the latter is
+a perfect incarnation of the spirit of old Germany, virginal and gross,
+sincere and malicious, full of humour and sentiment, of deep feeling, of
+dreams of bloody and joyous battles, of the shade of great oak-trees and
+the song of birds.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In my opinion, _Siegfried_, in spirit and in form, stands alone in
+Wagner's work. It breathes perfect health and happiness, and it
+overflows with gladness. Only _Die Meistersinger_ rivals it in
+merriment, though even there one does not find such a nice balance of
+poetry and music.
+
+And _Siegfried_ rouses one's admiration the more when one thinks that it
+was the offspring of sickness and suffering. The time at which Wagner
+wrote it was one of the saddest in his life. It often happens so in art.
+One goes astray in trying to interpret an artist's life by his work, for
+it is exceptional to find one a counterpart of the other. It is more
+likely that an artist's work will express the opposite of his life--the
+things that he did not experience. The object of art is to fill up what
+is missing in the artist's experience: "Art begins where life leaves
+off," said Wagner. A man of action is rarely pleased with stimulating
+works of art. Borgia and Sforza patronised Leonardo. The strong,
+full-blooded men of the seventeenth century; the apoplectic court at
+Versailles (where Fagon's lancet played so necessary a part); the
+generals and ministers who harassed the Protestants and burned the
+Palatinate--all these loved pastorales. Napoleon wept at a reading of
+_Paul et Virginie_, and delighted in the pallid music of Paesiello. A
+man wearied by an over-active life seeks repose in art; a man who lives
+a narrow, commonplace life seeks energy in art. A great artist writes a
+gay work when he is sad, and a sad work when he is gay, almost in spite
+of himself. Beethoven's symphony _To Joy_ is the offspring of his
+misery; and Wagner's _Meistersinger_ was composed immediately after the
+failure of _Tannhaeuser_ in Paris. People try to find in _Tristan_ the
+trace of some love-story of Wagner's, but Wagner himself says: "As in
+all my life I have never truly tasted the happiness of love, I will
+raise a monument to a beautiful dream of it: I have the idea of _Tristan
+und Isolde_ in my head." And so it was with his creation of the happy
+and heedless _Siegfried_.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The first ideas of _Siegfried_ were contemporary with the Revolution of
+1848, which Wagner took part in with the same enthusiasm he put into
+everything else. His recognised biographer, Herr Houston Stewart
+Chamberlain--who, with M. Henri Lichtenberger, has succeeded best in
+unravelling Wagner's complex soul, though he is not without certain
+prejudices--has been at great pains to prove that Wagner was always a
+patriot and a German monarchist. Well, he may have been so later on, but
+it was not, I think, the last phase of his evolution. His actions speak
+for themselves. On 14 June, 1848, in a famous speech to the National
+Democratic Association, Wagner violently attacked the organisation of
+society itself, and demanded both the abolition of money and the
+extinction of what was left of the aristocracy. In _Das Kunstwerk der
+Zukunft_ (1849) he showed that beyond the "local nationalism" were signs
+of a "supernational universalism." And all this was not merely talk, for
+he risked his life for his ideas. Herr Chamberlain himself quotes the
+account of a witness who saw him, in May, 1849, distributing
+revolutionary pamphlets to the troops who were besieging Dresden. It was
+a miracle that he was not arrested and shot. We know that after Dresden
+was taken a warrant was out against him, and he fled to Switzerland,
+with a passport on which was a borrowed name. If it be true that Wagner
+later declared that he had been "involved in error and led away by his
+feelings" it matters little to the history of that time. Errors and
+enthusiasms are an integral part of life, and one must not ignore them
+in a man's biography under the pretext that he regretted them twenty or
+thirty years later, for they have, nevertheless, helped to guide his
+actions and impressed his imagination. It was out of the Revolution
+itself that _Siegfried_ directly sprang.
+
+In 1848, Wagner was not yet thinking of a Tetralogy, but of an heroic
+opera in three acts called _Siegfried's Tod_, in which the fatal power
+of gold was to be symbolised in the treasure of the Niebelungen; and
+Siegfried was to represent "a socialist redeemer come down to earth to
+abolish the reign of Capital." As the rough draft developed, Wagner went
+up the stream of his hero's life. He dreamed of his childhood, of his
+conquest of the treasure, of the awakening of Bruennhilde; and in 1851 he
+wrote the poem of _Der Junge Siegfried_. Siegfried and Bruennhilde
+represent the humanity of the future, the new era that should be
+realised when the earth was set free from the yoke of gold. Then Wagner
+went farther back still, to the sources of the legend itself, and Wotan
+appeared, the symbol of our time, a man such as you or I--in contrast to
+Siegfried, man as he ought to be, and one day will be. On this subject
+Wagner says, in a letter to Roeckel: "Look well at Wotan; he is the
+unmistakable likeness of ourselves, and the sum of the present-day
+spirit, while Siegfried is the man we wait and wish for--the future man
+whom we cannot create, but who will create himself by our
+annihilation--the most perfect man I can imagine." Finally Wagner
+conceived the Twilight of the Gods, the fall of the Valhalla--our
+present system of society--and the birth of a regenerated humanity.
+Wagner wrote to Uhlig in 1851 that the complete work was to be played
+after the great Revolution.
+
+The opera public would probably be very astonished to learn that in
+_Siegfried_ they applaud a revolutionary work, expressly directed by
+Wagner against this detested Capital, whose downfall would have been so
+dear to him. And he never doubted that he was expressing grief in all
+these pages of shining joy.
+
+Wagner went to Zurich after a stay in Paris, where he felt "so much
+distrust for the artistic world and horror for the restraint that he was
+forced to put upon himself" that he was seized with a nervous malady
+which nearly killed him. He returned to work at _Der Junge Siegfried_,
+and he says it brought him great joy.
+
+ "But I am unhappy in not being able to apply myself to anything but
+ music. I know I am feeding on an illusion, and that reality is the
+ only thing worth having. My health is not good, and my nerves are
+ in a state of increasing weakness. My life, lived entirely in the
+ imagination and without sufficient action, tires me so, that I can
+ only work with frequent breaks and long intervals of rest;
+ otherwise I pay the penalty with long and painful suffering.... I
+ am very lonely. I often wish for death.
+
+ "While I work I forget my troubles; but the moment I rest they come
+ flocking about me, and I am very miserable. What a splendid life is
+ an artist's! Look at it! How willingly would I part with it for a
+ week of real life.
+
+ "I can't understand how a really happy man could think of serving
+ art. If we enjoyed life, we should have no need of art. When the
+ present has nothing more to offer us we cry out our needs by means
+ of art. To have my youth again and my health, to enjoy nature, to
+ have a wife who would love me devotedly, and fine children--for
+ this I would give up _all my art_. Now I have said it--give me what
+ is left."
+
+Thus the poem of the Tetralogy was written with doubts, as he said, as
+to whether he should abandon art and all belonging to it and become a
+healthy, normal man--a son of nature. He began to compose the music of
+the poem while in a state of suffering, which every day became more
+acute.
+
+ "My nights are often sleepless; I get out of bed, wretched and
+ exhausted, with the thought of a long day before me, which will not
+ bring me a single joy. The society of others tortures me, and I
+ avoid it only to torture myself. Everything I do fills me with
+ disgust. It can't go on for ever. I can't stand such a life any
+ longer. I will kill myself rather than live like this.... I don't
+ believe in anything, and I have only one desire--to sleep so
+ soundly that human misery will exist no more for me. I ought to be
+ able to get such a sleep somehow; it should not be really
+ difficult."
+
+For distraction he went to Italy; Turin, Genoa, Spezia, and Nice. But
+there, in a strange world, his loneliness seemed so frightful that he
+became very depressed, and made all haste back to Zurich. It was there
+he wrote the happy music of _Das Rheingold_. He began the score of _Die
+Walkuere_ at a time when his normal condition was one of suffering. Then
+he discovered Schopenhauer, whose philosophy only helped to confirm and
+crystallise his instinctive pessimism. In the spring of 1855 he went to
+London to give concerts; but he was ill there, and this fresh contact
+with the world only served to annoy him further. He had some difficulty
+in again taking up _Die Walkuere_; but he finished it at last in spite of
+frequent attacks of facial erysipelas, for which he afterwards had to
+undergo a hydropathic cure at Geneva. He began the score of _Siegfried_
+towards the end of 1856, while the thought of Tristan was stirring
+within him. In _Tristan_ he wished to depict love as "a dreadful
+anguish"; and this idea obsessed him so completely that he could not
+finish _Siegfried_. He seemed to be consumed by a burning fever; and,
+abandoning _Siegfried_ in the middle of the second act, he threw himself
+madly into _Tristan_. "I want to gratify my desire for love," he says,
+"until it is completely satiated; and in the folds of the black flag
+that floats over its consummation I wish to wrap myself and die."[109]
+_Siegfried_ was not finished until 5 February, 1871, at the end of the
+Franco-Prussian war--that is fourteen years later, after several
+interruptions.
+
+Such is, in a few words, the history of this heroic idyll. It is perhaps
+as well to remind the public now and then that the hours of distraction
+they enjoy by means of art may represent years of suffering for the
+artist.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Footnote 109: The quotations from Wagner are taken from his letters to
+Roeckel, Uhlig, and Liszt, between 1851 and 1856.]
+
+Do you know the amusing account Tolstoy gave of a performance of
+_Siegfried_? I will quote it from his book, _What is Art_?--
+
+ "When I arrived, an actor in tight-fitting breeches was seated
+ before an object that was meant to represent an anvil. He wore a
+ wig and false beard; his white and manicured hands had nothing of
+ the workman about them; and his easy air, prominent belly, and
+ flabby muscles readily betrayed the actor. With an absurd hammer he
+ struck--as no one else would ever strike--a fantastic-looking
+ sword-blade. One guessed he was a dwarf, because when he walked he
+ bent his legs at the knees. He cried out a great deal, and opened
+ his mouth in a queer fashion. The orchestra also emitted peculiar
+ noises like several beginnings that had nothing to do with one
+ another. Then another actor appeared with a horn in his belt,
+ leading a man dressed up as a bear, who walked on all-fours. He let
+ loose the bear on the dwarf, who ran away, but forgot to bend his
+ knees this time. The actor with the human face represented the
+ hero, Siegfried. He cried out for a long time, and the dwarf
+ replied in the same way. Then a traveller arrived--the god Wotan.
+ He had a wig, too; and, settling himself down with his spear, in a
+ silly attitude, he told Mimi all about things he already knew, but
+ of which the audience was ignorant. Then Siegfried seized some bits
+ that were supposed to represent pieces of a sword, and sang:
+
+ 'Heaho, heaho, hoho! Hoho, hoho, hoho, hoho! Hoheo, haho, haheo,
+ hoho!' And that was the end of the first act. It was all so
+ artificial and stupid that I had great difficulty in sitting it
+ out. But my friends begged me to stay, and assured me that the
+ second act would be better.
+
+ "The next scene represented a forest. Wotan was waking up the
+ dragon. At first the dragon said, 'I want to go to sleep'; but
+ eventually he came out of his grotto. The dragon was represented by
+ two men clothed in a green skin with some scales stuck about it. At
+ one end of the skin they wagged a tail, and at the other end they
+ opened a crocodile's mouth, out of which came fire. The dragon,
+ which ought to have been a frightful beast--and perhaps he would
+ have frightened children about five years old--said a few words in
+ a bass voice. It was so childish and feeble that one was astonished
+ to see grown-up people present; even thousands of so-called
+ cultured people looked on and listened attentively, and went into
+ raptures. Then Siegfried arrived with his horn. He lay down during
+ a pause, which is reputed to be very beautiful; and sometimes he
+ talked to himself, and sometimes he was quite silent. He wanted to
+ imitate the song of the birds, and cut a rush with his horn, and
+ made a flute out of it. But he played the flute badly, and so he
+ began to blow his horn. The scene is intolerable, and there is not
+ the least trace of music in it. I was annoyed to see three thousand
+ people round about me, listening submissively to this absurdity
+ and dutifully admiring it.
+
+ "With some courage I managed to wait for the next
+ scene--Siegfried's fight with the dragon. There were roarings and
+ flames of fire and brandishings of the sword. But I could not stand
+ it any longer; and I fled out of the theatre with a feeling of
+ disgust that I have not yet forgotten."
+
+I admit I cannot read this delightful criticism without laughing; and it
+does not affect me painfully like Nietzsche's pernicious and morbid
+irony. It used to be a grief to me that two men whom I loved with an
+equal affection, and whom I reverenced as the finest spirits in Europe,
+remained strangers and hostile to each other. I could not bear the
+thought that a genius, hopelessly misunderstood by the crowd, should be
+bent on making his solitude more bitter and narrow by refusing, with a
+sort of jealous waywardness, to be reconciled to his equals, or to offer
+them the hand of friendship. But now I think that perhaps it was better
+so. The first virtue of genius is sincerity. If Nietzsche had to go out
+of his way _not_ to understand Wagner, it is natural, on the other hand,
+that Wagner should be a closed book to Tolstoy; it would be almost
+surprising if it were otherwise. Each one has his own part to play, and
+has no need to change it. Wagner's wonderful dreams and magic intuition
+of the inner life are not less valuable to us than Tolstoy's pitiless
+truth, in which he exposes modern society and tears away the veil of
+hypocrisy with which she covers herself. So I admire _Siegfried_, and
+at the same time enjoy Tolstoy's satire; for I like the latter's sturdy
+humour, which is one of the most striking features of his realism, and
+which, as he himself noticed, makes him closely resemble Rousseau. Both
+men show us an ultra-refined civilisation, and both are uncompromising
+apostles of a return to nature.
+
+Tolstoy's rough banter recalls Rousseau's sarcasm about an opera of
+Rameau's. In the _Nouvelle Heloise_, he rails in a similar fashion
+against the sadly fantastic performances at the theatre. It was, even
+then, a question of monsters, "of dragons animated by a blockhead of a
+Savoyard, who had not enough spirit for the beast."
+
+ "They assured me that they had a tremendous lot of machinery to
+ make all this movement, and they offered several times to show it
+ to me; but I felt no curiosity about little effects achieved by
+ great efforts.... The sky is represented by some blue rags
+ suspended from sticks and cords, like a laundry display.... The
+ chariots of the gods and goddesses are made of four joists in a
+ frame, suspended by a thick rope, as a swing might be. Then a plank
+ is stuck across the joists, and on this is seated a god. In front
+ of him hangs a piece of daubed cloth, which serves as a cloud upon
+ which his splendid chariot may rest.... The theatre is furnished
+ with little square trap-doors which, opening as occasion requires,
+ show that the demons can be let loose from the cellars. When the
+ demons have to fly in the air, dummies of brown cloth are
+ substituted, or sometimes real chimney-sweeps, who swing in the
+ air, suspended by cords, until they are gloriously lost in the rag
+ sky....
+
+ "But you can have no idea of the dreadful cries and roarings with
+ which the theatre resounds.... What is so extraordinary is that
+ these howlings are almost the only things that the audience
+ applaud. By the way they clap their hands one would take them to be
+ a lot of deaf creatures, who were so delighted to catch a few
+ piercing sounds now and then that they wanted the actors to do them
+ all over again. I am quite sure that people applaud the bawling of
+ an actress at the opera as they would a mountebank's feats of skill
+ at a fair--one suffers while they are going on, but one is so
+ delighted to see them finish without an accident that one willingly
+ demonstrates one's pleasure.... With these beautiful sounds, as
+ true as they are sweet, those of the orchestra blend very worthily.
+ Imagine an unending clatter of instruments without any melody; a
+ lingering and endless groaning among the bass parts; and the whole
+ the most mournful and boring thing that I ever heard in my life. I
+ could not put up with it for half an hour without getting a violent
+ headache.
+
+ "All this forms a sort of psalmody, possessing neither tune nor
+ time. But if by any chance a lively air is played, there is a
+ general stamping; the audience is set in motion, and follows, with
+ a great deal of trouble and noise, some performer in the
+ orchestra. Delighted to feel for a few moments the rhythm that is
+ so lacking, they torment the ear, the voice, the arms, the legs,
+ and all the body, to chase after a tune that is ever ready to
+ escape them...."
+
+I have quoted this rather long passage to show how the impression made
+by one of Rameau's operas on his contemporaries resembled that made by
+Wagner on his enemies. It was not without reason that Rameau was said to
+be Wagner's forerunner, as Rousseau was Tolstoy's forerunner.
+
+In reality, it was not against _Siegfried_ itself that Tolstoy's
+criticism was directed; and Tolstoy was closer than he thought to the
+spirit of this drama. Is not Siegfried the heroic incarnation of a free
+and healthy man, sprung directly from Nature? In a sketch of
+_Siegfried_, written in 1848, Wagner says:
+
+ "To follow the impulses of my heart is my supreme law; what I can
+ accomplish by obeying my instincts is what I ought to do. Is that
+ voice of instinct cursed or blessed? I do not know; but I yield to
+ it, and never force myself to run counter to my inclination."
+
+Wagner fought against civilisation by quite other methods than those
+employed by Tolstoy; and if the efforts of the two were equally great,
+the practical result is--one must really say it--as poor on one side as
+on the other.
+
+What Tolstoy's raillery is really aimed at is not Wagner's work, but the
+way in which his work was represented. The splendours of the setting do
+not hide the childishness of the ideas behind them: the dragon Fafna,
+Fricka's rams, the bear, the serpent, and all the Valhalla menagerie
+have always been ridiculous. I will only add that the dragon's failure
+to be terrifying was not Wagner's fault, for he never attempted to
+depict a terrifying dragon. He gave it quite clearly, and of his own
+choice, a comic character. Both the text and the music make Fafner a
+sort of ogre, a simple creature, but, above all, a grotesque one.
+
+Besides, I cannot help feeling that scenic reality takes away rather
+than adds to the effect of these great philosophical fairylands. Malwida
+von Meysenbug told me that at the Bayreuth festival of 1876, while she
+was following one of the _Ring_ scenes very attentively with her
+opera-glasses, two hands were laid over her eyes, and she heard Wagner's
+voice say impatiently: "Don't look so much at what is going on. Listen!"
+It was good counsel. There are dilettanti who pretend that at a concert
+the best way to enjoy Beethoven's last works--where the sonority is
+defective--is to stop the ears and read the score. One might say with
+less of a paradox that the best way to follow a performance of Wagner's
+operas is to listen with the eyes shut. So perfect is the music, so
+powerful its hold on the imagination, that it leaves nothing to be
+desired; what it suggests to the mind is infinitely finer than what the
+eyes may see. I have never shared the opinion that Wagner's works may
+be best appreciated in the theatre. His works are epic symphonies. As a
+frame for them I should like temples; as scenery, the illimitable land
+of thought; as actors, our dreams.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The first act of _Siegfried_ is one of the most dramatic in the
+Tetralogy. Nothing satisfied me more completely at Bayreuth, both as
+regards the actors and the dramatic effects. Fantastic creatures like
+Alberich and Mimi, who seem to be out of their element in France, are
+rooted deep down in German imaginations. The Bayreuth actors surpassed
+themselves in making them startlingly lifelike, with a trembling and
+grimacing realism. Burgstaller, who was then making his debut in
+_Siegfried_, acted with an impetuous awkwardness which accorded well
+with the part. I remember with what zest--which seemed in no way
+affected--he played the hero smith, labouring like a true workman,
+blowing the fire and making the blade glow, dipping it in the steaming
+water, and working it on the anvil; and then, in a burst of Homeric
+gaiety, singing that fine hymn at the end of the first act, which sounds
+like an air by Bach or Haendel.
+
+But in spite of all this, I felt how much better it was to dream, or to
+hear this poem of a youthful soul at a concert. It is then that the
+magic murmurs of the forest in the second act speak more directly to the
+heart. However beautiful the scenery of glades and woods, however
+cleverly the light is made to change and dance among the trees--and it
+is manipulated now like a set of organ stops--it still seems almost
+wrong to listen with open eyes to music that, unaided, can show us a
+glorious summer's day, and make us see the swaying of the tree-tops, and
+hear the brush of the wind against the leaves. Through the music alone
+the hum and murmur of a thousand little voices is about us, the glorious
+song of the birds floats into the depths of a blue sky; or comes a
+silence, vibrating with invisible life, when Nature, with her mysterious
+smile, opens her arms and hushes all things in a divine sleep.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Wagner left _Siegfried_ asleep in the forest in order to embark on the
+funereal vessel of _Tristan und Isolde_. But he left Siegfried with some
+anguish of heart. When writing to Liszt in 1857, he says:
+
+ "I have taken young Siegfried into the depths of a lonely forest;
+ there I have left him under a lime-tree, and said good-bye to him
+ with tears in my eyes. It has torn my heart to bury him alive, and
+ I had a hard and painful fight with myself before I could do it....
+ Shall I ever go back to him? No, it is all finished. Don't let us
+ speak of it again."
+
+Wagner had reason to be sad. He knew well that he would never find his
+young Siegfried again. He roused him up ten years later. But all was
+changed. That splendid third act has not the freshness of the first two.
+Wotan has become an important figure, and brought reason and pessimism
+with him into the drama. Wagner's later conceptions were perhaps
+loftier, and his genius was more master of itself (think of the classic
+dignity in the awakening of Bruennhilde); but the ardour and happy
+expression of youth is gone. I know that this is not the opinion of most
+of Wagner's admirers; but, with the exception of a few pages of sublime
+beauty, I have never altogether liked the love scenes at the end of
+_Siegfried_ and at the beginning of _Goetterdaemmerung_. I find their
+style rather pompous and declamatory; and their almost excessive
+refinement makes them border upon dulness. The form of the duet, too,
+seems cut and dried, and there are signs of weariness in it. The
+heaviness of the last pages of _Siegfried_ recalls _Die Meistersinger_,
+which is also of that period. It is no longer the same joy nor the same
+quality of joy that is found in the earlier acts.
+
+Yet it does not really matter, for joy is there, nevertheless; and so
+splendid was the first inspiration of the work that the years have not
+dimmed its brilliancy. One would like to end with _Siegfried_, and
+escape the gloomy _Goetterdaemmerung_. For those who have sensitive
+feelings the fourth day of the Tetralogy has a depressing effect. I
+remember the tears I have seen shed at the end of the _Ring_, and the
+words of a friend, as we left the theatre at Bayreuth and descended the
+hill at night: "I feel as though I were coming away from the burial of
+someone I dearly loved." It was truly a time of mourning. Perhaps there
+was something incongruous in building such a structure when it had
+universal death for its conclusion--or at least in making the whole an
+object of show and instruction. _Tristan_ achieves the same end with
+much more power, as the action is swifter. Besides that, the end of
+_Tristan_ is not without comfort, for life there is terrible. But it is
+not the same in _Goetterdaemmerung_; for in spite of the absurdity of the
+spell which is set upon the love of Siegfried and Bruennhilde, life with
+them is happy and desirable, since they are beings capable of love, and
+death appears to be a splendid but awful catastrophe. And one cannot say
+the _Ring_ breathes a spirit of renunciation and sacrifice like
+_Parsifal_; renunciation and sacrifice are only talked about in the
+_Ring_; and, in spite of the last transports which impel Bruennhilde to
+the funeral pyre, they are neither an inspiration nor a delight. One has
+the impression of a great gulf yawning at one's feet, and the anguish of
+seeing those one loves fall into it.
+
+I have often regretted that Wagner's first conception of _Siegfried_
+changed in the course of years; and in spite of the magnificent
+_denouement_ of _Goetterdaemmerung_ (which is really more effective in a
+concert room, for the real tragedy ends with Siegfried's death), I
+cannot help thinking with regret how fine a more optimistic poem from
+this revolutionary of '48 might have been. People tell me that it would
+then have been less true to life. But why should it be truthful to
+depict life only as a bad thing? Life is neither good nor bad it is just
+what we make it, and the result of the way in which we look at it. Joy
+is as real as sorrow, and a very fertile source of action. What
+inspiration there is in the laugh of a great man! Let us welcome,
+therefore, the sparkling if transient gaiety of _Siegfried_.
+
+Wagner wrote to Malwida von Meysenbug: "I have, by chance, just been
+reading Plutarch's life of Timoleon. That life ended very happily--a
+rare and unheard-of thing, especially in history. It does one good to
+think that such a thing is possible. It moved me profoundly."
+
+I feel the same when I hear _Siegfried_. We are rarely allowed to
+contemplate happiness in great tragic art; but when we may, how splendid
+it is, and how good for one!
+
+
+
+
+"TRISTAN"
+
+
+Tristan towers like a mountain above all other love poems, as Wagner
+above all other artists of his century. It is the outcome of a sublime
+conception, though the work as a whole is far from perfect. Of perfect
+works there is none where Wagner is concerned. The effort necessary for
+the creation of them was too great to be long sustained; for a single
+work might means years of toil. And the tense emotions of a whole drama
+cannot be expressed by a series of sudden inspirations put into form the
+moment they are conceived. Long and arduous labour is necessary. These
+giants, fashioned like Michelangelo's, these concentrated tempests of
+heroic force and decadent complexity, are not arrested, like the work of
+a sculptor or painter, in one moment of their action; they live and go
+on living in endless detail of sensation. To expect sustained
+inspiration is to expect what is not human. Genius may reveal what is
+divine; it may call up and catch a glimpse of _die Muetter_, but it
+cannot always breathe in the exhausted air of this world. So will must
+sometimes take the place of inspiration; though the will is uncertain
+and often stumbles in its task. That is why we encounter things that jar
+and jolt in the greatest works--they are the marks of human weakness.
+Well, perhaps there is less weakness in _Tristan_ than in Wagner's
+other dramas--_Goetterdaemmerung_, for instance--for nowhere else is the
+effort of his genius more strenuous or its flight more dizzy. Wagner
+himself knew it well. His letters show the despair of a soul wrestling
+with its familiar spirit, which it clutches and holds, only to lose
+again. And we seem to hear cries of pain, and feel his anger and
+despair.
+
+ "I can never tell you what a really wretched musician I am. In my
+ inmost heart I know I am a bungler and an absolute failure. You
+ should see me when I say to myself, 'It ought to go now,' and sit
+ down to the piano and put together some miserable rubbish, which I
+ fling away again like an idiot. I know quite well the kind of
+ musical trash I produce.... Believe me, it is no good expecting me
+ to do anything decent. Sometimes I really think it was Reissiger
+ who inspired me to write _Tannhaeuser_ and _Lohengrin_."
+
+This is how Wagner wrote to Liszt when he was finishing this amazing
+work of art. In the same way Michelangelo wrote to his father in 1509:
+"I am in agony. I have not dared to ask the Pope for anything, because
+my work does not make sufficient progress to merit any remuneration. The
+work is too difficult, and indeed it is not my profession. I am wasting
+my time to no purpose. Heaven help me!" For a year he had been working
+at the ceiling of the Sixtine chapel.
+
+This is something more than a burst of modesty. No one had more pride
+than Michelangelo or Wagner; but both felt the defects of their work
+like a sharp wound. And although those defects do not prevent their
+works from being the glory of the human spirit, they are there just the
+same.
+
+I do not want to dwell upon the inherent imperfections of Wagner's
+dramas; they are really dramatic or epic symphonies, impossible to act,
+and gaining nothing from representation. This is especially true of
+_Tristan_, where the disparity between the storm of sentiment depicted,
+and the cold convention and enforced timidity of action on the stage, is
+such that at certain moments--in the second act, for example--it pains
+and shocks one, and seems almost grotesque.
+
+But while admitting that _Tristan_ is a symphony that is not suitable
+for representation, one also recognises its blemishes and, above all,
+its unevenness. The orchestration in the first act is often rather thin,
+and the plot lacks solidity. There are gaps and unaccountable holes, and
+melodious lines left suspended in space. From beginning to end, lyrical
+bursts of melody are broken by declamations, or, what is worse, by
+dissertations. Frenzied whirlwinds of passion stop suddenly to give
+place to recitatives of explanation or argument. And although these
+recitatives are nearly always a great relief, although these
+metaphysical reveries have a character of barbarous cunning that one
+relishes, yet the superior beauty of the movements of pure poetry,
+emotion, and music is so evident, that this musical and philosophical
+drama serves to give one a distaste for philosophy and drama and
+everything else that cramps and confines music.
+
+But the musical part of _Tristan_ is not free either from the faults of
+the work as a whole, for it, too, lacks unity. Wagner's music is made up
+of very diverse styles: one finds in it Italianisms and Germanisms and
+even Gallicisms of every kind; there are some that are sublime, some
+that are commonplace; and at times one feels the awkwardness of their
+union and the imperfections of their form. Then again, perhaps two ideas
+of equal originality come together and spoil each other by making too
+strong a contrast. The fine lamentation of King Mark--that
+personification of a knight of the Grail--is treated with such
+moderation and with so noble a scorn for outward show, that its pure,
+cold light is entirely lost after the glowing fire of the duet.
+
+The work suffers everywhere from a lack of balance. It is an almost
+inevitable defect, arising from its very grandeur. A mediocre work may
+quite easily be perfect of its kind; but it is rarely that a work lofty
+aim attains perfection. A landscape of little dells and smiling meadows
+is brought more readily into pleasing harmony than a landscape of
+dazzling Alps, torrents, glaciers, and tempests; for the heights may
+sometimes overwhelm the picture and spoil the effect. And so it is with
+certain great pages of _Tristan_. We may take for example the verses
+which tell of excruciating expectation--in the second act, Isolde's
+expectation on the night filled with desire; and, in the third act,
+Tristan's expectation, as he lies wounded and delirious, waiting for the
+vessel that brings Isolde and death--or we may take the Prelude, that
+expression of eternal desire that is like a restless sea for ever
+moaning and beating itself upon the shore.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The quality that touches me most deeply in _Tristan_ is the evidence of
+honesty and sincerity in a man who was treated by his enemies as a
+charlatan that used superficial and grossly material means to arrest and
+amaze the public eye. What drama is more sober or more disdainful of
+exterior effect than _Tristan_? Its restraint is almost carried to
+excess. Wagner rejected any picturesque episode in it that was
+irrelevant to his subject. The man who carried all Nature in his
+imagination, who at his will made the storms of the _Walkuere_ rage, or
+the soft light of Good Friday shine, would not even depict a bit of the
+sea round the vessel in the first act. Believe me, that must have been a
+sacrifice, though he wished it so. It pleased him to enclose this
+terrible drama within the four walls of a chamber of tragedy. There are
+hardly any choruses; there is nothing to distract one's attention from
+the mystery of human souls; there are only two real parts--those of the
+lovers; and if there is a third, it belongs to Destiny, into whose hands
+the victims are delivered. What a fine seriousness there is in this love
+play. Its passion remains sombre and stern; there is no laughter in it,
+only a belief which is almost religious, more religious perhaps in its
+sincerity than that of _Parsifal_.
+
+It is a lesson for dramatists to see a man suppressing all frivolous
+trifling and empty episodes in order to concentrate his subject entirely
+on the inner life of two living souls. In that Wagner is our master, a
+better, stronger, and more profitable master to follow, in spite of his
+mistakes, than all the other literary and dramatic authors of his time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I see that criticism has filled a larger place in these notes than I
+meant it to do. But in spite of that, I love _Tristan_; for me and for
+others of my time it has long been an intoxicating draught. And it has
+never lost anything of its grandeur; the years have left its beauty
+untouched, and it is for me the highest point of art reached by anyone
+since Beethoven's death.
+
+But as I was listening to it the other evening I could not help
+thinking: Ah, Wagner, you will one day go too, and join Gluck and Bach
+and Monteverde and Palestrina and all the great souls whose names still
+live among men, but whose thoughts are only felt by a handful of the
+initiated, who try in vain to revive the past. You, also, are already of
+the past, though you were the steady light of our youth, the strong
+source of life and death, of desire and renouncement, whence we drew our
+moral force and our power of resistance against the world. And the
+world, ever greedy for new sensations, goes on its way amid the
+unceasing ebb and flow of its desires. Already its thoughts have
+changed, and new musicians are making new songs for the future. But it
+is the voice of a century of tempest that passes with you.
+
+
+
+
+CAMILLE SAINT-SAENS
+
+
+M. Saint-Saens has had the rare honour of becoming a classic during his
+lifetime. His name, though it was long unrecognised, now commands
+universal respect, not less by his worth of character than by the
+perfection of his art. No artist has troubled so little about the
+public, or been more indifferent to criticism whether popular or expert.
+As a child he had a sort of physical repulsion for outward success:
+
+ "De l'applaudissement
+ J'entends encor le bruit qui, chose assez etrange,
+ Pour ma pudeur d'enfant etait comme une fange
+ Dont le flot me venait toucher; je redoutais
+ Son contact, et parfois, malin, je l'evitais,
+ Affectant la raideur."[110]
+
+[Footnote 110:
+
+ Of applause
+ I still hear the noise; and, strangely enough,
+ In my childish shyness it seemed like mire
+ About to spot me; I feared
+ Its touch, and secretly shunned it,
+ Affecting obstinacy.
+
+These verses were read by M. Saint-Saens at a concert given on 10 June,
+1896, in the Salle Pleyel, to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of his
+_debut_, which he made in 1846. It was in this same Salle Pleyel that he
+gave his first concert.]
+
+Later on, he achieved success by a long and painful struggle, in which
+he had to fight against the kind of stupid criticism that condemned him
+"to listen to one of Beethoven's symphonies as a penance likely to give
+him the most excruciating torture."[111] And yet after this, and after
+his admission to the Academy, after _Henry VIII_ and the _Symphonie avec
+orgue_, he still remained aloof from praise or blame, and judged his
+triumphs with sad severity:
+
+ "Tu connaitras les yeux menteurs, l'hypocrisie
+ Des serrements de mains,
+ Le masque d'amitie cachant la jalousie,
+ Les pales lendemains
+
+ "De ces jours de triomphe ou le troupeau vulgaire
+ Qui pese au meme poids
+ L'histrion ridicule et le genie austere
+ Vous mets sur le pavois."[112]
+
+M. Saint-Saens has now grown old, and his fame has spread abroad, but he
+has not capitulated. Not many years ago he wrote to a German journalist:
+"I take very little notice of either praise or censure, not because I
+have an exalted idea of my own merits (which would be foolish), but
+because in doing my work, and fulfilling the function of my nature, as
+an apple-tree grows apples, I have no need to trouble myself with other
+people's views."[113]
+
+[Footnote 111: C. Saint-Saens, _Harmonie et Melodie_, 1885.]
+
+[Footnote 112: C. Saint-Saens, _Rimes familieres_, 1890.
+
+ You will know the lying eyes, the insincerity
+ Of pressures of the hand,
+ The mask of friendship that hides jealousy.
+ The tame to-morrows
+
+ Of these days of triumph, when the vulgar herd
+ Crowns you with honour;
+ Judging rare genius to be
+ Equal in merit to the wit of clowns.
+
+]
+
+[Footnote 113: Letter written to M. Levin, the correspondent of the
+_Boersen-Courier_ of Berlin, 9 September, 1901.]
+
+Such independence is rare at any time; but it is very rare in our day,
+when the power of public opinion is tyrannical; and it is rarest of all
+in France, where artists are perhaps more sociable than in other
+countries. Of all qualities in an artist it is the most precious; for it
+forms the foundation of his character, and is the guarantee of his
+conscience and innate strength. So we must not hide it under a bushel.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The significance of M. Saint-Saens in art is a double one, for one must
+judge him from the inside as well as the outside of France. He stands
+for something exceptional in French music, something which was almost
+unique until just lately: that is, a great classical spirit and a fine
+breadth of musical culture--German culture, we must say, since the
+foundation of all modern art rests on the German classics. French music
+of the nineteenth century is rich in clever artists, imaginative writers
+of melody, and skilful dramatists; but it is poor in true musicians, and
+in good and solid workmanship. Apart from two or three splendid
+exceptions, our composers have too much the character of gifted amateurs
+who compose music as a pastime, and regard it, not as a special form of
+thought, but as a sort of dress for literary ideas. Our musical
+education is superficial: it may be got for a few years, in a formal
+way, at a Conservatoire, but it is not within reach of all; the child
+does not breathe music as, in a way, he breathes the atmosphere of
+literature and oratory; and although nearly everyone in France has an
+instinctive feeling for beautiful writing, only a very few people care
+for beautiful music. From this arise the common faults and failings in
+our music. It has remained a luxurious art; it has not become, like
+German music, the poetical expression of the people's thought.
+
+To bring this about we should need a combination of conditions that are
+very rare in France; though such conditions went to the making of
+Camille Saint-Saens. He had not only remarkable natural talent, but came
+of a family of ardent musicians, who devoted themselves to his
+education. At five years of age he was nourished on the orchestral score
+of _Don Juan_;[114] as a little boy
+
+ "De dix ans, delicat, frele, le teint jaunet,
+ Mais confiant, naif, plein d'ardeur et de joie,"[115]
+
+he "measured himself against Beethoven and Mozart" by playing in a
+public concert; at sixteen years of age he wrote his _Premiere
+Symphonie_. As he grew older he soaked himself in the music of Bach and
+Haendel, and was able to compose at will after the manner of Rossini,
+Verdi, Schumann, and Wagner.[116] He has written excellent music in all
+styles--the Grecian style, and that of the sixteenth, seventeenth, and
+eighteenth centuries. His compositions are of every kind: masses, grand
+operas, light operas, cantatas, symphonies, symphonic poems; music for
+the orchestra, the organ, the piano, the voice, and chamber music. He is
+the learned editor of Gluck and Rameau; and is thus not only an artist,
+but an artist who can talk about his art. He is an unusual figure in
+France--one would have thought rather to find his home in Germany.
+
+[Footnote 114: C. Saint-Saens, _Charles Gounod et le Don Juan de
+Mozart_, 1894.]
+
+[Footnote 115:
+
+ But ten years old, slightly built and pale,
+ Yet full of simple confidence and joy (_Rimes familieres_).
+
+]
+
+[Footnote 116: Charles Gounod, _Memoires d'un Artiste_, 1896.]
+
+In Germany, however, they make no mistake about him. There, the name of
+Camille Saint-Saens stands for the French classical spirit, and is
+thought worthiest to represent us in music from the time of Berlioz
+until the appearance of the young school of Cesar Franck--though Franck
+himself is as yet little known in Germany. M. Saint-Saens possesses,
+indeed, some of the best qualities of a French artist, and among them
+the most important quality of all--perfect clearness of conception. It
+is remarkable how little this learned artist is bothered by his
+learning, and how free he is from all pedantry. Pedantry is the plague
+of German art, and the greatest men have not escaped it. I am not
+speaking of Brahms, who was ravaged with it, but of delightful geniuses
+like Schumann, or of powerful ones like Bach. "This unnatural art
+wearies one like the sanctimonious salon of some little provincial town;
+it stifles one, it is enough to kill one."[117] "Saint-Saens is not a
+pedant," wrote Gounod; "he has remained too much of a child and become
+too clever for that." Besides, he has always been too much of a
+Frenchman.
+
+[Footnote 117: Quoted from Saint-Saens by Edmond Hippeau in _Henry VIII
+et L'Opera francais_, 1883. M. Saint-Saens speaks elsewhere of "these
+works, well written, but heavy and unattractive, and reflecting in a
+tiresome way the narrow and pedantic spirit of certain little towns in
+Germany" (_Harmonie et Melodie_).]
+
+Sometimes Saint-Saens reminds me of one of our eighteenth-century
+writers. Not a writer of the _Encyclopedie_, nor one of Rousseau's camp,
+but rather of Voltaire's school. He has a clearness of thought, an
+elegance and precision of expression, and a quality of mind that make
+his music "not only noble, but very noble, as coming of a fine race and
+distinguished family."[118]
+
+He has also excellent discernment, of an unemotional kind; and he is
+"calm in spirit, restrained in imagination, and keeps his self-control
+even in the midst of the most disturbing emotions."[119] This
+discernment is the enemy of anything approaching obscurity of thought or
+mysticism; and its outcome was that curious book, _Problemes et
+Mysteres_--a misleading title, for the spirit of reason reigns there and
+makes an appeal to young people to protect "the light of a menaced
+world" against "the mists of the North, Scandinavian gods, Indian
+divinities, Catholic miracles, Lourdes, spiritualism, occultism, and
+obscurantism."[120]
+
+His love and need of liberty is also of the eighteenth century. One may
+say that liberty is his only passion. "I am passionately fond of
+liberty," he wrote.[121]
+
+[Footnote 118: Charles Gounod, _"Ascanio" de Saint-Saens_, 1890.]
+
+[Footnote 119: _Id., ibid._]
+
+[Footnote 120: C. Saint-Saens, _Problemes et Mysteres_, 1894.]
+
+[Footnote 121: _Harmonie et Melodie_.]
+
+And he has proved it by the absolute fearlessness of his judgments on
+art; for not only has he reasoned soundly against Wagner, but dared to
+criticise the weaknesses of Gluck and Mozart, the errors of Weber and
+Berlioz, and the accepted opinions about Gounod; and this classicist,
+who was nourished on Bach, goes so far as to say: "The performance of
+works by Bach and Haendel to-day is an idle amusement," and that those
+who wish to revive their art are like "people who would live in an old
+mansion that has been uninhabited for centuries."[122] He went even
+further; he criticised his own work and contradicted his own opinions.
+His love of liberty made him form, at different periods, different
+opinions of the same work. He thought that people had a right to change
+their opinions, as sometimes they deceived themselves. It seemed to him
+better boldly to admit an error than to be the slave of consistency. And
+this same feeling showed itself in other matters besides art: in ethics,
+as is shown by some verses which he addressed to a young friend, urging
+him not to be bound by a too rigid austerity:
+
+ "Je sens qu'une triste chimere
+ A toujours assombri ton ame: la Vertu...."[123]
+
+and in metaphysics also, where he judges religions, faith, and the
+Gospels with a quiet freedom of thought, seeking in Nature alone the
+basis of morals and society.
+
+[Footnote 122: C. Saint-Saens, _Portraits et Souvenirs_, 1900.]
+
+[Footnote 123:
+
+ I know that a vain dream of virtue
+ Has always cast a shadow on your soul (_Rimes familieres_).
+]
+
+Here are some of his opinions, taken at random from _Problemes et
+Mysteres_:
+
+ "As science advances, God recedes."
+
+ "The soul is only a medium for the expression of thought."
+
+ "The discouragement of work, the weakening of character, the
+ sharing of one's goods under pain of death--this is the Gospel
+ teaching on the foundation of society."
+
+ "The Christian virtues are not social virtues."
+
+ "Nature is without aim: she is an endless circle, and leads us
+ nowhere."
+
+His thoughts are unfettered and full of love for humanity and a sense of
+the responsibility of the individual. He called Beethoven "the greatest,
+the only really great artist," because he upheld the idea of universal
+brotherhood. His mind is so comprehensive that he has written books on
+philosophy, on the theatre, on classical painting,[124] as well as
+scientific essays,[125] volumes of verse, and even plays.[126]
+
+[Footnote 124: C. Saint-Saens, _Note sur les decors de theatre dans
+l'antiquite romaine_, 1880, where he discusses the mural paintings of
+Pompeii.]
+
+[Footnote 125: Lecture on the Phenomena of Mirages, given to the
+Astronomical Society of France in 1905.]
+
+[Footnote 126: C. Saint-Saens, _La Crampe des Ecrivains_, a comedy in
+one act, 1892.]
+
+He has been able to take up all sorts of things, I will not say with
+equal skill, but with discernment and undeniable ability. He shows a
+type of mind rare among artists and, above all, among musicians. The two
+principles that he enunciates and himself follows out are: "Keep free
+from all exaggeration" and "Preserve the soundness of your mind's
+health."[127] They are certainly not the principles of a Beethoven or a
+Wagner, and it would be rather difficult to find a noted musician of the
+last century who had applied them. They tell us, without need of
+comment, what is distinctive about M. Saint-Saens, and what is defective
+in him. He is not troubled by any sort of passion. Nothing disturbs the
+clearness of his reason. "He has no prejudices; he takes no
+side"[128]--one might add, not even his own, since he is not afraid to
+change his views--"he does not pose as a reformer of anything"; he is
+altogether independent, perhaps almost too much so. He seems sometimes
+as if he did not know what to do with his liberty. Goethe would have
+said, I think, that he needed a little more of the devil in him.
+
+[Footnote 127: _Harmonie et Melodie_.]
+
+[Footnote 128: Charles Gounod, _Memoires d'un Artiste_.]
+
+His most characteristic mental trait seems to be a languid melancholy,
+which has its source in a rather bitter feeling of the futility of
+life;[129] and this is accompanied by fits of weariness which are not
+altogether healthy, followed by capricious moods and nervous gaiety, and
+a freakish liking for burlesque and mimicry. It is his eager, restless
+spirit that makes him rush about the world writing Breton and Auvergnian
+rhapsodies, Persian songs, Algerian suites, Portuguese barcarolles,
+Danish, Russian, or Arabian caprices, souvenirs of Italy, African
+fantasias, and Egyptian concertos; and, in the same way, he roams
+through the ages, writing Greek tragedies, dance music of the sixteenth
+and seventeenth centuries, and preludes and fugues of the eighteenth.
+But in all these exotic and archaic reflections of times and countries
+through which his fancy wanders, one recognises the gay, intelligent
+countenance of a Frenchman on his travels, who idly follows his
+inclinations, and does not trouble to enter very deeply into the spirit
+of the people he meets, but gleans all he can, and then reproduces it
+with a French complexion--after the manner of Montaigne in Italy, who
+compared Verona to Poitiers, and Padua to Bordeaux, and who, when he was
+in Florence, paid much less attention to Michelangelo than to "a very
+strangely shaped sheep, and an animal the size of a large mastiff,
+shaped like a cat and striped with black and white, which they called a
+tiger."
+
+[Footnote 129: _Les Heures; Mors; Modestie (Rimes familieres_).]
+
+From a purely musical point of view there is some resemblance between M.
+Saint-Saens and Mendelssohn. In both of them we find the same
+intellectual restraint, the same balance preserved among the
+heterogeneous elements of their work. These elements are not common to
+both of them, because the time, the country, and the surroundings in
+which they lived are not the same; and there is also a great difference
+in their characters. Mendelssohn is more ingenuous and religious; M.
+Saint-Saens is more of a dilettante and more sensuous. They are not so
+much kindred spirits by their science as good company by a common purity
+of taste, a sense of rhythm, and a genius for method, which gave all
+they wrote a neo-classic character.
+
+As for the things that directly influenced M. Saint-Saens, they are so
+numerous that it would be difficult and rather bold of me to pretend to
+be able to pick them out. His remarkable capacity for assimilation has
+often moved him to write in the style of Wagner or Berlioz, of Haendel or
+Rameau, of Lulli or Charpentier, or even of some English harpsichord or
+clavichord player of the sixteenth century, like William Byrd--whose
+airs are introduced quite naturally in the music of _Henry VIII_; but we
+must remember that these are deliberate imitations, the amusements of a
+virtuoso, about which M. Saint-Saens never deceives himself. His memory
+serves him as he pleases, but he is never troubled by it.
+
+As far as one can judge, M. Saint-Saens' musical ideas are infused with
+the spirit of the great classics belonging to the end of the eighteenth
+century--far more, whatever people may say, with the spirit of
+Beethoven, Haydn, and Mozart, than with the spirit of Bach. Schumann's
+seductiveness also left its mark upon him, and he has felt the influence
+of Gounod, Bizet, and Wagner. But a stronger influence was that of
+Berlioz, his friend and master,[130] and, above all, that of Liszt. We
+must stop at this last name.
+
+[Footnote 130: "Thanks to Berlioz, all my generation has been shaped,
+and well shaped" _(Portraits et Souvenirs_).]
+
+M. Saint-Saens has good reason for liking Liszt, for Liszt was also a
+lover of freedom, and had shaken off traditions and pedantry, and
+scorned German routine; and he liked him, too, because his music was a
+reaction from the stiff school of Brahms.[131] He was enthusiastic about
+Liszt's work, and was one of the earliest and most ardent champions of
+that new music of which Liszt was the leading spirit--of that
+"programme" music which Wagner's triumph seemed to have nipped in the
+bud, but which has suddenly and gloriously burst into life again in the
+works of Richard Strauss. "Liszt is one of the great composers of our
+time," wrote M. Saint-Saens; "he has dared more than either Weber, or
+Mendelssohn, or Schubert, or Schumann. He has created the symphonic
+poem. He is the deliverer of instrumental music.... He has proclaimed
+the reign of free music."[132] This was not said impulsively in a moment
+of enthusiasm; M. Saint-Saens has always held this opinion. All his life
+he has remained faithful to his admiration of Liszt--since 1858, when he
+dedicated a _Veni Creator_ to "the Abbe Liszt," until 1886, when, a few
+months after Liszt's death, he dedicated his masterpiece, the _Symphonic
+avec orgue_, "To the memory of Franz Liszt."[133]
+
+[Footnote 131: "I like Liszt's music so much, because he does not bother
+about other people's opinions; he says what he wants to say; and the
+only thing that he troubles about is to say it as well as he possibly
+can" (Quoted by Hippeau).]
+
+[Footnote 132: The quotations are taken from _Harmonie et Melodie_ and
+_Portraits et Souvenirs_.]
+
+[Footnote 133: In _Harmonie et Melodie_ M. Saint-Saens tells us that he
+organised and directed a concert in the Theatre-Italien where only
+Liszt's compositions were played. But all his efforts to make the French
+musical public appreciate Liszt were a failure.]
+
+"People have not hesitated to scoff at what they call my weakness for
+Liszt's works. But even if the feelings of affection and gratitude that
+he inspired in me did come like a prism and interpose themselves between
+my eyes and his face, I do not see anything greatly to be regretted in
+it.[134] I had not yet felt the charm of his personal fascination, I had
+neither heard nor seen him, and I did not owe him anything at all, when
+my interest was gripped in reading his first symphonic poems; and when
+later they pointed the way which was to lead to _La Danse macabre_, _Le
+Rouet d'Omphale_, and other works of the same nature, I am sure that my
+judgment was not biassed by any prejudice in his favour, and that I
+alone was responsible for what I did."[135]
+
+[Footnote 134: The admiration was mutual. M. Saint-Saens even said that
+without Liszt he could not have written _Samson et Dalila_. "Not only
+did Liszt have _Samson et Dalila_ performed at Weimar, but without him
+that work would never have come into being. My suggestions on the
+subject had met with such hostility that I had given up the idea of
+writing it; and all that existed were some illegible notes.... Then at
+Weimar one day I spoke to Liszt about it, and he said to me, quite
+trustingly and without having heard a note, 'Finish your work; I will
+have it performed here.' The events of 1870 delayed its performance for
+several years." (_Revue Musicale_, 8 November, 1901).]
+
+[Footnote 135: _Portraits et Souvenirs_.]
+
+This influence seems to me to explain some of M. Saint-Saens' work. Not
+only is this influence evident in his symphonic poems--some of his best
+work--but it is to be found in his suites for orchestra, his fantasias,
+and his rhapsodies, where the descriptive and narrative element is
+strong. "Music should charm unaided," said M. Saint-Saens; "but its
+effect is much finer when we use our imagination and let it flow in some
+particular channel, thus imaging the music. It is then that all the
+faculties of the soul are brought into play for the same end. What art
+gains from this is not greater beauty, but a wider field for its
+scope--that is, a greater variety of form and a larger liberty."[136]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And so we find that M. Saint-Saens has taken part in the vigorous
+attempt of modern German symphony writers to bring into music some of
+the power of the other arts: poetry, painting, philosophy, romance,
+drama--the whole of life. But what a gulf divides them and him! A gulf
+made up, not only of diversities of style, but of the difference between
+two races and two worlds. Beside the frenzied outpourings of Richard
+Strauss, who flounders uncertainly between mud and debris and genius,
+the Latin art of Saint-Saens rises up calm and ironical. His delicacy of
+touch, his careful moderation, his happy grace, "which enters the soul
+by a thousand little paths,"[137] bring with them the pleasures of
+beautiful speech and honest thought; and we cannot but feel their charm.
+Compared with the restless and troubled art of to-day, his music strikes
+us by its calm, its tranquil harmonies, its velvety modulations, its
+crystal clearness, its smooth and flowing style, and an elegance that
+cannot be put into words. Even his classic coldness does us good by its
+reaction against the exaggerations, sincere as they are, of the new
+school. At times one feels oneself carried back to Mendelssohn, even to
+Spontini and the school of Gluck. One seems to be travelling in a
+country that one knows and loves; and yet in M. Saint-Saens' works one
+does not find any direct resemblance to the works of other composers;
+for with no one are reminiscences rarer than with this master who
+carries all the old masters in his mind--it is his spirit that is akin
+to theirs. And that is the secret of his personality and his value to
+us; he brings to our artistic unrest a little of the light and sweetness
+of other times. His compositions are like fragments of another world.
+
+[Footnote 136: _Harmonie et Melodie_.]
+
+[Footnote 137: C. Saint-Saens, _Portraits et Souvenirs_.]
+
+"From time to time," he said, in speaking of _Don Giovanni_, "in the
+sacred earth of Hellene we find a fragment, an arm, the debris of a
+torso, scratched and damaged by the ravages of time; it is only the
+shadow of the god that the sculptor's chisel once created; but the charm
+is somehow still there, the sublime style is radiant in spite of
+everything."[138]
+
+And so with this music. It is sometimes a little pale, a little too
+restrained; but in a phrase, in a few harmonies, there will shine out a
+clear vision of the past.
+
+[Footnote 138: _Portraits et Souvenirs_.]
+
+
+
+
+VINCENT D'INDY
+
+ "I consider that criticism is useless, I would even say that it is
+ harmful.... Criticism generally means the opinion some man or other
+ holds about another person's work. How can that opinion help
+ forward the growth of art? It is interesting to know the ideas,
+ even the erroneous ideas, of geniuses and men of great talent, such
+ as Goethe, Schumann, Wagner, Sainte-Beuve, and Michelet, when they
+ wish to indulge in criticism; but it is of no interest at all to
+ know whether Mr. So-and-so likes, or does not like, such-and-such
+ dramatic or musical work."[139]
+
+So writes M. Vincent d'Indy.
+
+After such an expression of opinion one imagines that a critic ought to
+feel some embarrassment in writing about M. Vincent d'Indy. And I myself
+ought to be the more concerned in the matter, for in the number of the
+review where the above was written the only other opinions expressed
+with equal conviction belonged to the author of this book. There is only
+one thing to be done--to copy M. d'Indy's example; for that forsworn
+enemy of criticism is himself a keen critic.
+
+[Footnote 139: _Revue d'Art dramatique_, 5 February, 1899.]
+
+It is not altogether on M. d'Indy's musical gifts that I want to dwell.
+It is known that in Europe to-day he is one of the masters of dramatic
+musical expression, of orchestral colouring, and of the science of
+style. But that is not the end of his attainments; he has artistic
+originality, which springs from something deeper still. When an artist
+has some worth, you will find it not only in his work but in his being.
+So we will endeavour to explore M. d'Indy's being.
+
+M. d'Indy's personality is not a mysterious one. On the contrary, it is
+open and clear as daylight; and we see this in his musical work, in his
+artistic activities, and in his writings. To his own writings we may
+apply the exception of his rule about criticism in favour of a small
+number of men whose thoughts are interesting even when they are
+erroneous. It would be a pity indeed not to know M. d'Indy's
+thoughts--even the erroneous ones; for they let us catch a glimpse, not
+only of the ideas of an eminent artist, but of certain surprising
+characteristics of the thought of our time. M. d'Indy has closely
+studied the history of his art; but the chief interest of his writings
+lies rather in their unconscious expression of the spirit of modern art
+than in what they tell us about the past.
+
+M. d'Indy is not a man hedged in by the boundaries of his art; his mind
+is open and well fertilised. Musicians nowadays are no longer entirely
+absorbed in their notes, but let their minds go out to other interests.
+And it is not one of the least interesting phenomena of French music
+to-day that gives us these learned and thoughtful composers, who are
+conscious of what they create, and bring to their art a keen critical
+faculty, like that of M. Saint-Saens, M. Dukas, or M. d'Indy. From M.
+d'Indy we have had scholarly editions of Rameau, Destouches, and Salomon
+de Rossi. Even in the middle of rehearsals of _L'Etranger_ at Brussels
+he was working at a reconstruction of Monteverde's _Orfeo_. He has
+published selections of folk-songs with critical notes, essays on
+Beethoven's predecessors, a history of Musical Composition, and debates
+and lectures. This fine intellectual culture is not, however, the most
+remarkable of M. d'Indy's characteristics, though it may have been the
+most remarked. Other musicians share this culture with him; and his real
+distinction lies in his moral and almost religious qualities, and it is
+this side of him that gives him an unusual interest for us among other
+contemporary artists.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ "Maneant in vobis Fides, Spes, Caritas.
+ Tria haec: major autem horum est Caritas.
+
+ "An artist must have at least Faith, faith in God and faith in his
+ art; for it is Faith that disposes him to _learn_, and by his
+ learning to raise himself higher and higher on the ladder of Being,
+ up to his goal, which is God.
+
+ "An artist should practise Hope; for he can expect nothing from the
+ present; he knows that his mission is to _serve_, and to give his
+ work for the life and teaching of the generations that shall come
+ after him.
+
+ "An artist should be inspired by a splendid Charity--'the greatest
+ of these.' To _love_ should be his aim in life; for the moving
+ principle of all creation is divine and charitable Love."
+
+Who speaks like this? Is it the monk Denys in his cell at Mount Athos?
+Or Cennini, who spread the pious teaching of the Giotteschi? Or one of
+the old painters of Sienna, who in their profession of faith called
+themselves "by the grace of God, those who manifest marvellous things to
+common and illiterate men, by the virtue of the holy faith, and to its
+glory"?
+
+No; it was the director of the _Schola Cantorum_, addressing the
+students in an inaugural speech, or giving them a lecture on
+Composition.[140]
+
+[Footnote 140: Vincent d'Indy: _Cours de Composition musicale_, Book I,
+drawn up from notes taken in Composition classes at the _Schola
+Cantorum_, 1897-1898, p. 16 (Durand, 1902). See also the inaugural
+speech given at the school, and published by the _Tribune de
+Saint-Gervais_, November, 1900.]
+
+We must consider a little this singular book, where a living science and
+a Gothic spirit are closely intermingled (I use the word "Gothic" in its
+best sense; I know it is the highest praise one can give M. d'Indy).
+This work has not received the attention it deserves. It is a record of
+the spirit of contemporary art; and if it stands rather apart from other
+writings, it should not be allowed to pass unnoticed on that account.
+
+In this book, Faith is shown to be everything--the beginning and the
+end. We learn how it fans the flame of genius, nourishes thought,
+directs work, and governs even the modulations and the style of a
+musician. There is a passage in it that one would think was of the
+thirteenth century; it is curious, but not without dignity:
+
+ "One should have an aim in the progressive march of modulations, as
+ one has in the different stages of life. The reason, instincts, and
+ faith that guide a man in the troubles of his life also guide the
+ musician in his choice of modulations. Thus useless and
+ contradictory modulations, an undecided balance between light and
+ shade, produce a painful and confusing impression on the hearer,
+ comparable to that which a poor human being inspires when he is
+ feeble and inconsistent, buffeted between the East and the West in
+ the course of his unhappy life, without an aim and without
+ belief."[141]
+
+[Footnote 141: Vincent d'Indy, _Cours de Composition musicale_, p. 132.]
+
+This book seems to be of the Middle Ages by reason of a sort of
+scholastic spirit of abstraction and classification.
+
+ "In artistic creation, seven faculties are called into play by the
+ soul: the Imagination, the Affections, the Understanding, the
+ Intelligence, the Memory, the Will, and the Conscience."[142]
+
+[Footnote 142: _Id._, _ibid._, p. 13.]
+
+And again its mediaeval spirit is shown by an extraordinary symbolism,
+which discovers in everything (as far as I understand it) the imprint
+of divine mysteries, and the mark of God in Three Persons in such things
+as the beating of the heart and ternary rhythms--"an admirable
+application of the principle of the Unity of the Trinity"![143]
+
+From these remote times comes also M. d'Indy's method of writing
+history, not by tracing facts back to laws, but by deducing, on the
+contrary, facts from certain great general ideas, which have once been
+admitted, but not proved by frequent recurrence, such as: "The origin of
+art is in religion"[144]--a fact which is anything but certain. From
+this reasoning it follows that folk-songs are derived from Gregorian
+chants, and not the Gregorian chants from the folk-songs--as I would
+sooner believe. The history of art may thus become a sort of history of
+the world in moral achievement. One could divide it into two parts: the
+world before the coming of Pride, and after it.
+
+"Subdued by the Christian faith, that formidable enemy of man, Pride,
+rarely showed itself in the soul of an artist in the Middle Ages. But
+with the weakening of religious belief, with the spirit of the
+Reformation applying itself almost at the same time to every branch of
+human learning, we see Pride reappear, and watch its veritable
+Renaissance."[145]
+
+[Footnote 143: _Id., ibid._, p. 25. In the thirteenth century, Philippe
+de Vitry, Bishop of Meaux, called triple time "perfect," because "it
+hath its name from the Trinity, that is to say, from the Father, the
+Son, and the Holy Ghost, in whom is divine perfection."]
+
+[Footnote 144: _Id., ibid._, pp. 66, 83, and _passim_.]
+
+[Footnote 145: _Id., ibid._]
+
+Finally, this Gothic spirit shows itself--in a less original way, it is
+true--in M. d'Indy's religious antipathies, which, in spite of the
+author's goodness of heart and great personal tolerance, constantly
+break out against the two faiths that are rivals to his own; and to them
+he attributes all the faults of art and all the vices of humanity. Each
+has its offence. Protestantism is made responsible for the extremes of
+individualism;[146] and Judaism, for the absurdities of its customs and
+the weakness of its moral sense.[147] I do not know which of the two is
+the more soundly belaboured; the second has the privilege of being so,
+not only in writing, but in pictures.[148] The worst of it is, these
+antipathies are apt to spoil the fairness of M. d'Indy's artistic
+judgment. It goes without saying that the Jewish musicians are treated
+with scant consideration; and even the great Protestant musicians,
+giants in their art, do not escape rebuke. If Goudimel is mentioned, it
+is because he was Palestrina's master, and his achievement of "turning
+the Calvinist psalms into chorales" is dismissed as being of little
+importance.[149]
+
+[Footnote 146: "Make war against Particularism, that unwholesome fruit
+of the Protestant heresy!" (Speech to the _Schola_, taken from the
+_Tribune de Saint-Gervais_, November, 1900.)]
+
+[Footnote 147: At least Judaism has the honour of giving its name to a
+whole period of art, the "Judaic period." "The modern style is the last
+phase of the Judaic school...." etc.]
+
+[Footnote 148: In the _Cours de Composition musicale_ M. d'Indy speaks
+of "the admirable initial T in the _Rouleau mortuaire_ of Saint-Vital
+(twelfth century), which represents Satan vomiting two Jews ... an
+expressive and symbolic work of art, if ever there was one." I should
+not mention this but for the fact that there are only two illustrations
+in the whole book.]
+
+[Footnote 149: _Cours de Composition musicale_, p. 160.]
+
+Haendel's oratorios are spoken of as "chilling, and, frankly speaking,
+tedious."[150] Bach himself escapes with this qualification: "If he is
+great, it is not because of, but in spite of the dogmatic and parching
+spirit of the Reformation."[151]
+
+I will not try to play the part of judge; for a man is sufficiently
+judged by his own writings. And, after all, it is rather interesting to
+meet people who are sincere and not afraid to speak their minds. I will
+admit that I rather enjoy--a little perversely, perhaps--some of these
+extreme opinions, where the writer's personality stands strongly
+revealed.
+
+[Footnote 150: _L'Oratorio moderne_ (_Tribune de Saint-Gervais_, March,
+1899).]
+
+[Footnote 151: _Ibid._ As much as to say he was a Catholic without
+knowing it. And that is what a friend of the _Schola_, M. Edgar Tinel,
+declares: "Bach is a truly Christian artist and, without doubt, _a
+Protestant by mistake_, since in his immortal _Credo_ he confesses his
+faith in one holy, catholic, and apostolic Church" (_Tribune de
+Saint-Gervais_, August-September, 1902). M. Edgar Tinel was, as you
+know, one of the principal masters of Belgian oratorio.]
+
+So the old Gothic spirit still lives among us, and informs the mind of
+one of our best-known artists, and also, without doubt, the minds of
+hundreds of those who listen to him and admire him. M. Louis Laloy has
+shown the persistence of certain forms of plain-song in M. Debussy's
+_Pelleas_; and in a dim sense of far-away kinship he finds the cause of
+the mysterious charm that such music holds for some of us.[152] This
+learned paradox is possible. Why not? The mixtures of race and the
+vicissitudes of history have given us so full and complex a soul that we
+may very well find its beginnings there, if it pleases us--or the
+beginnings of quite other things. Of beginnings there is no end; the
+choice is quite embarrassing, and I imagine one's inclination has as
+much to do with the matter as one's temperament.
+
+[Footnote 152: _Revue musicale_, November, 1902.]
+
+However that may be, M. d'Indy hails from the Middle Ages, and not from
+antiquity (which does not exist for him[153]), or from the Renaissance,
+which he confounds with the Reformation (though the two sisters are
+enemies) in order to crush it the better.[154] "Let us take for models,"
+he says, "the fine workers in art of the Middle Ages."[155]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In this return to the Gothic spirit, in this awakening of faith, there
+is a name--a modern one this time--that they are fond of quoting at the
+_Schola_; it is that of Cesar Franck, under whose direction the little
+Conservatoire in the Rue Saint-Jacques was placed. And indeed they could
+quote no better name than that of this simple-hearted man. Nearly all
+who came into contact with him felt his irresistible charm--a charm that
+has perhaps a great deal to do with the influence that his works still
+have on French music to-day. None has felt Franck's power, both morally
+and musically, more than M. Vincent d'Indy; and none holds a more
+profound reverence for the man whose pupil he was for so long.
+
+[Footnote 153: "The only documents extant on ancient music are either
+criticisms or appreciations, and not musical texts" (_Cours de
+Composition_).]
+
+[Footnote 154: "The influence of the Renaissance, with its pretension
+and vanity, caused a check in all the arts--the effect of which we are
+still feeling" (_Traite de Composition_, p. 89. See also the passage
+quoted before on Pride).]
+
+[Footnote 155: _Tribune de Saint-Gervais_, November, 1900.]
+
+The first time I saw M. d'Indy was at a concert of the _Societe
+nationale_, in the Salle Pleyel, in 1888. They were playing several of
+Franck's works; among others, for the first time, his admirable _Theme,
+fugue, et variation_, for the harmonium and pianoforte, a composition in
+which the spirit of Bach is mingled with a quite modern tenderness.
+Franck was conducting, and M. d'Indy was at the pianoforte. I shall
+always remember his reverential manner towards the old musician, and how
+careful he was to follow his directions; one would have said he was a
+diligent and obedient pupil. It was a touching homage from one who had
+already proved himself a master by works like _Le Chant de la cloche_,
+_Wallenstein_, _La Symphonie sur un theme montagnard_, and who was
+perhaps at that time better known and more popular than Cesar Franck
+himself. Since then twenty years have passed, and I still see M. d'Indy
+as I saw him that evening; and, whatever may happen in the future, his
+memory for me will be always associated with that of the grand old
+artist, presiding with his fatherly smile over the little gathering of
+the faithful.
+
+Of all the characteristics of Franck's fine moral nature, the most
+remarkable was his religious faith. It must have astonished the artists
+of his time, who were even more destitute of such a thing than they are
+now. It made itself felt in some of his followers, especially in those
+who were near the master's heart, as M. d'Indy was. The religious
+thought of the latter reflects in some degree the thought of his master;
+though the shape of that thought may have undergone unconscious
+alteration. I do not know if Franck altogether fits the conception
+people have of him to-day. I do not want to introduce personal memories
+of him here. I knew him well enough to love him, and to catch a glimpse
+of the beauty and sincerity of his soul; but I did not know him well
+enough to discover the secrets of his mind. Those who had the happiness
+of being his intimate friends seem always to represent him as a mystic
+who shut himself away from the spirit of his time. I hope at some future
+date one of his friends will publish some of the conversations that he
+had with him, of which I have heard. But this man who had so strong a
+faith was also very independent. In his religion he had no doubts: it
+was the mainspring of his life; though faith with him was much more a
+matter of feeling than a matter of doctrine. But all was feeling with
+Franck, and reason made little appeal to him. His religious faith did
+not disturb his mind, for he did not measure men and their works by its
+rules; and he would have been incapable of putting together a history of
+art according to the Bible. This great Catholic had at times a very
+pagan soul; and he could enjoy without a qualm the musical dilettantism
+of Renan and the sonorous nihilism of Leconte de Lisle. There were no
+limits to his vast sympathies. He did not attempt to criticise the thing
+he loved--understanding was already in his heart. Perhaps he was right;
+and perhaps there was more trouble in the depths of his heart than the
+valiant serenity of its surface would lead us to believe.
+
+His faith too.... I know how dangerous it is to interpret a musician's
+feelings by his music; but how can we do otherwise when we are told by
+Franck's followers that the expression of the soul is the only end and
+aim of music? Do we find his faith, as expressed through his music
+always full of peace and calm?[156] I ask those who love that music
+because they find some of their own sadness reflected there. Who has not
+felt the secret tragedies that some of his musical passages
+enfold--those short, characteristically abrupt phrases which seem to
+rise in supplication to God, and often fall back in sadness and in
+tears? It is not all light in that soul; but the light that is there
+does not affect us less because it shines from afar,
+
+ "Dans un ecartement de nuages, qui laisse
+ Voir au-dessus des mers la celeste allegresse...."[157]
+
+[Footnote 156: I speak of the passages where he expresses himself
+freely, and is not interpreting a dramatic situation necessary to his
+subject, as in that fine symphonic part of the _Redemption_, where he
+describes the triumph of Christ. But even there we find traces of
+sadness and suffering.]
+
+[Footnote 157: Through a break in the clouds, revealing Celestial joy
+shining above the deeps.]
+
+And so Franck seems to me to differ from M. d'Indy in that he has not
+the latter's urgent desire for clearness.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Clearness is the distinguishing quality of M. d'Indy's mind. There are
+no shadows about him. His ideas and his art are as clear as the look
+that gives so much youth to his face. For him to examine, to arrange,
+to classify, to combine, is a necessity. No one is more French in
+spirit. He has sometimes been taxed with Wagnerism, and it is true that
+he has felt Wagner's influence very strongly. But even when this
+influence is most apparent it is only superficial: his true spirit is
+remote from Wagner's. You may find in _Fervaal_ a few trees like those
+in _Siegfried's_ forest; but the forest itself is not the same; broad
+avenues have been cut in it, and daylight fills the caverns of the
+Niebelungs.
+
+This love of clearness is the ruling factor of M. d'Indy's artistic
+nature. And this is the more remarkable, for his nature is far from
+being a simple one. By his wide musical education and his constant
+thirst for knowledge he has acquired a very varied and almost
+contradictory learning. It must be remembered that M. d'Indy is a
+musician familiar with the music of other countries and other times; all
+kinds of musical forms are floating in his mind; and he seems sometimes
+to hesitate between them. He has arranged these forms into three
+principal classes, which seem to him to be models of musical art: the
+decorative art of the singers of plain-song, the architectural art of
+Palestrina and his followers, and the expressive art of the great
+Italians of the seventeenth century.[158] But in doing this is not his
+eclecticism trying to reconcile arts that are naturally disunited?
+Again, we must remember that M. d'Indy has had direct or indirect
+contact with some of the greatest musical personalities of our time:
+with Wagner, Liszt, Brahms, and Cesar Franck.
+
+[Footnote 158: _Tribune de Saint-Gervais_ November, 1900.]
+
+And he has been readily attracted by them; for he is not one of those
+egotistic geniuses whose thoughts are fixed on his own interests, nor
+has he one of those carnivorous minds that sees nothing, looks for
+nothing, and relishes nothing, unless it may be afterwards useful to it.
+His sympathies are readily with others, he is happy in giving homage to
+their greatness, and quick to appreciate their charm. He speaks
+somewhere of the "irresistible need of transformation" that every artist
+feels.[159] But in order to escape being overwhelmed by conflicting
+elements and interests, one should have great force of feeling or will,
+in order to be able to eliminate what is not necessary, and choose out
+and transform what is. M. d'Indy eliminates hardly anything; he makes
+use of it. In his music he exercises the qualities of an army general:
+understanding of his purpose and the patience to attain it, a perfect
+knowledge of the means at his disposal, the spirit of order, and command
+over his work and himself. Despite the variety of the materials he
+employs, the whole is always clear. One might almost reproach him with
+being too clear; he seems to simplify too much.
+
+Nothing helps one to grasp the essence of M. d'Indy's personality more
+than his last dramatic work. His personality shows itself plainly in all
+his compositions, but nowhere is it more evident than in
+_L'Etranger_.[160]
+
+[Footnote 159: _Id._, September, 1899.]
+
+[Footnote 160: _L'Etranger_, "action musicale" in two acts. Poem and
+music by M. Vincent d'Indy. Played for the first time at Brussels in the
+Theatre de la Monnaie, 7 January, 1903. The quotations from the drama,
+whose poetry is not as good as its music, are taken from the score.]
+
+The scene of _L'Etranger_ is laid in France, by the sea, whose murmuring
+calm we hear in a symphonic introduction. The fishermen are coming back
+to port; the fishing has been bad. But one among them, "a man about
+forty years old, with a sad and dignified air," has been more fortunate
+than the others. The fishermen envy him, and vaguely suspect him of
+sorcery. He tries to enter into friendly conversation with them, and
+offers his catch to a poor family. But in vain; his advances are
+repulsed and his generosity is eyed with suspicion. He is a
+stranger--the Stranger.[161] Evening falls, and the angelus rings. Some
+work-girls come trooping out of their workshop, singing a merry
+folk-song.[162] One of the young girls, Vita, goes up to the Stranger
+and speaks to him, for she alone, of all the village, is his friend. The
+two feel themselves drawn together by a secret sympathy. Vita confides
+artlessly in the unknown man; they love each other though they do not
+admit it. The Stranger tries to repress his feelings; for Vita is young
+and already affianced, and he thinks that he has no right to claim her.
+But Vita, offended by his coldness, seeks to wound him, and succeeds.
+In the end he betrays himself. "Yes, he loves her, and she knew it well.
+But now that he has told her so, he will never see her again; and he
+bids her good-bye."
+
+[Footnote 161: There is a certain likeness in the subject to Herr
+Richard Strauss's _Feuersnot_. There, too, the hero is a stranger who is
+persecuted, and treated as a sorcerer in the very town to which he has
+brought honour. But the _denouement_ is not the same; and the
+fundamental difference of temperament between the two artists is
+strongly marked. M. d'Indy finishes with the renouncement of a
+Christian, and Herr Richard Strauss by a proud and joyous affirmation of
+independence.]
+
+[Footnote 162: Found by M. d'Indy in his own province, as he tells us in
+his _Chansons populaires du Vivarais_.]
+
+That is the first act. Up to this point we seem to be witnessing a very
+human and realistic drama--the ordinary story of the man who tries to do
+good and receives ingratitude, and the sad tragedy of old age that comes
+to a heart still young and unable to resign itself to growing old. But
+the music puts us on our guard. We had heard its religious tone when the
+Stranger was speaking, and it seemed to us that we recognised a
+liturgical melody in the principal theme. What secret is being hidden
+from us? Are we not in France? Yet, in spite of the folk-song and a
+passing breath of the sea, the atmosphere of the Church and Cesar Franck
+is evident. Who is this Stranger?
+
+He tells us in the second act.
+
+ "My name? I have none. I am He who dreams; I am He who loves. I
+ have passed through many countries, and sailed on many seas, loving
+ the poor and needy, dreaming of the happiness of the brotherhood of
+ man."
+
+ "Where have I seen you?--for I know you."
+
+ "Where? you ask. But everywhere: under the warm sun of the East, by
+ the white oceans of the Pole.... I have found you everywhere, for
+ you are Beauty itself, you are immortal Love!"
+
+The music is not without a certain nobility, and bears the imprint of
+the calm, strong spirit of belief. But I was sorry that the story was
+only about a mere entity when I had been getting interested in a man. I
+can never understand the attraction of this kind of symbolism. Unless it
+is allied to sublime powers of creation in metaphysics or morals--such
+as that possessed by a Goethe or an Ibsen--I do not see what such
+symbolism can add to life, though I see very well what it takes away
+from it. But it is, after all, a matter of taste; and, anyway, there is
+nothing in this story to astonish us greatly. This transition from
+realism to symbolism is something in opera with which we have grown only
+too familiar since the time of Wagner.
+
+But the story does not stop there; for we leave symbolic abstractions to
+enter a still more extraordinary domain, which is removed even farther
+still from realities.
+
+There had been some talk at the beginning of an emerald that sparkled in
+the Stranger's cap; and this emerald now takes its turn in the action of
+the piece. "It had sparkled formerly in the bows of the boat that
+carried the body of Lazarus, the friend of our Master, Jesus; and the
+boat had safely reached the port of the Phoceans--without a helm or
+sails or oars. For by this miraculous stone a clean and upright heart
+could command the sea and the winds." But now that the Stranger has done
+amiss, by falling a victim to passion, its power is gone; so he gives it
+to Vita.
+
+Then follows a real scene in fairyland. Vita stands before the sea and
+invokes it in an incantation full of weird and beautiful vocal music:
+"O sea! Sinister sea with your angry charm, gentle sea with your kiss of
+death, hear me!" And the sea replies in a song. Voices mingle with the
+orchestra in a symphony of increasing anger. Vita swears she will give
+herself to no one but the Stranger. She lifts the emerald above her
+head, and it shines with a lurid light. "'Receive, O sea, as a token of
+my oath, the sacred stone, the holy emerald! Then may its power be no
+longer invoked, and none may know again its protecting virtue. Jealous
+sea, take back your own, the last offering of a betrothed!' With an
+impressive gesture she throws the emerald into the waves, and a dark
+green light suddenly shines out against the black sky. This supernatural
+light slowly spreads over the water until it reaches the horizon, and
+the sea begins to roll in great billows." Then the sea takes up its song
+in an angrier tone; the orchestra thunders, and the storm bursts.
+
+The boats put hurriedly back to land, and one of them seems likely to be
+dashed to pieces on the shore. The whole village turns out to watch the
+disaster; but the men refuse to risk their lives in aid of the
+shipwrecked crew. Then the Stranger gets into a boat, and Vita jumps in
+after him. The squall redoubles in violence. A wave of enormous height
+breaks on the jetty, flooding the scene with a dazzling green light. The
+crowd recoil in fear. There is a silence; and an old fisherman takes off
+his woollen cap and intones the _De Profundis_. The villagers take up
+the chant....
+
+One may see by this short account what a heterogeneous work it is. Two
+or three quite different worlds are brought into it: the realism of the
+bourgeois characters of Vita's mother and lover is mixed up with
+symbolisms of Christianity, represented by the Stranger, and with the
+fairy-tale of the magic emerald and the voices of the ocean. This
+complexity, which is evident enough in the poem, is even more evident in
+the music, where a union of different arts and different ideas is
+attempted. We get the art of the folk-song, religious art, the art of
+Wagner, the art of Franck, as well as a note of familiar realism (which
+is something akin to the Italian _opera-bouffe_) and descriptions of
+sensation that are quite personal. As there are only two short acts, the
+rapidity of the action only serves to accentuate this impression. The
+changes are very abrupt: we are hurried from a world of human beings to
+a world of abstract ideas, and then taken from an atmosphere of religion
+to a land of fairies. The work is, however, clear enough from a musical
+point of view. The more complex the elements that M. d'Indy gathers
+round him the more anxious he is to bring them into harmony. It is a
+difficult task, and is only possible when the different elements are
+reduced to their simplest expression and brought down to their
+fundamental qualities--thus depriving them of the spice of their
+individuality. M. d'Indy puts different styles and ideas on the anvil,
+and then forges them vigorously. It is natural that here and there we
+should see the mark of the hammer, the imprint of his determination; but
+it is only by his determination that he welded the work into a solid
+whole.
+
+Perhaps it is determination that brings unity now and then into M.
+d'Indy's spirit. With reference to this, I will dwell upon one point
+only, since it is curious, and seems to me to be of general artistic
+interest. M. d'Indy writes his own poems for his "_actions
+musicales_"--Wagner's example, it seems, has been catching. We have seen
+how the harmony of a work may suffer through the dual gifts of its
+author; though he may have thought to perfect his composition by writing
+both words and music. But an artist's poetical and musical gifts are not
+necessarily of the same order. A man has not always the same kind of
+talent in other arts that he has in the art which he has made his own--I
+am speaking not only of his technical skill, but of his temperament as
+well. Delacroix was of the Romantic school in painting, but in
+literature his style was Classic. We have all known artists who were
+revolutionaries in their own sphere, but conservative and behind the
+times in their opinions about other branches of art. The double gift of
+poetry and music is in M. d'Indy up to a certain point. But is his
+reason always in agreement with his heart?[163]
+
+[Footnote 163: In his criticisms his heart is not always in agreement
+with his mind. His mind denounces the Renaissance, but his instinct
+obliges him to appreciate the great Florentine painters of the
+Renaissance and the musicians of the sixteenth century. He only gets out
+of the difficulty by the most extraordinary compromises, by saying that
+Ghirlandajo and Filippo Lippi were Gothic, or by stating that the
+Renaissance in music did not begin till the seventeenth century! (_Cours
+de Composition_, pp. 214 and 216.)]
+
+Of course his nature is too dignified to let the quarrel be shown
+openly. His heart obeys the commands of his reason, or compromises with
+it, and by seeming respectful of authority saves appearances. His
+reason, represented here by the poet, likes simple, realistic, and
+relevant action, together with moral or even religious teaching. His
+heart, represented by the musician, is romantic; and if he followed it
+altogether he would wander off to any subject that enabled him to
+indulge in his love of the picturesque, such as the descriptive
+symphony, or even the old form of opera.
+
+For myself, I am in sympathy with his heart; and I find his heart is in
+the right, and his reason in the wrong. There is nothing that M. d'Indy
+has made more his own than the art of painting landscapes in music.
+There is one page in _Fervaal_ at the beginning of Act II which calls up
+misty mountain tops covered with pine forests; there is another page in
+_L'Etranger_ where one sees strange lights glimmering on the sea while a
+storm is brooding.[164] I should like to see M. d'Indy give himself up
+freely, in spite of all theories, to this descriptive lyricism, in which
+he so excels; or I wish at least he would seek inspiration in a subject
+where both his religious beliefs and his imagination could find
+satisfaction: a subject such as one of the beautiful episodes of the
+Golden Legend, or the one which _L'Etranger_ itself recalls--the
+romantic voyage of the Magdalen in Provence. But it is foolish to wish
+an artist to do anything but the thing he likes; he is the best judge
+of what pleases him.
+
+[Footnote 164: Act III, scene 3. The power of that evocation is so
+strong that it carries the poet along with it. It would seem that part
+of the action had only been conceived with a view to the final effect of
+the sudden colouring of the waves.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In this sketchy portrait I must not forget one of the finest of this
+composer's gifts--his talent as a teacher of music. Everything has
+fitted M. d'Indy for this part. By his knowledge and his precise,
+orderly mind he must be a perfect teacher of composition. If I submit
+some question of harmony or melodic phrasing to his analysis, the result
+is the essence of clear, logical reasoning; and if the reasoning is a
+little dry and simplifies the thing almost too much, it is still very
+illuminating and from the hand of a master of French prose. And in this
+I find him exercising the same consistent instinct of good sense and
+sincerity, the same art of development, the same seventeenth and
+eighteenth century principles of classic rhetoric that he applies to his
+music. In truth, M. d'Indy could write a musical _Discourse on Style_,
+if he wished.
+
+But, above all, he is gifted with the moral qualities of a teacher--the
+vocation for teaching, first of all. He has a firm belief in the
+absolute duty of giving instruction in art, and, what is rarer still, in
+the efficacious virtue of that teaching. He readily shares Tolstoy's
+scorn, which he sometimes quotes, of the foolishness of art for art's
+sake.
+
+ "At the bottom of art is this essential condition--teaching. The
+ aim of art is neither gain nor glory; the true aim of art is to
+ teach, to elevate gradually the spirit of humanity; in a word, to
+ serve in the highest sense--'_dienen_' as Wagner says by the mouth
+ of the repentant Kundry, in the third act of Parsifal."[165]
+
+There is in this a mixture of Christian humility and aristocratic pride.
+M. d'Indy has a sincere desire for the welfare of humanity, and he loves
+the people; but he treats them with an affectionate kindness, at once
+protective and tolerant; he regards them as children that must be
+led.[166]
+
+[Footnote 165: _Cours de Composition_, and _Tribune de Saint-Gervais_.]
+
+[Footnote 166: _Cours de Composition_.]
+
+The popular art that he extols is not an art belonging to the people,
+but that of an aristocracy interested in the people. He wishes to
+enlighten them, to mould them, to direct them, by means of art. Art is
+the source of life; it is the spirit of progress; it gives the most
+precious of possessions to the soul--liberty. And no one enjoys this
+liberty more than the artist. In a lecture to the _Schola_ he said:
+
+ "What makes the name of 'artist' so splendid is that the artist is
+ free--absolutely free. Look about you, and tell me if from this
+ point of view there is any career finer than that of an artist who
+ is conscious of his mission? The Army? The Law? The University?
+ Politics?"
+
+And then follows a rather cold appreciation of these different careers.
+
+ "There is no need to mention the excessive bureaucracy and
+ officialism which is the crying evil of this country. We find
+ everywhere submission to rules and servitude to the State. But what
+ government, pope, emperor, or president could oblige an artist to
+ think and write against his will? Liberty--that is the true wealth
+ and the most precious inheritance of the artist, the liberty to
+ think, and the liberty that no one has the power to take away from
+ us--that of doing our work according to the dictates of our
+ conscience."
+
+Who does not feel the infectious warmth and beauty of these spirited
+words? How this force of enthusiasm and sincerity must grip all young
+and eager hearts. "There are two qualities," says M. d'Indy, on the last
+page of _Cours de Composition_, "which a master should try to encourage
+and develop in the spirit of the pupil, for without them science is
+useless; these qualities are an unselfish love of art and enthusiasm for
+good work." And these two virtues radiate from M. d'Indy's personality
+as they do from his writings; that is his power.
+
+But the best of his teaching lies in his life. One can never speak too
+highly of his disinterested devotion for the good of art. As if it were
+not enough to put all his might into his own creations, M. d'Indy gives
+his time and the results of his study unsparingly to others. Franck gave
+lessons in order to be able to live; M. d'Indy gives them for the
+pleasure of instructing, and to serve his art and aid artists. He
+directs schools, and accepts and almost seeks out the most thankless,
+though the most necessary, kinds of teaching. Or he will apply himself
+devoutly to the study of the past and the resuscitation of some old
+master. And he seems to take so much pleasure in training young minds to
+appreciate music, or in repairing the injustices of history to some fine
+but forgotten musician, that he almost forgets about himself. To what
+work or to what worker, worthy of interest, or seeming to be so, has he
+ever refused his advice and help? I have known his kindness personally,
+and I shall always be sincerely grateful for it.
+
+His devotion and his faith have not been in vain. The name of M. d'Indy
+will be associated in history, not only with fine works, but with great
+works: with the _Societe Nationale de Musique_, of which he is
+president; with the _Schola Cantorum_, which he founded with Charles
+Bordes, and which he directs; with the young French school of music, a
+group of skilful artists and innovators, to whom he is a kind of elder
+brother, giving them encouragement by his example and helping them
+through the first hard years of struggle; and, lastly, with an awakening
+of music in Europe, with a movement which, after the death of Wagner and
+Franck, attracted the interest of the world by its revival of the art of
+the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. M. d'Indy has been the chief
+representative of all this artistic evolution in France. By his deeds,
+by his example, and by his spirit, he was among the first to stir up
+interest in the musical education of France to-day. He has done more
+for the advancement of our music than the entire official teaching of
+the Conservatoires A day will come when, by the force of things and in
+spite of all resistance, such a man will take the place that belongs to
+him at the head of the organisation of music in France.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I have tried to unearth M. d'Indy's strongest characteristics, and I
+think I have found them in his faith and in his activity, I am only too
+aware of the pitfalls that have beset me in this attempt; it is always
+difficult to criticise a man's personality, and it is most difficult
+when he is alive and still in the midst of his development. Every man is
+a mystery, not only to others, but to himself. There is something very
+presumptuous about pretending to know anyone who does not quite know
+himself. And yet one cannot live without forming opinions; it is a
+necessity of life. The people we see and know (or say we know), our
+friends, and those we love, are never what we think them. Often they are
+not at all like the portrait we conjure up; for we walk among the
+phantoms of our hearts. But still one must go on having opinions, and go
+on constructing and creating things, if we do not want to become
+impotent through inertia. Error is better than doubt, provided we err in
+good faith; and the main thing is to speak out the thing that one really
+feels and believes. I hope M. d'Indy will forgive me if I have gone far
+wrong, and that he will see in these pages a sincere effort to
+understand him and a keen sympathy with himself, and even with his
+ideas, though I do not always share them. But I have always thought that
+in life a man's opinions go for very little, and that the only thing
+that matters is the man himself. Freedom of spirit is the greatest
+happiness one can know; one must be sorry for those who have not got it.
+And there is a secret pleasure in rendering homage to another's splendid
+creed, even though it is one that we do not ourselves profess.
+
+
+
+
+RICHARD STRAUSS
+
+
+The composer of _Heldenleben_ is no longer unknown to Parisians. Every
+year at Colonne's or Chevillard's we see his tall, thin silhouette
+reappear in the conductor's desk. There he is with his abrupt and
+imperious gestures, his wan and anxious face, his wonderfully clear
+eyes, restless and penetrating at the same time, his mouth shaped like a
+child's, a moustache so fair that it is nearly white, and curly hair
+growing like a crown above his high round forehead.
+
+I should like to try to sketch here the strange and arresting
+personality of the man who in Germany is considered the inheritor of
+Wagner's genius--the man who has had the audacity to write, after
+Beethoven, an Heroic Symphony, and to imagine himself the hero.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Richard Strauss is thirty-four years old.[167] He was born in Munich on
+11 June, 1864. His father, a well-known virtuoso, was first horn in the
+Royal orchestra, and his mother was a daughter of the brewer Pschorr. He
+was brought up among musical surroundings. At four years old he played
+the piano, and at six he composed little dances, _Lieder_, sonatas, and
+even overtures for the orchestra. Perhaps this extreme artistic
+precocity has had something to do with the feverish character of his
+talents, by keeping his nerves in a state of tension and unduly exciting
+his mind. At school he composed choruses for some of Sophocles'
+tragedies. In 1881, Hermann Levi had one of the young collegian's
+symphonies performed by his orchestra. At the University he spent his
+time in writing instrumental music. Then Buelow and Radecke made him play
+in Berlin; and Buelow, who became very fond of him, had him brought to
+Meiningen as _Musikdirector_. From 1886 to 1889 he held the same post at
+the _Hoftheater_ in Munich. From 1889 to 1894 he was _Kapellmeister_ at
+the _Hoftheater_ in Weimar. He returned to Munich in 1894 as
+_Hofkapellmeister_, and in 1897 succeeded Hermann Levi. Finally, he left
+Munich for Berlin, where at present he conducts the orchestra of the
+Royal Opera.
+
+[Footnote 167: This essay was written in 1899.]
+
+Two things should be particularly noted in his life: the influence of
+Alexander Ritter--to whom he has shown much gratitude--and his travels
+in the south of Europe. He made Ritter's acquaintance in 1885. This
+musician was a nephew of Wagner's, and died some years ago. His music is
+practically unknown in France, though he wrote two well-known operas,
+_Fauler Hans_ and _Wem die Krone_? and was the first composer, according
+to Strauss, to introduce Wagnerian methods into the _Lied_. He is often
+discussed in Buelow's and Liszt's letters. "Before I met him," says
+Strauss, "I had been brought up on strictly classical lines; I had lived
+entirely on Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven, and had just been studying
+Mendelssohn, Chopin, Schumann, and Brahms. It is to Ritter alone I am
+indebted for my knowledge of Liszt and Wagner; it was he who showed me
+the importance of the writings and works of these two masters in the
+history of art. It was he who by years of lessons and kindly counsel
+made me a musician of the future (_Zukunftsmusiker_), and set my feet on
+a road where now I can walk unaided and alone. It was he also who
+initiated me in Schopenhauer's philosophy."
+
+The second influence, that of the South, dates from April, 1886, and
+seems to have left an indelible impression upon Strauss. He visited Rome
+and Naples for the first time, and came back with a symphonic fantasia
+called _Aus Italien_. In the spring of 1892, after a sharp attack of
+pneumonia, he travelled for a year and a half in Greece, Egypt, and
+Sicily. The tranquillity of these favoured countries filled him with
+never-ending regret. The North has depressed him since then, "the
+eternal grey of the North and its phantom shadows without a sun."[168]
+When I saw him at Charlottenburg, one chilly April day, he told me with
+a sigh that he could compose nothing in winter, and that he longed for
+the warmth and light of Italy. His music is infected by that longing;
+and it makes one feel how his spirit suffers in the gloom of Germany,
+and ever yearns for the colours, the laughter, and the joy of the South.
+
+[Footnote 168: Nietzsche.]
+
+Like the musician that Nietzsche dreamed of,[169] he seems "to hear
+ringing in his ears the prelude of a deeper, stronger music, perhaps a
+more wayward and mysterious music; a music that is super-German, which,
+unlike other music, would not die away, nor pale, nor grow dull beside
+the blue and wanton sea and the clear Mediterranean sky; a music
+super-European, which would hold its own even by the dark sunsets of the
+desert; a music whose soul is akin to the palm trees; a music that knows
+how to live and move among great beasts of prey, beautiful and solitary;
+a music whose supreme charm is its ignorance of good and evil. Only from
+time to time perhaps there would flit over it the longing of the sailor
+for home, golden shadows, and gentle weaknesses; and towards it would
+come flying from afar the thousand tints of the setting of a moral world
+that men no longer understood; and to these belated fugitives it would
+extend its hospitality and sympathy." But it is always the North, the
+melancholy of the North, and "all the sadness of mankind," mental
+anguish, the thought of death, and the tyranny of life, that come and
+weigh down afresh his spirit hungering for light, and force it into
+feverish speculation and bitter argument. Perhaps it is better so.
+
+[Footnote 169: _Beyond Good and Evil_, 1886. I hope I may be excused for
+introducing Nietzsche here, but his thoughts seem constantly to be
+reflected in Strauss, and to throw much light on the soul of modern
+Germany.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Richard Strauss is both a poet and a musician. These two natures live
+together in him, and each strives to get the better of the other. The
+balance is not always well maintained; but when he does succeed in
+keeping it by sheer force of will the union of these two talents,
+directed to the same end, produces an effect more powerful than any
+known since Wagner's time. Both natures have their source in a mind
+filled with heroic thoughts--a rarer possession, I consider, than a
+talent for either music or poetry. There are other great musicians in
+Europe; but Strauss is something more than a great musician, for he is
+able to create a hero.
+
+When one talks of heroes one is thinking of drama. Dramatic art is
+everywhere in Strauss's music, even in works that seem least adapted to
+it, such as his _Lieder_ and compositions of pure music. It is most
+evident in his symphonic poems, which are the most important part of his
+work. These poems are: _Wanderers Sturmlied_ (1885), _Aus Italien_
+(1886), _Macbeth_ (1887), _Don Juan_ (1888), _Tod und Verklaerung_
+(1889), _Guntram_ (1892-93), _Till Eulenspiegel_ (1894), _Also sprach
+Zarathustra_ (1895), _Don Quixote_ (1897), and _Heldenleben_
+(1898).[170]
+
+[Footnote 170: This article was written in 1899. Since then the
+_Sinfonia Domestica_, has been produced, and will be noticed in the
+essay _French and German Music_.]
+
+I shall not say much about the four first works, where the mind and
+manner of the artist is taking shape. The _Wanderers Sturmlied_ (the
+song of a traveller during a storm, op. 14) is a vocal sextette with an
+orchestral accompaniment, whose subject is taken from a poem of
+Goethe's. It was written before Strauss met Ritter, and its construction
+is after the manner of Brahms, and shows a rather affected thought and
+style. _Aus Italien_ (op. 16) is an exuberant picture of impressions of
+his tour in Italy, of the ruins at Rome, the seashore at Sorrento, and
+the life of the Italian people. _Macbeth_ (op. 23) gives us a rather
+undistinguished series of musical interpretations of poetical subjects.
+_Don Juan_ (op. 20) is much finer, and translates Lenau's poem into
+music with bombastic vigour, showing us the hero who dreams of grasping
+all the joy of the world, and how he fails, and dies after he has lost
+faith in everything.
+
+_Tod und Verklaerung_ ("Death and Transfiguration," op. 24[171]) marks
+considerable progress in Strauss's thought and style. It is still one of
+the most stirring of Strauss's works, and the one that is conceived with
+the most perfect unity. It was inspired by a poem of Alexander Ritter's,
+and I will give you an idea of its subject.
+
+[Footnote 171: Composed in 1889, and performed for the first time at
+Eisenach in 1890.]
+
+In a wretched room, lit only by a nightlight, a sick man lies in bed.
+Death draws near him in the midst of awe-inspiring silence. The unhappy
+man seems to wander in his mind at times, and to find comfort in past
+memories. His life passes before his eyes: his innocent childhood, his
+happy youth, the struggles of middle age, and his efforts to attain the
+splendid goal of his desires, which always eludes him. He had been
+striving all his life for this goal, and at last thought it was within
+reach, when Death, in a voice of thunder, cries, suddenly, "Stop!" And
+even now in his agony he struggles desperately, being set upon
+realising his dream; but the hand of Death is crushing life out of his
+body, and night is creeping on. Then resounds in the heavens the promise
+of that happiness which he had vainly sought for on earth--Redemption
+and Transfiguration.
+
+Richard Strauss's friends protested vigorously against this orthodox
+ending; and Seidl,[1] Jorisenne,[2] and Wilhelm Mauke[3] pretended that
+the subject was something loftier, that it was the eternal struggle of
+the soul against its lower self and its deliverance by means of art. I
+shall not enter into that discussion, though I think that such a cold
+and commonplace symbolism is much less interesting than the struggle
+with death, which one feels in every note of the composition. It is a
+classical work, comparatively speaking; broad and majestic and almost
+like Beethoven in style. The realism of the subject in the
+hallucinations of the dying man, the shiverings of fever, the throbbing
+of the veins, and the despairing agony, is transfigured by the purity of
+the form in which it is cast. It is realism after the manner of the
+symphony in C minor, where Beethoven argues with Destiny. If all
+suggestion of a programme is taken away, the symphony still remains
+intelligible and impressive by its harmonious expression of feeling.
+
+[1] _Richard Strauss, eine Charakterskizze_, 1896, Prague.]
+
+[2] _R. Strauss, Essai critique et biologique_, 1898, Brussels.]
+
+[3] _Der Musikfuehrer: Tod und Verklaerung_, Frankfort.]
+
+Many German musicians think that Strauss has reached the highest point
+of his work in _Tod und Verklaerung_. But I am far from agreeing with
+them, and believe myself that his art has developed enormously as the
+result of it. It is true it is the summit of one period of his life,
+containing the essence of all that is best in it; but _Heldenleben_
+marks the second period, and is its corner-stone. How the force and
+fulness of his feeling has grown since that first period! But he has
+never re-found the delicate and melodious purity of soul and youthful
+grace of his earlier work, which still shines out in _Guntram_, and is
+then effaced.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Strauss has directed Wagner's dramas at Weimar since 1889. While
+breathing their atmosphere he turned his attention to the theatre, and
+wrote the libretto of his opera _Guntram_. Illness interrupted his work,
+and he was in Egypt when he took it up again. The music of the first act
+was written between December, 1892, and February, 1893, while travelling
+between Cairo and Luxor; the second act was finished in June, 1893, in
+Sicily; and the third act early in September, 1893, in Bavaria. There
+is, however, no trace of an oriental atmosphere in this music. We find
+rather the melodies of Italy, the reflection of a mellow light, and a
+resigned calm. I feel in it the languid mind of the convalescent, almost
+the heart of a young girl whose tears are ready to flow, though she is
+smiling a little at her own sad dreams. It seems to me that Strauss must
+have a secret affection for this work, which owes its inspiration to
+the undefinable impressions of convalescence. His fever fell asleep in
+it, and certain passages are full of the caressing touch of nature, and
+recall Berlioz's _Les Troyens_. But too often the music is superficial
+and conventional, and the tyranny of Wagner makes itself felt--a rare
+enough occurrence in Strauss's other works. The poem is interesting;
+Strauss has put much of himself into it, and one is conscious of the
+crisis that unsettled his broad-minded but often self-satisfied and
+inconsistent ideas.
+
+Strauss had been reading an historical study of an order of
+_Minnesaenger_ and mystics, which was founded in Austria in the Middle
+Ages to fight against the corruption of art, and to save souls by the
+beauty of song. They called themselves _Streiter der Liebe_ ("Warriors
+of Love"). Strauss, who was imbued at that time with neo-Christian ideas
+and the influence of Wagner and Tolstoy, was carried away by the
+subject, and took Guntram from the _Streiter der Liebe_, and made him
+his hero.
+
+The action takes place in the thirteenth century, in Germany. The first
+act gives us a glade near a little lake. The country people are in
+revolt against the nobles, and have just been repulsed. Guntram and his
+master Friedhold distribute alms among them, and the band of defeated
+men then take flight into the woods. Left alone, Guntram begins to muse
+on the delights of springtime and the innocent awakening of Nature. But
+the thought of the misery that its beauty hides weighs upon him. He
+thinks of men's evil doing, of human suffering, and of civil war. He
+gives thanks to Christ for having led him to this unhappy country,
+kisses the cross, and decides to go to the court of the tyrant who is
+the cause of all the trouble, and make known to him the Divine
+revelation. At that moment Freihild appears. She is the wife of Duke
+Robert, who is the cruellest of all the nobles, and she is horrified by
+all that is happening around her; life seems hateful to her, and she
+wishes to drown herself. But Guntram prevents her; and the pity that her
+beauty and trouble had at first aroused changes unconsciously into love
+when he recognises her as the beloved princess and sole benefactress of
+the unhappy people. He tells her that God has sent him to her for her
+salvation. Then he goes to the castle, where he believes himself to be
+sent on the double mission of saving the people--and Freihild.
+
+In the second act, the princes celebrate their victory in the Duke's
+castle. After some pompous talk on the part of the official
+_Minnesaenger_, Guntram is invited to sing. Discouraged beforehand by the
+wickedness of his audience, and feeling that he can sing to no purpose,
+he hesitates and is on the point of leaving them. But Freihild's sadness
+holds him back, and for her sake he sings. His song is at first calm and
+measured, and expresses the melancholy that fills him in the midst of a
+feast which celebrates triumphant power. He then loses himself in
+dreams, and sees the gentle figure of Peace moving among the company. He
+describes her lovingly and with youthful tenderness, which approaches
+ecstasy as he draws a picture of the ideal life of humanity made free.
+Then he paints War and Death, and the disorder and darkness that they
+spread over the world. He addresses himself directly to the Prince; he
+shows him his duty, and how the love of his people would be his
+recompense; he threatens him with the hate of the unhappy who are driven
+to despair; and, finally, he urges the nobles to rebuild the towns, to
+liberate their prisoners, and to come to the aid of their subjects. His
+song is ended amid the profound emotion of his audience. Duke Robert,
+feeling the danger of these outspoken words, orders his men to seize the
+singer; but the vassals side with Guntram. At this juncture news is
+brought that the peasants have renewed the attack. Robert calls his men
+to arms, but Guntram, who feels that he will be supported by those
+around him, orders Robert's arrest. The Duke draws his sword, but
+Guntram kills him. Then a sudden change comes over Guntram's spirit,
+which is explained in the third act. In the scene that follows he speaks
+no word, his sword falls from his hand, and he lets his enemies again
+assume their authority over the crowd; he allows himself to be bound and
+taken to prison, while the band of nobles noisily disperses to fight
+against the rebels. But Freihild is full of an unaffected and almost
+savage joy at her deliverance by Guntram's sword. Love for Guntram fills
+her heart, and her one desire is to save him.
+
+The third act takes place in the prison of the chateau; and it is a
+surprising, uncertain, and very curious act. It is not a logical result
+of the action that has preceded it. One feels a sudden commotion in the
+poet's ideas, a crisis of feeling which disturbed him even as he wrote,
+and a difficulty which he did not succeed in solving. The new light
+towards which he was beginning to move appears very clearly. Strauss was
+too advanced in the composition of his work to escape the neo-Christian
+renouncement which had to finish the drama; he could only have avoided
+that by completely remodelling his characters. So Guntram rejects
+Freihild's love. He sees he has fallen, even as the others, under the
+curse of sin. He had preached charity to others when he himself was full
+of egoism; he had killed Robert rather to satisfy his instinctive and
+animal jealousy than to deliver the people from a tyrant. So he
+renounces his desires, and expiates the sin of being alive by retirement
+from the world. But the interest of the act does not lie in this
+anticipated _denouement_, which since _Parsifal_ has become rather
+common; it lies in another scene, which has evidently been inserted at
+the last moment, and which is uncomfortably out of tune with the action,
+though in a singularly grand way. This scene gives us a dialogue between
+Guntram and his former companion, Friedhold.[172]
+
+[Footnote 172: Some people have tried to see Alexander Ritter's thoughts
+in Friedhold, as they have seen Strauss's thoughts in Guntram.]
+
+Friedhold had initiated him in former days, and he now comes to
+reproach him for his crime, and to bring him before the Order, who will
+judge him. In the original version of the poem Guntram complies, and
+sacrifices his passion to his vow. But while Strauss had been travelling
+in the East he had conceived a sudden horror for this Christian
+annihilation of will, and Guntram revolts along with him, and refuses to
+submit to the rules of his Order. He breaks his lute--a symbol of false
+hope in the redemption of humanity through faith--and rouses himself
+from the glorious dreams in which he used to believe, for he sees they
+are shadows that are scattered by the light of real life. He does not
+abjure his former vows; but he is not the same man he was when he made
+them. While his experience was immature he was able to believe that a
+man ought to submit himself to rules, and that life should be governed
+by laws. A single hour has enlightened him. Now he is free and
+alone--alone with his spirit. "I alone can lessen my suffering; I alone
+can expiate my crime. Through myself alone God speaks to me; to me alone
+God speaks. _Ewig einsam_." It is the proud awakening of individualism,
+the powerful pessimism of the Super-man. Such an expression of feeling
+gives the character of action to renouncement and even to negation
+itself, for it is a strong affirmation of the will.
+
+I have dwelt rather at length on this drama on account of the real value
+of its thought and, above all, on account of what one may call its
+autobiographical interest. It was at this time that Strauss's mind began
+to take more definite form. His further experience will develop that
+form still more, but without making any important change in it.
+
+_Guntram_ was the cause of bitter disappointment to its author. He did
+not succeed in getting it produced at Munich, for the orchestra and
+singers declared that the music could not be performed. It is even said
+that they got an eminent critic to draw up a formal document, which they
+sent to Strauss, certifying that _Guntram_ was not meant to be sung. The
+chief difficulty was the length of the principal part, which took up by
+itself, in its musings and discourses, the equivalent of an act and a
+half. Some of its monologues, like the song in the second act, last half
+an hour on end. Nevertheless, _Guntram_ was performed at Weimar on 16
+May, 1894. A little while afterwards Strauss married the singer who
+played Freihild, Pauline de Ahna, who had also created Elizabeth in
+_Tannhaeuser_ at Bayreuth, and who has since devoted herself to the
+interpretation of her husband's _Lieder_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But the rancour of his failure at the theatre still remained with
+Strauss, and he turned his attention again to the symphonic poem, in
+which he showed more and more marked dramatic tendencies, and a soul
+which grew daily prouder and more scornful. You should hear him speak in
+cold disdain of the theatre-going public--"that collection of bankers
+and tradespeople and miserable seekers after pleasure"--to know the sore
+that this triumphant artist hides. For not only was the theatre long
+closed to him, but, by an additional irony, he was obliged to conduct
+musical rubbish at the opera in Berlin, on account of the poor taste in
+music--really of Royal origin--that prevailed there.
+
+The first great symphony of this new period was _Till Eulenspiegel's
+lustige Streiche, nach alter Schelmenweise, in Rondeauform_ ("Till
+Eulenspiegel's Merry Pranks, according to an old legend, in rondeau
+form"), op. 28.[173] Here his disdain is as yet only expressed by witty
+bantering, which scoffs at the world's conventions. This figure of Till,
+this devil of a joker, the legendary hero of Germany and Flanders, is
+little known with us in France. And so Strauss's music loses much of its
+point, for it claims to recall a series of adventures which we know
+nothing about--Till crossing the market place and smacking his whip at
+the good women there; Till in priestly attire delivering a homely
+sermon; Till making love to a young woman who rebuffs him; Till making a
+fool of the pedants; Till tried and hung. Strauss's liking to present,
+by musical pictures, sometimes a character, sometimes a dialogue, or a
+situation, or a landscape, or an idea--that is to say, the most volatile
+and varied impressions of his capricious spirit--is very marked here. It
+is true that he falls back on several popular subjects, whose meaning
+would be very easily grasped in Germany; and that he develops them, not
+quite in the strict form of a rondeau, as he pretends, but still with a
+certain method, so that apart from a few frolics, which are
+unintelligible without a programme, the whole has real musical unity.
+This symphony, which is a great favourite in Germany, seems to me less
+original than some of his other compositions. It sounds rather like a
+refined piece of Mendelssohn's, with curious harmonies and very
+complicated instrumentation.
+
+[Footnote 173: Composed in 1894-95, and played for the first time at
+Cologne in 1895.]
+
+There is much more grandeur and originality in his _Also sprach
+Zarathustra, Tondichtung frei, nach Nietzsche_ ("Thus spake Zarathustra,
+a free Tone-poem, after Nietzsche"), op. 30.[174] Its sentiments are
+more broadly human, and the programme that Strauss has followed never
+loses itself in picturesque or anecdotic details, but is planned on
+expressive and noble lines. Strauss protests his own liberty in the face
+of Nietzsche's. He wishes to represent the different stages of
+development that a free spirit passes through in order to arrive at that
+of Super-man. These ideas are purely personal, and are not part of some
+system of philosophy. The sub-titles of the work are: _Von den
+Hinterweltern_ ("Of Religious Ideas"), _Von der grossen Sehnsucht_ ("Of
+Supreme Aspiration"), _Von den Freuden und Leidenschaften_ ("Of Joys and
+Passions"), _Das Grablied_ ("The Grave Song"), _Von der Wissenschaft_
+("Of Knowledge"), _Der Genesende_ ("The Convalescent"--the soul
+delivered of its desires), _Das Tanzlied_ ("Dancing Song"), _Nachtlied_
+("Night Song"). We are shown a man who, worn out by trying to solve the
+riddle of the universe, seeks refuge in religion. Then he revolts
+against ascetic ideas, and gives way madly to his passions. But he is
+quickly sated and disgusted and, weary to death, he tries science, but
+rejects it again, and succeeds in ridding himself of the uneasiness its
+knowledge brings by laughter--the master of the universe--and the merry
+dance, that dance of the universe where all the human sentiments enter
+hand-in-hand--religious beliefs, unsatisfied desires, passions,
+disgust, and joy. "Lift up your hearts on high, my brothers! Higher
+still! And mind you don't forget your legs! I have canonised laughter.
+You super-men, learn to laugh!"[175] And the dance dies away and is lost
+in ethereal regions, and Zarathustra is lost to sight while dancing in
+distant worlds. But if he has solved the riddle of the universe for
+himself, he has not solved it for other men; and so, in contrast to the
+confident knowledge which fills the music, we get the sad note of
+interrogation at the end.
+
+[Footnote 174: Composed in 1895-96, and performed for the first time at
+Frankfort-On-Main in November, 1896.]
+
+[Footnote 175: Nietzsche.]
+
+There are few subjects that offer richer material for musical
+expression. Strauss has treated it with power and dexterity; he has
+preserved unity in this chaos of passions, by contrasting the
+_Sehnsucht_ of man with the impassive strength of Nature. As for the
+boldness of his conceptions, I need hardly remind those who heard the
+poem at the Cirque d'ete of the intricate "Fugue of Knowledge," the
+trills of the wood wind and the trumpets that voice Zarathustra's laugh,
+the dance of the universe, and the audacity of the conclusion which, in
+the key of B major, finishes up with a note of interrogation, in C
+natural, repeated three times.
+
+I am far from thinking that the symphony is without a fault. The themes
+are of unequal value: some are quite commonplace; and, in a general way,
+the working up of the composition is superior to its underlying
+thought. I shall come back later on to certain faults in Strauss's
+music; here I only want to consider the overflowing life and feverish
+joy that set these worlds spinning.
+
+_Zarathustra_ shows the progress of scornful individualism in
+Strauss--"the spirit that hates the dogs of the populace and all that
+abortive and gloomy breed; the spirit of wild laughter that dances like
+a tempest as gaily on marshes and sadness as it does in fields."[176]
+That spirit laughs at itself and at its idealism in the _Don Quixote_ of
+1897, _fantastische Variationen uber ein Thema ritterlichen Charakters_
+("Don Quixote, fantastic variations on a theme of knightly character"),
+op. 35; and that symphony marks, I think, the extreme point to which
+programme music may be carried. In no other work does Strauss give
+better proof of his prodigious cleverness, intelligence, and wit; and I
+say sincerely that there is not a work where so much force is expended
+with so great a loss for the sake of a game and a musical joke which
+lasts forty-five minutes, and has given the author, the executants, and
+the public a good deal of tiring work. These symphonic poems are most
+difficult to play on account of the complexity, the independence, and
+the fantastic caprices of the different parts. Judge for yourself what
+the author expects to get out of the music by these few extracts from
+the programme:--
+
+[Footnote 176: Nietzsche, _Zarathustra_.]
+
+The introduction represents Don Quixote buried in books of chivalrous
+romance; and we have to see in the music, as we do in little Flemish and
+Dutch pictures, not only Don Quixote's features, but the words of the
+books he reads. Sometimes it is the story of a knight who is righting a
+giant, sometimes the adventures of a knight-errant who has dedicated
+himself to the services of a lady, sometimes it is a nobleman who has
+given his life in fulfilment of a vow to atone for his sins. Don
+Quixote's mind becomes confused (and our own with it) over all these
+stories; he is quite distracted. He leaves home in company with his
+squire. The two figures are drawn with great spirit; the one is an old
+Spaniard, stiff, languishing, distrustful, a bit of a poet, rather
+undecided in his opinions but obstinate when his mind is once made up;
+the other is a fat, jovial peasant, a cunning fellow, given to repeating
+himself in a waggish way and quoting droll proverbs--translated in the
+music by short-winded phrases that always return to the point they
+started from. The adventures begin. Here are the windmills (trills from
+the violins and wood wind), and the bleating army of the grand emperor,
+Alifanfaron (tremolos from the wood wind); and here, in the third
+variation, is a dialogue between the knight and his squire, from which
+we are to guess that Sancho questions his master on the advantages of a
+chivalrous life, for they seem to him doubtful. Don Quixote talks to him
+of glory and honour; but Sancho has no thought for it. In reply to these
+grand words he urges the superiority of sure profits, fat meals, and
+sounding money. Then the adventures begin again. The two companions fly
+through the air on wooden horses; and the illusion of this giddy voyage
+is given by chromatic passages on the flutes, harps, kettledrums, and a
+"windmachine," while "the tremolo of the double basses on the key-note
+shows that the horses have never left the earth."[177]
+
+But I must stop. I have said enough to show the fun the author is
+indulging in. When one hears the work one cannot help admiring the
+composer's technical knowledge, skill in orchestration, and sense of
+humour. And one is all the more surprised that he confines himself to
+the illustration of texts[178] when he is so capable of creating comic
+and dramatic matter without it. Although _Don Quixote_ is a marvel of
+skill and a very wonderful work, in which Strauss has developed a
+suppler and richer style, it marks, to my mind, a progress in his
+technique and a backward step in his mind, for he seems to have adopted
+the decadent conceptions of an art suited to playthings and trinkets to
+please a frivolous and affected society.
+
+[Footnote 177: Arthur Hahn, _Der Musikfuehrer: Don Quixote_, Frankfort.]
+
+[Footnote 178: At the head of each variation Strauss has marked on the
+score the chapter of "Don Quixote" that he is interpreting.]
+
+In _Heldenleben_ ("The Life of a Hero"), op. 40,[179] he recovers
+himself, and with a stroke of his wings reaches the summits. Here there
+is no foreign text for the music to study or illustrate or transcribe.
+Instead, there is lofty passion and an heroic will gradually developing
+itself and breaking down all obstacles. Without doubt Strauss had a
+programme in his mind, but he said to me himself: "You have no need to
+read it. It is enough to know that the hero is there fighting against
+his enemies." I do not know how far that is true, or if parts of the
+symphony would not be rather obscure to anyone who followed it without
+the text; but this speech seems to prove that he has understood the
+dangers of the literary symphony, and that he is striving for pure
+music.
+
+[Footnote 179: Finished in December, 1898. Performed for the first time
+at Frankfort-On-Main on 3 March, 1899. Published by Leuckart, Leipzig.]
+
+_Heldenleben_ is divided into six chapters: The Hero, The Hero's
+Adversaries, The Hero's Companion, The Field of Battle, The Peaceful
+Labours of the Hero, The Hero's Retirement from the World, and the
+Achievement of His Ideal. It is an extraordinary work, drunken with
+heroism, colossal, half barbaric, trivial, and sublime. An Homeric hero
+struggles among the sneers of a stupid crowd, a herd of brawling and
+hobbling ninnies. A violin solo, in a sort of concerto, describes the
+seductions, the coquetry, and the degraded wickedness of woman. Then
+strident trumpet-blasts sound the attack; and it is beyond me to give an
+idea of the terrible charge of cavalry that follows, which makes the
+earth tremble and our hearts leap; nor can I describe how an iron
+determination leads to the storming of towns, and all the tumultuous din
+and uproar of battle--the most splendid battle that has ever been
+painted in music. At its first performance in Germany I saw people
+tremble as they listened to it, and some rose up suddenly and made
+violent gestures quite unconsciously. I myself had a strange feeling of
+giddiness, as if an ocean had been upheaved, and I thought that for the
+first time for thirty years Germany had found a poet of Victory.
+
+_Heldenleben_ would be in every way one of the masterpieces of musical
+composition if a literary error had not suddenly cut short the soaring
+flight of its most impassioned pages, at the supreme point of interest
+in the movement, in order to follow the programme; though, besides this,
+a certain coldness, perhaps weariness, creeps in towards the end. The
+victorious hero perceives that he has conquered in vain: the baseness
+and stupidity of men have remained unaltered. He stifles his anger, and
+scornfully accepts the situation. Then he seeks refuge in the peace of
+Nature. The creative force within him flows out in imaginative works;
+and here Richard Strauss, with a daring warranted only by his genius,
+represents these works by reminiscences of his own compositions, and
+_Don Juan, Macbeth, Tod und Verklaerung, Till, Zarathustra, Don Quixote,
+Guntram_, and even his _Lieder_, associate themselves with the hero
+whose story he is telling. At times a storm will remind this hero of his
+combats; but he also remembers his moments of love and happiness, and
+his soul is quieted. Then the music unfolds itself serenely, and rises
+with calm strength to the closing chord of triumph, which is placed like
+a crown of glory on the hero's head.
+
+There is no doubt that Beethoven's ideas have often inspired,
+stimulated, and guided Strauss's own ideas. One feels an indescribable
+reflection of the first _Heroic_ and of the _Ode to Joy_ in the key of
+the first part (E flat); and the last part recalls, even more forcibly,
+certain of Beethoven's _Lieder_. But the heroes of the two composers are
+very different: Beethoven's hero is more classical and more rebellious;
+and Strauss's hero is more concerned with the exterior world and his
+enemies, his conquests are achieved with greater difficulty, and his
+triumph is wilder in consequence. If that good Oulibicheff pretends to
+see the burning of Moscow in a discord in the first _Heroic_, what would
+he find here? What scenes of burning towns, what battlefields! Besides
+that there is cutting scorn and a mischievous laughter in _Heldenleben_
+that is never heard in Beethoven. There is, in fact, little kindness in
+Strauss's work; it is the work of a disdainful hero.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In considering Strauss's music as a whole, one is at first struck by the
+diversity of his style. The North and the South mingle; and in his
+melodies one feels the attraction of the sun. Something Italian had
+crept into _Tristan_; but how much more of Italy there is in the work of
+this disciple of Nietzsche. The phrases are often Italian and their
+harmonies ultra-Germanic. Perhaps one of the greatest charms of
+Strauss's art is that we are able to watch the rent in the dark clouds
+of German polyphony, and see shining through it the smiling line of an
+Italian coast and the gay dancers on its shore. This is not merely a
+vague analogy. It would be easy, if idle, to notice unmistakable
+reminiscences of France and Italy even in Strauss's most advanced works,
+such as _Zarathustra_ and _Heldenleben_. Mendelssohn, Gounod, Wagner,
+Rossini, and Mascagni elbow one another strangely. But these disparate
+elements have a softer outline when the work is taken as a whole, for
+they have been absorbed and controlled by the composer's imagination.
+
+His orchestra is not less composite. It is not a compact and serried
+mass like Wagner's Macedonian phalanxes; it is parcelled out and as
+divided as possible. Each part aims at independence and works as it
+thinks best, without apparently troubling about the other parts.
+Sometimes it seems, as it did when reading Berlioz, that the execution
+must result in incoherence, and weaken the effect. But somehow the
+result is very satisfying. "Now doesn't that sound well?" said Strauss
+to me with a smile, just after he had finished conducting
+_Heldenleben_.[180]
+
+[Footnote 180: The composition of the orchestra in Strauss's later works
+is as follows: In _Zarathustra_: one piccolo, three flutes, three oboes,
+one English horn, one clarinet in E flat, two clarinets in B, one
+bass-clarinet in B, three bassoons, one double-bassoon, six horns in F,
+four trumpets in C, three trombones, three bass-tuba, kettledrums, big
+drum, cymbals, triangle, chime of bells, bell in E, organ, two harps,
+and strings. In _Heldenleben_: eight horns instead of six, five trumpets
+instead of four (two in E flat, three in B); and, in addition, military
+drums.]
+
+But it is especially in Strauss's subjects that caprice and a disordered
+imagination, the enemy of all reason, seem to reign. We have seen that
+these poems try to express in turn, or even simultaneously, literary
+texts, pictures, anecdotes, philosophical ideas, and the personal
+sentiments of the composer. What unity is there in the adventures of Don
+Quixote or Till Eulenspiegel? And yet unity is there, not in the
+subjects, but in the mind that deals with them. And these descriptive
+symphonies with their very diffuse literary life are vindicated by their
+musical life, which is much more logical and concentrated. The caprices
+of the poet are held in rein by the musician. The whimsical Till
+disports himself "after the old form of rondeau," and the folly of Don
+Quixote is told in "ten variations on a chivalrous theme, with an
+introduction and finale." In this way, Strauss's art, one of the most
+literary and descriptive in existence, is strongly distinguished from
+others of the same kind by the solidarity of its musical fabric, in
+which one feels the true musician--a musician brought up on the great
+masters, and a classic in spite of everything.
+
+And so throughout that music a strong unity is felt among the unruly and
+often incongruous elements. It is the reflection, so it seems to me, of
+the soul of the composer. Its unity is not a matter of what he feels,
+but a matter of what he wishes. His emotion is much less interesting to
+him than his will, and it is less intense, and often quite devoid of any
+personal character. His restlessness seems to come from Schumann, his
+religious feeling from Mendelssohn, his voluptuousness from Gounod or
+the Italian masters, his passion from Wagner.[181] But his will is
+heroic, dominating, eager, and powerful to a sublime degree. And that is
+why Richard Strauss is noble and, at present, quite unique. One feels in
+him a force that has dominion over men.
+
+[Footnote 181: In _Guntram_ one could even believe that he had made up
+his mind to use a phrase in _Tristan_, as if he could not find anything
+better to express passionate desire.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is through this heroic side that he may be considered as an inheritor
+of some of Beethoven's and Wagner's thought. It is this heroic side
+which makes him a poet--one of the greatest perhaps in modern Germany,
+who sees herself reflected in him and in his hero. Let us consider this
+hero.
+
+He is an idealist with unbounded faith in the power of the mind and the
+liberating virtue of art. This idealism is at first religious, as in
+_Tod und Verklaerung_, and tender and compassionate as a woman, and full
+of youthful illusions, as in _Guntram_. Then it becomes vexed and
+indignant with the baseness of the world and the difficulties it
+encounters. Its scorn increases, and becomes sarcastic _(Till
+Eulenspiegel)_; it is exasperated with years of conflict, and, in
+increasing bitterness, develops into a contemptuous heroism. How
+Strauss's laugh whips and stings us in _Zarathustra_! How his will
+bruises and cuts us in _Heldenleben_! Now that he has proved his power
+by victory, his pride knows no limit; he is elated and is unable to see
+that his lofty visions have become realities. But the people whose
+spirit he reflects see it. There are germs of morbidity in Germany
+to-day, a frenzy of pride, a belief in self, and a scorn for others that
+recalls France in the seventeenth century. "_Dem Deutschen gehoert die
+Welt_" ("Germany possesses the world") calmly say the prints displayed
+in the shop windows in Berlin. But when one arrives at this point the
+mind becomes delirious. All genius is raving mad if it comes to that;
+but Beethoven's madness concentrated itself in himself, and imagined
+things for his own enjoyment. The genius of many contemporary German
+artists is an aggressive thing, and is characterised by its destructive
+antagonism. The idealist who "possesses the world" is liable to
+dizziness. He was made to rule over an interior world. The splendour of
+the exterior images that he is called upon to govern dazzles him; and,
+like Caesar, he goes astray. Germany had hardly attained the position of
+empire of the world when she found Nietzsche's voice and that of the
+deluded artists of the _Deutsches Theater_ and the _Secession_. Now
+there is the grandiose music of Richard Strauss.
+
+What is all this fury leading to? What does this heroism aspire to? This
+force of will, bitter and strained, grows faint when it has reached its
+goal, or even before that. It does not know what to do with its victory.
+It disdains it, does not believe in it, or grows tired of it.[182]
+
+[Footnote 182: "The German spirit, which but a little while back had the
+will to dominate Europe, the force to govern Europe, has finally made up
+its mind to abandon it."--Nietzsche.]
+
+Like Michelangelo's _Victory_, it has set its knee on the captive's
+back, and seems ready to despatch him. But suddenly it stops, hesitates,
+and looks about with uncertain eyes, and its expression is one of
+languid disgust, as though weariness had seized it.
+
+And this is how the work of Richard Strauss appears to me up to the
+present. Guntram kills Duke Robert, and immediately lets fall his sword.
+The frenzied laugh of Zarathustra ends in an avowal of discouraged
+impotence. The delirious passion of Don Juan dies away in nothingness.
+Don Quixote when dying forswears his illusions. Even the Hero himself
+admits the futility of his work, and seeks oblivion in an indifferent
+Nature. Nietzsche, speaking of the artists of our time, laughs at "those
+Tantaluses of the will, rebels and enemies of laws, who come, broken in
+spirit, and fall at the foot of the cross of Christ." Whether it is for
+the sake of the Cross or Nothingness, these heroes renounce their
+victories in disgust and despair, or with a resignation that is sadder
+still. It was not thus that Beethoven overcame his sorrows. Sad adagios
+make their lament in the middle of his symphonies, but a note of joy and
+triumph is always sounded at the end. His work is the triumph of a
+conquered hero; that of Strauss is the defeat of a conquering hero. This
+irresoluteness of the will can be still more clearly seen in
+contemporary German literature, and in particular in the author of _Die
+versunkene Glocke_. But it is more striking in Strauss, because he is
+more heroic. And so we get all this display of superhuman will, and the
+end is only "My desire is gone!"
+
+In this lies the undying worm of German thought--I am speaking of the
+thought of the choice few who enlighten the present and anticipate the
+future. I see an heroic people, intoxicated by its triumphs, by its
+great riches, by its numbers, by its force, which clasps the world in
+its great arms and subjugates it, and then stops, fatigued by its
+conquest, and asks: "Why have I conquered?"
+
+
+
+
+HUGO WOLF
+
+
+The more one learns of the history of great artists, the more one is
+struck by the immense amount of sadness their lives enclose. Not only
+are they subjected to the trials and disappointments of ordinary
+life--which affect them more cruelly through their greater
+sensitiveness--but their surroundings are like a desert, because they
+are twenty, thirty, fifty, or even hundreds of years in advance of their
+contemporaries; and they are often condemned to despairing efforts, not
+to conquer the world, but to live.
+
+These highly-strung natures are rarely able to keep up this incessant
+struggle for very long; and the finest genius may have to reckon with
+illness and misery and even premature death. And yet there were people
+like Mozart and Schumann and Weber who were happy in spite of
+everything, because they had been able to keep their soul's health and
+the joy of creation until the end; and though their bodies were worn out
+with fatigue and privation, a light was kept burning which sent its rays
+far into the darkness of their night. There are worse destinies; and
+Beethoven, though he was poor, shut up within himself, and deceived in
+his affections, was far from being the most unhappy of men. In his case,
+he possessed nothing but himself; but he possessed himself truly, and
+reigned over the world that was within him; and no other empire could
+ever be compared with that of his vast imagination, which stretched like
+a great expanse of sky, where tempests raged. Until his last day the old
+Prometheus in him, though fettered by a miserable body, preserved his
+iron force unbroken. When dying during a storm, his last gesture was one
+of revolt; and in his agony he raised himself on his bed and shook his
+fist at the sky. And so he fell, struck down by a single blow in the
+thick of the fight.
+
+But what shall be said of those who die little by little, who outlive
+themselves, and watch the slow decay of their souls?
+
+Such was the fate of Hugo Wolf, whose tragic destiny has assured him a
+place apart in the hell of great musicians.[183]
+
+[Footnote 183: A large number of works on Hugo Wolf have been published
+in Germany since his death. The chief is the great biography of Herr
+Ernst Decsey--_Hugo Wolf_ (Berlin, 1903-4). I have found this book of
+great service; it is a work full of knowledge and sympathy. I have also
+consulted Herr Paul Mueller's excellent little pamphlet, _Hugo Wolf
+(Moderne essays_, Berlin, 1904), and the collections of Wolf's letters,
+in particular his letters to Oskar Grohe, Emil Kaufmann, and Hugo
+Faisst.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He was born at Windischgratz in Styria, 13 March, 1860. He was the
+fourth son of a currier--a currier-musician, like old Veit Bach, the
+baker-musician, and Haydn's father, the wheelwright-musician. Philipp
+Wolf played the violin, the guitar, and the piano, and used to have
+little quintet parties at his house, in which he played the first
+violin, Hugo the second violin, Hugo's brother the violoncello, an uncle
+the horn, and a friend the tenor violin. The musical taste of the
+country was not properly German. Wolf was a Catholic; and his taste was
+not formed, like that of most German musicians, by books of chorales.
+Besides that, in Styria they were fond of playing the old Italian operas
+of Rossini, Bellini, and Donizetti. Later on, Wolf used to like to think
+that he had a few drops of Latin blood in his veins; and all his life he
+had a predilection for the great French musicians.
+
+His term of apprenticeship was not marked by anything brilliant. He went
+from one school to another without being kept long anywhere. And yet he
+was not a worthless lad; but he was always very reserved, little caring
+to be intimate with others, and passionately devoted to music. His
+father naturally did not want him to take up music as a profession; and
+he had the same struggles that Berlioz had. Finally he succeeded in
+getting permission from his family to go to Vienna, and he entered the
+Conservatoire there in 1875. But he was not any the happier for it, and
+at the end of two years he was sent away for being unruly.
+
+What was to be done? His family was ruined, for a fire had demolished
+their little possessions. He felt the silent reproaches of his father
+already weighing upon him--for he loved his father dearly, and
+remembered the sacrifices he had made for him. He did not wish to return
+to his own province; indeed he could not return--that would have been
+death. It was necessary that this boy of seventeen should find some
+means of earning a livelihood and be able to instruct himself at the
+same time. After his expulsion from the Conservatoire he attended no
+other school; he taught himself. And he taught himself wonderfully; but
+at what a cost! The suffering he went through from that time until he
+was thirty, the enormous amount of energy he had to expend in order to
+live and cultivate the fine spirit of poetry that was within him--all
+this effort and toil was, without doubt, the cause of his unhappy death.
+He had a burning thirst for knowledge and a fever for work which made
+him sometimes forget the necessity for eating and drinking.
+
+He had a great admiration for Goethe, and was infatuated by Heinrich von
+Kleist, whom he rather resembles both in his gifts and in his life; he
+was an enthusiast about Grillparzer and Hebbel at a time when they were
+but little appreciated; and he was one of the first Germans to discover
+the worth of Moerike, whom, later on, he made popular in Germany. Besides
+this, he read English and French writers. He liked Rabelais, and was
+very partial to Claude Tillier, the French novelist of the provinces,
+whose _Oncle Benjamin_ has given pleasure to so many German provincial
+families, by bringing before them, as Wolf said, the vision of their own
+little world, and helping them by his own jovial good humour to bear
+their troubles with a smiling face. And so little Wolf, with hardly
+enough to eat, found the means of learning both French and English, in
+order better to appreciate the thoughts of foreign artists.
+
+In music he learned a great deal from his friend Schalk,[184] a
+professor at the Vienna Conservatoire; but, like Berlioz, he got most of
+his education from the libraries, and spent months in reading the scores
+of the great masters. Not having a piano, he used to carry Beethoven's
+sonatas to the Prater Park in Vienna and study them on a bench in the
+open air. He soaked himself in the classics--in Bach and Beethoven, and
+the German masters of the _Lied_--Schubert and Schumann. He was one of
+the young Germans who was passionately fond of Berlioz; and it is due to
+Wolf that France was afterwards honoured in the possession of this great
+artist, whom French critics, whether of the school of Meyerbeer, Wagner,
+Franck, or Debussy, have never understood. He was also early a friend of
+old Anton Bruckner, whose music we do not know in France, neither his
+eight symphonies, nor his _Te Deum_, nor his masses, nor his cantatas,
+nor anything else of his fertile work. Bruckner had a sweet and modest
+character, and an endearing, if rather childish, personality. He was
+rather crushed all his life by the Brahms party; but, like Franck in
+France, he gathered round him new and original talent to fight the
+academic art of his time.
+
+[Footnote 184: Joseph Schalk was one of the founders of the
+_Wagner-Verein_ at Vienna, and devoted his life to propagating the cult
+of Bruckner (who called him his "_Herr Generalissimus_ "), and to
+fighting for Wolf.]
+
+But of all these influences, the strongest was that of Wagner. Wagner
+came to Vienna in 1875 to conduct _Tannhaeuser_ and _Lohengrin_. There
+was then among the younger people a fever of enthusiasm similar to that
+which _Werther_ had caused a century before. Wolf saw Wagner. He tells
+us about it in his letters to his parents. I will quote his own words,
+and though they make one smile, one loves the impulsive devotion of his
+youth; and they make one feel, too, that a man who inspires such an
+affection, and who can do so much good by a little sympathy, is to blame
+when he does not befriend others--above all if he has suffered, like
+Wagner, from loneliness and the want of a helping hand. You must
+remember that this letter was written by a boy of fifteen.
+
+ "I have been to--guess whom?... to the master, Richard Wagner! Now
+ I will tell you all about it, just as it happened. I will copy the
+ words down exactly as I wrote them in my note-book.
+
+ "On Thursday, 9 December, at half-past ten, I saw Richard Wagner
+ for the second time at the Hotel Imperial, where I stayed for half
+ an hour on the staircase, awaiting his arrival (I knew that on that
+ day he would conduct the last rehearsal of his _Lohengrin_). At
+ last the master came down from the second floor, and I bowed to him
+ very respectfully while he was yet some distance from me. He
+ thanked me in a very friendly way. As he neared the door I sprang
+ forward and opened it for him, upon which he looked fixedly at me
+ for a few seconds, and then went on his way to the rehearsal at
+ the Opera. I ran as fast as I could, and arrived at the Opera
+ sooner than Richard Wagner did in his cab. I bowed to him again,
+ and I wanted to open the door of his cab for him; but as I could
+ not get it open, the coachman jumped down from his seat and did it
+ for me. Wagner said something to the coachman--I think it was about
+ me. I wanted to follow him into the theatre, but they would not let
+ me pass.
+
+ "I often used to wait for him at the Hotel Imperial; and on this
+ occasion I made the acquaintance of the manager of the hotel, who
+ promised that he would interest himself on my behalf. Who was more
+ delighted than I when he told me that on the following Saturday
+ afternoon, 11 December, I was to come and find him, so that he
+ could introduce me to Mme. Cosima's maid and Richard Wagner's
+ valet! I arrived at the appointed hour. The visit to the lady's
+ maid was very short. I was advised to come the following day,
+ Sunday, 12 December, at two o'clock. I arrived at the right hour,
+ but found the maid and the valet and the manager still at table....
+ Then I went with the maid to the master's rooms, where I waited for
+ about a quarter of an hour until he came. At last Wagner appeared
+ in company with Cosima and Goldmark. I bowed to Cosima very
+ respectfully, but she evidently did not think it worth while to
+ honour me with a single glance. Wagner was going into his room
+ without paying any attention to me, when the maid said to him in a
+ beseeching voice: 'Ah, Herr Wagner, it is a young musician who
+ wishes to speak to you; he has been waiting for you a long time.'
+
+ "He then came out of his room, looked at me, and said: 'I have seen
+ you before, I think. You are....'
+
+ "Probably he wanted to say, 'You are a fool.'
+
+ "He went in front of me and opened the door of the reception-room,
+ which was furnished in a truly royal style. In the middle of the
+ room was a couch covered in velvet and silk. Wagner himself was
+ wrapped in a long velvet mantle bordered with fur.
+
+ "When I was inside the room he asked me what I wanted."
+
+Here Hugo Wolf, to excite the curiosity of his parents, broke off his
+story and put "To be continued in my next." In his next letter he
+continues:
+
+ "I said to him: 'Highly honoured master, for a long time I have
+ wanted to hear an opinion on my compositions, and it would be....'
+
+ "Here the master interrupted me and said: 'My dear child, I cannot
+ give you an opinion of your compositions; I have far too little
+ time; I can't even get my own letters written. I understand nothing
+ at all about music _(Ich verstehe gar nichts von der Musik_).'
+
+ "I asked the master whether I should ever be able really to do
+ anything, and he said to me: 'When I was your age and composing
+ music, no one could tell me then whether I should ever do anything
+ great. You could at most play me your compositions on the piano;
+ but I have no time to hear them. When you are older, and when you
+ have composed bigger works, and if by chance I return to Vienna,
+ you shall show me what you have done. But that is no use now; I
+ cannot give you an opinion of them yet.'
+
+ "When I told the master that I took the classics as models, he
+ said: 'Good, good. One can't be original at first.' And he laughed,
+ and then said, 'I wish you, dear friend, much happiness in your
+ career. Go on working steadily, and if I come back to Vienna, show
+ me your compositions.'
+
+ "Upon that I left the master, profoundly moved and impressed."
+
+Wolf and Wagner did not see each other again. But Wolf fought
+unceasingly on Wagner's behalf. He went several times to Bayreuth,
+though he had no personal intercourse with the Wagner family; but he met
+Liszt, who, with his usual goodness, wrote him a kind letter about a
+composition that he had sent him, and showed him what alterations to
+make in it.
+
+Mottl and the composer, Adalbert de Goldschmidt, were the first friends
+to aid him in his years of misery, by finding him some music pupils. He
+taught music to little children of seven and eight years old; but he was
+a poor teacher, and found giving lessons was a martyrdom. The money he
+earned hardly served to feed him, and he only ate once a day--Heaven
+knows how. To comfort himself he read Hebbel's Life; and for a time he
+thought of going to America. In 1881 Goldschmidt got him the post of
+second _Kapellmeister_ at the Salzburg theatre. It was his business to
+rehearse the choruses for the operettas of Strauss and Milloecker. He did
+his work conscientiously, but in deadly weariness; and he lacked the
+necessary power of making his authority felt. He did not stay long in
+this post, and came back to Vienna.
+
+Since 1875 he had been writing music: _Lieder_, sonatas, symphonies,
+quartets, etc., and already his _Lieder_ held the most important place.
+He also composed in 1883 a symphonic poem on the _Penthesilea_ of his
+friend Kleist.
+
+In 1884 he succeeded in getting a post as musical critic. But on what a
+paper! It was the _Salonblatt_--a mundane journal filled with articles
+on sport and fashion news. One would have said that this little
+barbarian was put there for a wager. His articles from 1884 to 1887 are
+full of life and humour. He upholds the great classic masters in them:
+Gluck, Mozart, Beethoven, and--Wagner; he defends Berlioz; he scourges
+the modern Italians, whose success at Vienna was simply scandalous; he
+breaks lances for Bruckner, and begins a bold campaign against Brahms.
+It was not that he disliked or had any prejudice against Brahms; he took
+a delight in some of his works, especially his chamber music, but he
+found fault with his symphonies and was shocked by the carelessness of
+the declamation in his _Lieder_ and, in general, could not bear his want
+of originality and power, and found him lacking in joy and fulness of
+life. Above all, he struck at him as being the head of a party that was
+spitefully opposed to Wagner and Bruckner and all innovators. For all
+that was retrograde in music in Vienna, and all that was the enemy of
+liberty and progress in art and criticism, was giving Brahms its
+detestable support by gathering itself about him and spreading his fame
+abroad; and though Brahms was really far above his party as an artist
+and a man, he had not the courage to break away from it.
+
+Brahms read Wolf's articles, but his attacks did not seem to stir his
+apathy. The "Brahmines," however, never forgave Wolf. One of his
+bitterest enemies was Hans von Buelow, who found anti-Brahmism "the
+blasphemy against the Holy Ghost--which shall not be forgiven."[185]
+Some years later, when Wolf succeeded in getting his own compositions
+played, he had to submit to criticisms like that of Max Kalbeck, one of
+the leaders of "Brahmism" at Vienna:
+
+ "Herr Wolf has lately, as a reporter, raised an irresistible laugh
+ in musical circles. So someone suggested he had better devote
+ himself to composition. The last products of his muse show that
+ this well-meant advice was bad. He ought to go back to reporting."
+
+[Footnote 185: Letter of H. von Buelow to Detlev von Liliencron.]
+
+An orchestral society in Vienna gave Wolf's _Penthesilea_ a trial
+reading; and it was rehearsed, in disregard of all good taste, amid
+shouts of laughter. When it was finished, the conductor said:
+"Gentlemen, I ask your pardon for having allowed this piece to be played
+to the end; but I wanted to know what manner of man it is that dares to
+write such things about the master, Brahms."
+
+Wolf got a little respite from his miseries by going to stay a few weeks
+in his own country with his brother-in-law, Strasser, an inspector of
+taxes.[186] He took with him his books, his poets, and began to set them
+to music.
+
+[Footnote 186: Wolf's letters to Strasser are of great value in giving
+us an insight into his artist's eager and unhappy soul.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He was now twenty-seven years old, and had as yet published nothing. The
+years of 1887 and 1888 were the most critical ones of his life. In 1887
+he lost his father whom he loved so much, and that loss, like so many of
+his other misfortunes, gave fresh impulse to his energies. The same
+year, a generous friend called Eckstein published his first collection
+of _Lieder_. Wolf up to that time had been smothered, but this
+publication stirred the life in him, and was the means of unloosing his
+genius. Settled at Perchtoldsdorf, near Vienna, in February, 1888, in
+absolute peace, he wrote in three months fifty-three _Lieder_ to the
+words of Eduard Moerike, the pastor-poet of Swabia, who died in 1875, and
+who, misunderstood and laughed at during his lifetime, is now covered
+with honour, and universally popular in Germany. Wolf composed his
+songs in a state of exalted joy and almost fright at the sudden
+discovery of his creative power.
+
+In a letter to Dr. Heinrich Werner, he says:
+
+ "It is now seven o'clock in the evening, and I am so happy--oh,
+ happier than the happiest of kings. Another new _Lied_! If you
+ could hear what is going on in my heart!... the devil would carry
+ you away with pleasure!...
+
+ "Another two new _Lieder_! There is one that sounds so horribly
+ strange that it frightens me. There is nothing like it in
+ existence. Heaven help the unfortunate people who will one day hear
+ it!...
+
+ "If you could only hear the last _Lied_ I have just composed you
+ would only have one desire left--to die.... Your happy, happy
+ Wolf."
+
+He had hardly finished the _Moerike-Lieder_ when he began a series of
+_Lieder_ on poems of Goethe. In three months (December, 1888, to
+February, 1889) he had written all the _Goethe-Liederbuch_--fifty-one
+_Lieder_, some of which are, like _Prometheus_, big dramatic scenes.
+
+The same year, while still at Perchtoldsdorf, after having published a
+volume of Eichendorff _Lieder_, he became absorbed in a new cycle--the
+_Spanisches-Liederbuch_, on Spanish poems translated by Heyse. He wrote
+these forty-four songs in the same ecstasy of gladness:
+
+ "What I write now, I write for the future.... Since Schubert and
+ Schumann there has been nothing like it!"
+
+In 1890, two months after he had finished the _Spanisches-Liederbuch_,
+he composed another cycle of _Lieder_ on poems called _Alten Weisen_, by
+the great Swiss writer Gottfried Keller. And lastly, in the same year,
+he began his _Italienisches-Liederbuch_, on Italian poems, translated by
+Geibel and Heyse.
+
+And then--then there was silence.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The history of Wolf is one of the most extraordinary in the history of
+art, and gives one a better glimpse of the mysteries of genius than most
+histories do.
+
+Let us make a little _resume_. Wolf at twenty-eight years old had
+written practically nothing. From 1888 to 1890 he wrote, one after
+another, in a kind of fever, fifty-three Moerike _Lieder_, fifty-one
+Goethe _Lieder_, forty-four Spanish _Lieder_, seventeen Eichendorff
+_Lieder_, a dozen Keller _Lieder_, and the first Italian _Lieder_--that
+is about two hundred _Lieder_, each one having its own admirable
+individuality.
+
+And then the music stops. The spring has dried up. Wolf in great anguish
+wrote despairing letters to his friends. To Oskar Grohe, on 2 May, 1891,
+he wrote:
+
+ "I have given up all idea of composing. Heaven knows how things
+ will finish. Pray for my poor soul."
+
+And to Wette, on 13 August, 1891, he says:
+
+ "For the last four months I have been suffering from a sort of
+ mental consumption, which makes me very seriously think of quitting
+ this world for ever.... Only those who truly live should live at
+ all. I have been for some time like one who is dead. I only wish it
+ were an apparent death; but I am really dead and buried; though the
+ power to control my body gives me a seeming life. It is my inmost,
+ my only desire, that the flesh may quickly follow the spirit that
+ has already passed. For the last fifteen days I have been living at
+ Traunkirchen, the pearl of Traunsee.... All the comforts that a man
+ could wish for are here to make my life happy--peace, solitude,
+ beautiful scenery, invigorating air, and everything that could suit
+ the tastes of a hermit like myself.[187] And yet--and yet, my
+ friend, I am the most miserable creature on earth. Everything
+ around me breathes peace and happiness, everything throbs with life
+ and fulfils its functions.... I alone, oh God!... I alone live like
+ a beast that is deaf and senseless. Even reading hardly serves to
+ distract me now, though I bury myself in books in my despair. As
+ for composition, that is finished; I can no longer bring to mind
+ the meaning of a harmony or a melody, and I almost begin to doubt
+ if the compositions that bear my name are really mine. Good God!
+ what is the use of all this fame? What is the good of these great
+ aims if misery is all that lies at the end of it?...
+
+ "_Heaven gives a man complete genius or no genius at all. Hell has
+ given me everything by halves_.
+
+ "O unhappy man, how true, how true it is! In the flower of your
+ life you went to hell; into the evil jaws of destiny you threw the
+ delusive present and yourself with it. O Kleist!"
+
+[Footnote 187: Wolf was living there with a friend. He had not a lodging
+of his own until 1896, and that was due to the generosity of his
+friends.]
+
+Suddenly, at Doebling, on 29 November, 1891, the stream of Wolf's genius
+flowed again, and he wrote fifteen Italian _Lieder_, sometimes several
+in one day. In December it stopped again; and this time for five years.
+These Italian melodies show, however, no trace of any effort, nor a
+greater tension of mind than is shown in his preceding works. On the
+contrary, they have the air of being the simplest and most natural work
+that Wolf ever did. But the matter is of no real consequence, for when
+Wolf's genius was not stirring within him he was useless. He wished to
+write thirty-three Italian _Lieder_, but he had to stop after the
+twenty-second, and in 1891 he published one volume only of the
+_Italienisches-Liederbuch_. The second volume was completed in a month,
+five years later, in 1896.
+
+One may imagine the tortures that this solitary man suffered. His only
+happiness was in creation, and he saw his life cease, without any
+apparent cause, for years together, and his genius come and go, and
+return for an instant, and then go again. Each time he must have
+anxiously wondered if it had gone for ever, or how long it would be
+before it came back again. In letters to Kaufmann on 6 August, 1891, and
+26 April, 1893, he says:
+
+ "You ask me for news of my opera.[188] Good Heavens! I should be
+ content if I could write the tiniest little _Liedchen_. And an
+ opera, now?... I firmly believe that it is all over with me.... I
+ could as well speak Chinese as compose anything. It is horrible....
+ What I suffer from this inaction I cannot tell you. I should like
+ to hang myself."
+
+To Hugo Faisst he wrote on 21 June, 1894:
+
+ "You ask me the cause of my great depression of spirit, and would
+ pour balm on my wounds. Ah yes, if you only could! But no herb
+ grows that could cure my sickness; only a god could help me. If you
+ can give me back my inspirations, and wake up the familiar spirit
+ that is asleep in me, and let him possess me anew, I will call you
+ a god and raise altars to your name. My cry is to gods and not to
+ men; the gods alone are fit to pronounce my fate. But however it
+ may end, even if the worst comes, I will bear it--yes, even if no
+ ray of sunshine lightens my life again.... And with that we will,
+ once for all, turn the page and have done with this dark chapter of
+ my life."
+
+[Footnote 188: The writing of an opera was Wolf's great dream and
+intention for many years.]
+
+This letter--and it is not the only one--recalls the melancholy stoicism
+of Beethoven's letters, and shows us sorrows that even the unhappy
+Beethoven did not know. And yet how can we tell? Perhaps Beethoven, too,
+suffered similar anguish in the sad days that followed 1815, before the
+last sonatas, the _Missa Solemnis_, and the Ninth Symphony had awaked to
+life in him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In March, 1895, Wolf lived once more, and in three months had written
+the piano score of _Corregidor_. For many years he had been attracted
+towards the stage, and especially towards light opera. Enthusiast though
+he was for Wagner's work, he had declared openly that it was time for
+musicians to free themselves from the Wagnerian _Musik-Drama_. He knew
+his own gifts, and did not aspire to take Wagner's place. When one of
+his friends offered him a subject for an opera, taken from a legend
+about Buddha, he declined it, saying that the world did not yet
+understand the meaning of Buddha's doctrines, and that he had no wish to
+give humanity a fresh headache. In a letter to Grohe, on 28 June, 1890,
+he says:
+
+ "Wagner has, by and through his art, accomplished such a mighty
+ work of liberation that we may rejoice to think that it is quite
+ useless for us to storm the skies, since he has conquered them for
+ us. It is much wiser to seek out a pleasant nook in this lovely
+ heaven. I want to find a little place there for myself, not in a
+ desert with water and locusts and wild honey, but in a merry
+ company of primitive beings, among the tinkling of guitars, the
+ sighs of love, the moonlight, and such-like--in short, in a quite
+ ordinary _opera-comique_, without any rescuing spectre of
+ Schopenhauerian philosophy in the background."
+
+After having sought the libretto of an opera from the whole world, from
+poets ancient and modern,[189] and after having tried to write one
+himself, he finally took that of Madame Rosa Mayreder, an adaptation of
+a Spanish novelette of Don Pedro de Alarcon. This was _Corregidor_,
+which, after having been refused by other theatres, was played in June,
+1896, at Mannheim. The work was not a success in spite of its musical
+qualities, and the poorness of the libretto helped on its failure.
+
+[Footnote 189: Detlev von Liliencron offered him an American subject.
+"But in spite of my admiration for Buffalo Bill and his unwashed crew,"
+said Wolf sarcastically, "I prefer my native soil and people who
+appreciate the advantages of soap."]
+
+But the main thing was that Wolf's creative genius had returned. In
+April, 1896, he wrote straight away the twenty-two songs of the second
+volume of the _Italienisches-Liederbuch_. At Christmas his friend Mueller
+sent him some of Michelangelo's poems, translated into German by Walter
+Robert-Tornow; and Wolf, deeply moved by their beauty, decided at once
+to devote a whole volume of _Lieder_ to them. In 1897 he composed the
+first three melodies. At the same time he was also working at a new
+opera, _Manuel Venegas_, a poem by Moritz Hoernes, written after the
+style of Alarcon. He seemed full of strength and happiness and
+confidence in his renewed health. Mueller was speaking to him of the
+premature death of Schubert, and Wolf replied, "A man is not taken away
+before he has said all he has to say."
+
+He worked furiously, "like a steam-engine," as he said, and was so
+absorbed in the composition of _Manuel Venegas_ (September, 1897) that
+he went without rest, and had hardly time to take necessary food. In a
+fortnight he had written fifty pages of the pianoforte score, as well as
+the _motifs_ for the whole work, and the music of half the first act.
+
+Then madness came. On 20 September he was seized while he was working at
+the great recitative of Manuel Venegas in the first act.
+
+He was taken to Dr. Svetlin's private hospital in Vienna, and remained
+there until January, 1898. Happily he had devoted friends who took care
+of him and made up for the indifference of the public; for what he had
+earned himself would not have enabled him even to die in peace. When
+Schott, the publisher, sent him in October, 1895, his royalties for the
+editions of his _Lieder_ of Moerike, Goethe, Eichendorff, Keller, Spanish
+poetry, and the first volume of Italian poetry, their total for five
+years came to eighty-six marks and thirty-five pfennigs! And Schott
+calmly added that he had not expected so good a result. So it was Wolf's
+friends, and especially Hugo Faisst, who not only saved him from misery
+by their unobtrusive and often secret generosity, but spared him the
+horror of destitution in his last misfortunes.
+
+He recovered his reason, and was sent in February, 1898, for a voyage to
+Trieste and Venetia to complete his cure and prevent him from thinking
+of work. The precaution was unnecessary; for he says in a letter to Hugo
+Faisst, written in the same month:
+
+ "There is no need for you to trouble yourself or fear that I shall
+ overdo things. A real distaste for work has taken possession of me,
+ and I believe I shall never write another note. My unfinished opera
+ has no more interest for me, and music altogether is hateful. You
+ see what my kind friends have done for me! I cannot think how I
+ shall be able to exist in this state.... Ah, happy Swabians! one
+ may well envy you. Greet your beautiful country for me, and be
+ warmly greeted yourself by your unhappy and worn-out friend, Hugo
+ Wolf."
+
+When he returned to Vienna, however, he seemed to be a little better,
+and had apparently regained his health and cheerfulness. But to his own
+astonishment he had become, as he says in a letter to Faisst, a quiet,
+sedate, and silent man, who wished more and more to be alone. He did not
+compose anything fresh, but revised his Michelangelo _Lieder_, and had
+them published. He made plans for the winter, and rejoiced in the
+thought of passing it in the country near Gmunden, "in perfect quiet,
+undisturbed, and living only for art." In his last letter to Faisst, 17
+September, 1898, he says:
+
+ "I am quite well again now, and have no more need of any cures. You
+ would need them more than I."
+
+Then came a fresh seizure of madness, and this time all was finished.
+
+In the autumn of 1898 Wolf was taken to an asylum at Vienna. At first he
+was able to receive a few visits and to enjoy a little music by playing
+duets with the director of the establishment, who was himself a musician
+and a great admirer of Wolf's works. He was even able in the spring to
+take a few walks out of doors with his friends and an attendant. But he
+was beginning not to recognise things or people or even himself. "Yes,"
+he would say, sighing, "if only I were Hugo Wolf!" From the middle of
+1899 his malady grew rapidly worse, and general paralysis followed. At
+the beginning of 1900 his speech was affected, and, finally, in August,
+1901, all his body. At the beginning of 1902 all hope was given up by
+the doctors; but his heart was still sound, and the unhappy man dragged
+out his life for another year. He died on 16 February, 1903, of
+peripneumonia.
+
+He was given a magnificent funeral, which was attended by all the people
+who had done nothing for him while he was alive. The Austrian State, the
+town of Vienna, his native town Windischgratz, the Conservatoire that
+had expelled him, the _Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde_ who had been so
+long unfriendly to his works, the Opera that had been closed to him, the
+singers that had scorned him, the critics that had scoffed at him--they
+were all there. They sang one of his saddest melodies, _Resignation_, a
+setting of a poem of Eichendorff's, and a chorale by his old friend
+Bruckner, who had died several years before him. His faithful friends,
+Faisst at the head of them, took care to have a monument erected to his
+memory near those of Beethoven and Schubert.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Such was his life, cut short at thirty-seven years of age--for one
+cannot count the five years of complete madness. There are not many
+examples in the art world of so terrible a fate. Nietzsche's misfortune
+is nowhere beside this, for Nietzsche's madness was, to a certain
+extent, productive, and caused his genius to flash out in a way that it
+never would have done if his mind had been balanced and his health
+perfect. Wolf's madness meant prostration. But one may see how, even in
+the space of thirty-seven years, his life was strangely parcelled out.
+For he did not really begin his creative work until he was twenty-seven
+years old; and as from 1890 to 1895 he was condemned to five years'
+silence, the sum total of his real life, his productive life, is only
+four or five years. But in those few years he got more out of life than
+the greater part of artists do in a long career, and in his work he left
+the imprint of a personality that no one could forget after once having
+known it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Wolf's work consists chiefly, as we have already seen, of _Lieder_, and
+these _Lieder_ are characterised by the application to lyrical music of
+principles established by Wagner in the domain of drama. That does not
+mean he imitated Wagner. One finds here and there in Wolf's music
+Wagnerian forms, just as elsewhere there are evident reminiscences of
+Berlioz. It is the inevitable mark of his time, and each great artist in
+his turn contributes his share to the enrichment of the language that
+belongs to us all. But the real Wagnerism of Wolf is not made up of
+these unconscious resemblances; it lies in his determination to make
+poetry the inspiration of music. "To show, above all," he wrote to
+Humperdinck in 1890, "that poetry is the true source of my music."
+
+When a man is both a poet and a musician, like Wagner, it is natural
+that his poetry and music should harmonise perfectly. But when it is a
+matter of translating the soul of other poets into music, special gifts
+of mental subtlety and an abounding sympathy are needed. These gifts
+were possessed by Wolf in a very high degree. No musician has more
+keenly savoured and appreciated the poets. "He was," said one of his
+critics, G. Kuehl, "Germany's greatest psychologist in music since
+Mozart." There was nothing laboured about his psychology. Wolf was
+incapable of setting to music poetry that he did not really love. He
+used to have the poetry he wished to translate read over to him several
+times, or in the evening he would read it aloud to himself. If he felt
+very stirred by it he lived apart with it, and thought about it, and
+soaked himself in its atmosphere; then he went to sleep, and the next
+morning he was able to write the _Lied_ straight away. But some poems
+seemed to sleep in him for years, and then would suddenly awake in him
+in a musical form. On these occasions he would cry out with happiness.
+"Do you know?" he wrote to Mueller, "I simply shouted with joy." Mueller
+said he was like an old hen after it had laid an egg.
+
+Wolf never chose commonplace poems for his music--which is more than can
+be said of Schubert or Schumann. He did not use anything written by
+contemporary poets, although he was in sympathy with some of them, such
+as Liliencron, who hoped very much to be translated into music by him.
+But he could not do it; he could not use anything in the work of a great
+poet unless he became so intimate with it that it seemed to be a part of
+him.
+
+What strikes one also in the _Lieder_ is the importance of the
+pianoforte accompaniment and its independence of the voice. Sometimes
+the voice and the pianoforte express the contrast that so often exists
+between the words and the thought of the poem; at other times they
+express two personalities, as in his setting of Goethe's _Prometheus_,
+where the accompaniment represents Zeus sending out his thunderbolts,
+and the voice interprets Titan; or again, he may depict, as in the
+setting of Eichendorff's _Serenade_, a student in love in the
+accompaniment, while the song is the voice of an old man who is
+listening to it and thinking of his youth. But in whatever he is
+describing, the pianoforte and the voice have always their own
+individuality. You cannot take anything away from his _Lieder_ without
+spoiling the whole; and it is especially so with his instrumental
+passages, which give us the beginning and end of his emotion, and which
+circle round it and sum it up. The musical form, following closely the
+poetic form, is extremely varied. It may sometimes express a fugitive
+thought, a brief record of a poetic impression or some little action, or
+it may be a great epic or dramatic picture. Mueller remarks that Wolf put
+more into a poem than the poet himself--as in the
+_Italienisches-Liederbuch_. It is the worst reproach they can make about
+him, and it is not an ordinary one. Wolf excelled especially in setting
+poems which accorded with his own tragic fate, as if he had some
+presentiment of it. No one has better expressed the anguish of a
+troubled and despairing soul, such as we find in the old harp-player in
+_Wilhelm Meister_, or the splendid nihility of certain poems of
+Michelangelo.
+
+Of all his collections of _Lieder_, the 53 _Gedichte von Eduard Moerike,
+komponiert fuer eine Singstimme und Klavier_ (1888), the first published,
+is the most popular. It gained many friends for Wolf, not so much among
+artists (who are always in the minority) as among those critics who are
+the best and most disinterested of all--the homely, honest people who
+do not make a profession of art, but enjoy it as their spiritual daily
+bread. There are a number of these people in Germany, whose hard lives
+are beautified by their love of music. Wolf found these friends in all
+parts, but he found most of them in Swabia. At Stuttgart, at Mannheim,
+at Darmstadt, and in the country round about these towns he became very
+popular--the only popular musician since Schubert and Schumann. All
+classes of society unite in loving him. "His _Lieder_," says Herr
+Decsey, "are on the pianos of even the poorest houses, by the side of
+Schubert's _Lieder_." Stuttgart became for Wolf, as he said himself, a
+second home. He owes this popularity, which is without parallel in
+Swabia, to the people's passionate love of _Lieder_ and, above all, of
+the poetry of Moerike, the Swabian pastor, who lives again in Wolf's
+songs. Wolf has set to music a quarter of Moerike's poems, he has brought
+Moerike into his own, and given him one of the first places among German
+poets. Such was really his intention, and he said so when he had a
+portrait of Moerike put on the title-page of the songs. Whether the
+reading of his poetry acted as a balm to Wolf's unquiet spirit, or
+whether he became conscious of his genius for the first time when he
+expressed this poetry in music, I do not know; but he felt deep
+gratitude towards it, and wished to show it by beginning the first
+volume with that fine and rather Beethoven-like song, _Der Genesende an
+die Hoffnung_ ("The Convalescent's Ode to Hope").
+
+The fifty-one _Lieder_ of the _Goethe-Liederbuch_ (1888-89) were
+composed in groups of _Lieder_: the _Wilhelm Meister Lieder_, the
+_Divan (Suleika) Lieder_, etc. Wolf even tried to identify himself with
+the poet's line of thought; and in this we often find him in rivalry
+with Schubert. He avoided using the poems in which he thought Schubert
+had exactly conveyed the poet's meaning, as in _Geheimes_ and _An
+Schwager Kronos_; but he told Mueller that there were times when Schubert
+did not understand Goethe at all, because he concerned himself with
+translating their general lyrical thought rather than with showing the
+real nature of Goethe's characters. The peculiar interest of Wolf's
+_Lieder_ is that he gives each poetic figure its individual character.
+The Harpist and Mignon are traced with marvellous insight and restraint;
+and in some passages Wolf shows that he has re-discovered Goethe's art
+of presenting a whole world of sadness in a single word. The serenity of
+a great soul soars over the chaos of passions.
+
+The _Spanisches-Liederbuch nach Heyse und Geibel_ (1889-90) had already
+inspired Schumann, Brahms, Cornelius, and others. But none had tried to
+give it its rough and sensual character. Mueller shows how Schumann,
+especially, robbed the poems of their true nature. Not only did he
+invest them with his own sentimentalism, but he calmly arranged poems of
+the most marked individual character to be sung by four voices, which
+makes them quite absurd; and, worse than this, he changed the words and
+their sense when they stood in his way. Wolf, on the contrary, steeped
+himself in this melancholy and voluptuous world, and would not let
+anything draw him from it; and out of it he produced, as he himself
+said proudly, some masterpieces. The ten religious songs that come at
+the beginning of the collection suggest the delusions of mysticism, and
+weep tears of blood; they are distressing to the ear and mind alike, for
+they are the passionate expression of a faith that puts itself on the
+rack. By the side of them one finds smiling visions of the Holy Family,
+which recall Murillo. The thirty-four folk-songs are brilliant,
+restless, whimsical, and wonderfully varied in form. Each represents a
+different subject, a personality drawn with incisive strokes, and the
+whole collection overflows with life. It is said that the
+_Spanisches-Liederbuch_ is to Wolf's work what _Tristan_ is to Wagner's
+work.
+
+The _Italienisches-Liederbuch_ (1890-96) is quite different. The
+character of the songs is very restrained, and Wolf's genius here
+approached a classic clearness of form. He was always seeking to
+simplify his musical language, and said that if he wrote anything more,
+he wished it to be like Mozart's writings. These _Lieder_ contain
+nothing that is not absolutely essential to their subject; so the
+melodies are very short, and are dramatic rather than lyrical. Wolf gave
+them an important place in his work: "I consider them," he wrote to
+Kaufmann, "the most original and perfect of my compositions."
+
+As for the _Michelangelo Gedichten_ (1897), they were interrupted by the
+outbreak of his malady, and he had only time to write four, of which he
+suppressed one. Their associations are pathetic when one remembers the
+tragic time at which they were composed; and, by a sort of prophetic
+instinct, they exhale heaviness of spirit and mournful pride. The second
+melody is perhaps more beautiful than anything else Wolf wrote; it is
+truly his death-song:
+
+ _Alles endet, was entstehet.
+ Alles, alles rings vergehet_.[190]
+
+And it is a dead man that sings:
+
+ _Menschen waren wir ja auch,
+ Froh und traurig, so wie Ihr.
+ Und nun sind wir leblos hier,
+ Sind nur Erde, wie Ihr sehet_.[191]
+
+At the moment he was writing this song, in the short respite he had from
+his illness, he himself was nearly a dead man.
+
+[Footnote 190:
+
+ All that is begun must end,
+ All around will sometime perish.
+
+[Footnote 191:
+
+ Once we were also men
+ Happy or sad like you;
+ Now life is taken from us,
+ We are only of earth, as you see.
+
+ _Chiunque nasce a morte arriva
+ Nel fuggir del tempo, e'l sole
+ Niuna cosa lascia viva....
+ Come voi, uomini fummo,
+ Lieti e tristi, come siete;
+ E or siam, come vedete,
+ Terra al sol, di vita priva_.
+
+ (Poems of Michelangelo, CXXXVI.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As soon as Wolf was really dead his genius was recognised all over
+Germany. His sufferings provoked an almost excessive reaction in his
+favour. _Hugo-Wolf-Vereine_ were founded everywhere; and to-day we have
+publications, collections of letters, souvenirs, and biographies in
+abundance. It is a case of who can cry loudest that he always understood
+the genius of the unhappy artist, and work himself into the greatest
+fury against his traducers. A little later, and monuments and statues
+will spring up all over.
+
+I doubt if Wolf with his rough, sincere nature would have found much
+consolation in this tardy homage if he could have foreseen it. He would
+have said to his posthumous admirers: "You are hypocrites. It is not for
+me that you raise those statues; it is for yourselves. It is that you
+may make speeches, form committees, and delude yourselves and others
+that you were my friends. Where were you when I had need of you? You let
+me die. Do not play a comedy round my grave. Look rather around you, and
+see if there are not other Wolfs who are struggling against your
+hostility or your indifference. As for me, I have come safe to port."
+
+
+
+
+DON LORENZO PEROSI
+
+
+The winter that held Italian thought in its cold clasp is over, and
+great trees that seemed to be asleep are putting out new life in the
+sun. Yesterday it was poetry that awaked, and to-day it is music--the
+sweet music of Italy, calm in its passion and sadness, and artless in
+its knowledge. Are we really witnessing the return of its spring? Is it
+the incoming of some great tide of melody, which will wash away the
+gloom and doubt of our life to-day? As I was reading the oratorios of
+this young priest of Piedmont, I thought I heard, far away, the song of
+the children of old Greece: "The swallow has come, has come, bringing
+the gay seasons and glad years. Ear ede." I welcome the coming of Don
+Lorenzo Perosi with great hope.
+
+[Illustration: greek207]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The abbe Perosi, the precentor of St. Mark's chapel at Venice and the
+director of the Sistine chapel, is twenty-six years old.[192] He is
+short in stature and of youthful appearance, with a head a little too
+big for his body, and open and regular features lighted up by
+intelligent black eyes, his only peculiarity being a projecting
+underlip.
+
+[Footnote 192: This article was written in 1899, on the occasion of
+Lorenzo Perosi's coming to Paris to direct his oratorio _La
+Resurrection_.] He is simple-hearted and modest, and has a friendly
+warmth of affection. When he is conducting the orchestra his striking
+silhouette, his slow and awkward gestures in expressive passages, and
+his naive movements of passion at dramatic moments, bring to mind one of
+Fra Angelico's monks.
+
+For the last eighteen months Don Perosi has been working at a cycle of
+twelve oratorios descriptive of the life of Christ. In this short time
+he has finished four: _The Passion_, _The Transfiguration_, _The
+Resurrection of Lazarus_, _The Resurrection of Christ_. Now he is at
+work on the fifth--_The Nativity_.
+
+These compositions alone place him in the front rank of contemporary
+musicians. They abound in faults; but their qualities are so rare, and
+his soul shines so clearly through them, and such fine sincerity
+breathes in them, that I have not the courage to dwell on their
+weaknesses. So I shall content myself with remarking, in passing, that
+the orchestration is inadequate and awkward, and that the young musician
+should strive to make it fuller and more delicate; and though he shows
+great ease in composition, he is often too impetuous, and should resist
+this tendency; and that, lastly, there are sometimes traces of bad taste
+in the music and reminiscences of the classics--all of which are the
+sins of youth, which age will certainly cure.
+
+Each of the oratorios is really a descriptive mass, which from beginning
+to end traces out one dominating thought. Don Perosi said to me: "The
+mistake of artists to-day is that they attach themselves too much to
+details and neglect the whole. They begin by carving ornaments, and
+forget that the most important thing is the unity of their work, its
+plan and general outline. The outline must first of all be beautiful."
+
+In his own musical architecture one finds well-marked airs, numerous
+recitatives, Gregorian or Palestrinian choruses, chorales with
+developments and variations in the old style, and intervening symphonies
+of some importance.
+
+The whole work is to be preceded by a grand prelude, very carefully
+worked out, to which Don Perosi attaches particular worth. He wishes, he
+says, that his building shall have a beautiful door elaborately carved
+after the fashion of the artists of the Renaissance and Gothic times.
+And so he means to compose the prelude after the rest of the oratorio is
+finished, when he is able to think about it in undisturbed peace. He
+wishes to concentrate a moral atmosphere in it, the very essence of the
+soul and passions of his sacred drama. He also confided to me that of
+all he has yet composed there is nothing he likes better than the
+introductions to _The Transfiguration_ and _The Resurrection of Christ_.
+
+The dramatic tendency of these oratorios is very marked, and it is
+chiefly on that account that they have conquered Italy. In spite of some
+passages which have strayed a little in the direction of opera, or even
+melodrama, the music shows great depth of feeling. The figures of the
+women especially are drawn with delicacy; and in the second part of
+_Lazarus_, Mary's air, "Lord, if Thou hadst been here, my brother had
+not died," recalls something of Gluck's _Orfeo_ in its heart-broken
+sadness. And again, in the same oratorio, when Jesus gives the order to
+raise the stone from the tomb, Martha's speech, "Domine, jam foetet," is
+very expressive of her sadness, fear, and shame, and human horror. I
+should like to quote one more passage, the most moving of all, which is
+found in the _Resurrection of Christ_, when Mary Magdalene is beside the
+tomb of Christ; here, in her speech with the angels, in her touching
+lamentation, and in the words of the Evangelist, "And when she had thus
+said, she turned herself back, and saw Jesus standing, and knew not that
+it was Jesus," we hear a melody filled with tenderness, and seem to see
+Christ's eyes shining as they rest on Mary before she has recognised
+Him.
+
+It is not, however, Perosi's dramatic genius that strikes me in his
+work; it is rather his peculiar mournfulness, which is indescribable,
+his gift of pure poetry, and the richness of his flowing melody. However
+deep the religious feeling in the music may be, the music itself is
+often stronger still, and breaks in upon the drama that it may express
+itself freely. Take, for instance, the fine symphonic passage that
+follows the arrival of Jesus and His friends at Martha and Mary's house,
+after the death of their brother (p. 12 _et seq._ of _Lazarus_). It is
+true the orchestra expresses regrets and sighs, the excesses of sorrow
+mingled with words of consolation and faith, in a sort of languishing
+funeral march that is feminine and Christian in character. This,
+according to the composer, is a picture he has painted of the persons in
+the drama before he makes them speak. But, in spite of himself, the
+result is a flood of pure music, and his soul sings its own song of joy
+and sadness. Sometimes his spirit, in its naive and delicate charm,
+recalls that of Mozart; but his musical visions are always dominated and
+directed by a religious strength like that of Bach. Even the portions
+where the dramatic feeling is strongest are really little symphonies,
+such as the music that describes the miracle in _The Transfiguration_,
+and the illness of Lazarus. In the latter great depth of suffering is
+expressed; indeed, sadness could not have been carried farther even by
+Bach, and the same serenity of mind runs through its despair.
+
+But what joy there is when these deeds of faith have been
+performed--when Jesus has cured the possessed man, or when Lazarus has
+opened his eyes to the light. The heart of the multitude overflows
+perhaps in rather childish thanksgiving; and at first it seemed to me
+expressed in a commonplace way. But did not the joy of all great artists
+so express itself?--the joy of Beethoven, Mozart, and Bach, who, when
+once they had thrown their cares aside, knew how to amuse themselves
+like the rest of the populace. And the simple phrase at the beginning
+soon assumes fuller proportions, the harmonies gain in richness, a
+glowing ardour fills the music, and a chorale blends with the dances in
+triumphant majesty.
+
+All these works are radiant with a happy ease of expression. _The
+Passion_ was finished in September, 1897, _The Transfiguration_ in
+February, 1898. _Lazarus_ in June, 1898, and _The Resurrection of
+Christ_ in November, 1898. Such an output of work takes us back to
+eighteenth-century musicians.
+
+But this is not the only resemblance between the young musician and his
+predecessors. Much of their soul has passed into his. His style is made
+up of all styles, and ranges from the Gregorian chant to the most modern
+modulations. All available materials are used in this work. This is an
+Italian characteristic. Gabriel d'Annunzio threw into his melting-pot
+the Renaissance, the Italian painters, music, the writers of the North,
+Tolstoy, Dostoievsky, Maeterlinck, and our French writers, and out of it
+he drew his wonderful poems. So Don Perosi, in his compositions, welds
+together the Gregorian chant, the musical style of the contrapuntists of
+the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, Palestrina, Roland, Gabrieli,
+Carissimi, Schuetz, Bach, Haendel, Gounod, Wagner--I was going to say
+Cesar Franck, but Don Perosi told me that he hardly knew this composer
+at all, though his style bears some resemblance to Franck's.
+
+Time does not exist for Don Perosi. When he courteously wished to praise
+French musicians, the first name he chose--as if it were that of a
+contemporary--was that of Josquin, and then that of Roland de Lassus,
+who seems to him so great and profound a musician that he admires him
+most of all. And Don Perosi's universality of style is a trait that is
+Catholic as well as Italian. He expresses his mind quite clearly on the
+subject. "Great artists formerly," he says, "were more eclectic than
+ourselves, and less fettered by their nationalities. Josquin's school
+has peopled all Europe. Roland has lived in Flanders, in Italy, and in
+Germany. With them the same style expressed the same thought everywhere.
+We must do as they did. We must try to recreate a universal art in which
+the resources of all countries and all times are blended."
+
+As a matter of fact, I do not think this is quite correct. I rather
+doubt if Josquin and Roland were eclectic at all; for they did not
+really combine the styles of different countries, but thrust upon other
+countries the style that the Franco-Flemish school had just created, a
+style which they themselves were enriching daily. But Don Perosi's idea
+deserves our appreciation, and one must praise his endeavour to create a
+universal style. It would be a good thing for music if eclecticism, thus
+understood, could bring back some of the equilibrium that has been lost
+since Wagner's death; it would be a benefit to the human spirit, which
+might then find in the unity of art a powerful means of bringing about
+the unity of mind. Our aim should be to efface the differences of race
+in art, so that it may become a tongue common to all peoples, where the
+most opposite ideas may be reconciled. We should all join in working to
+build the cathedral of European art. And the place of the director of
+the Sistine chapel among the first builders is very plain.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Don Perosi sat down to the piano and played me the _Te Deum_ of _The
+Nativity_, which he had written the day before. He played very sweetly,
+with youthful gaiety, and sang the choral parts in an undertone. Every
+now and then he would look at me, not for praise, but to see if we were
+sharing the same thoughts. He would look me well in the face with his
+quiet eyes, then turn back to his score, and then look at me again. And
+I felt a comforting calm radiating from him and his music, from its
+happy harmony and the full and rhythmic serenity of its spirit. And how
+pleasant it was after the tempests and convulsions of art in these later
+days. Can we not tear ourselves away from that romantic suffering in
+music which was begun by Beethoven? After a century of battles, of
+revolutions, and of political and social strife, whose pain has found
+its reflection in art, let us begin to build a new city of art, where
+men may gather together in brotherly love for the same ideal. However
+Utopian that hope may sound now, let us think of it as a symptom of new
+directions of thought, and let us hope that Don Perosi may be one of
+those who will bring into music that divine peace, that peace which
+Beethoven craved for in despair at the end of his _Missa Solemnis_, that
+joy that he sang about but never knew.
+
+
+
+
+FRENCH AND GERMAN MUSIC
+
+
+In May, 1905, the first musical festival of Alsace-Lorraine took place
+at Strasburg. It was an important artistic event, and meant the bringing
+together of two civilisations that for centuries had been at variance on
+the soil of Alsace, more anxious for dispute than for mutual
+understanding.
+
+The official programme of the _fetes musicales_ laid stress on the
+reconciliatory purpose of its organisers, and I quote these words from
+the programme book, drawn up by Dr. Max Bendiner, of Strasburg:
+
+ "Music may achieve the highest of all missions: she may be a bond
+ between nations, races, and states, who are strangers to one
+ another in many ways; she may unite what is disunited, and bring
+ peace to what is hostile.... No country is more suited for her
+ friendly aid than Alsace-Lorraine, that old meeting-place of
+ people, where from time immemorial the North and South have
+ exchanged their material and their spiritual wealth; and no place
+ is readier to welcome her than Strasburg, an old town built by the
+ Romans, which has remained to this day a centre of spiritual life.
+ All great intellectual currents have left their mark on the people
+ of Alsace-Lorraine; and so they have been destined to play the part
+ of mediator between different times and different peoples; and the
+ East and the West, the past and the present, meet here and join
+ hands. In such festivals as this, it is not a matter of gaining
+ aesthetic victories; it is a matter of bringing together all that
+ is great and noble and eternal in the art of different times and
+ different nations."
+
+It was a splendid ambition for Alsace--the eternal field of battle--to
+wish to inaugurate these European Olympian games. But in spite of good
+intentions, this meeting of nations resulted in a fight, on musical
+ground, between two civilisations and two arts--French art and German
+art. For these two arts represent to-day all that is truly alive in
+European music.
+
+Such jousts are very stirring, and may be of great service to all
+combatants. But, unhappily, France was very indifferent in the matter.
+It was the duty of our musicians and critics to attend an international
+encounter like this, and to see that the conditions of the combat were
+fair. By that I mean our art should be represented as it ought to be, so
+that we may learn something from the result. But the French public does
+nothing at such a time; it remains absorbed in its concerts at Paris,
+where everyone knows everyone else so well that they are not able and do
+not dare to criticise freely. And so our art is withering away in an
+atmosphere of coteries, instead of seeking the open air and enjoying a
+vigorous fight with foreign art. For the majority of our critics would
+rather deny the existence of foreign art than try to understand it.
+Never have I regretted their indifference more than I did at the
+Strasburg festival, where, in spite of the unfavourable conditions in
+which French art was represented through our own carelessness, I
+realised what its force might have been if we had been interested
+spectators in the fight.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Perfect eclecticism had been exercised in the making up of the
+programme. One found mixed together the names of Mozart, Wagner, and
+Brahms; Cesar Franck and Gustave Charpentier; Richard Strauss and
+Mahler. There were French singers like Cazeneuve and Daraux, and French
+and Italian virtuosi like Henri Marteau and Ferruccio Busoni, together
+with German, Austrian, and Scandinavian artists. The orchestra (the
+_Strassbuerger Staedtische Orchester_) and the choir, which was formed of
+different _Chorvereine_ of Strasburg, were conducted by Richard Strauss,
+Gustav Mahler, and Camille Chevillard. But the names of these famous
+_Kapellmeister_ must not let us forget the man who was really the soul
+of the concerts--Professor Ernst Muench, of Strasburg, an Alsatian, who
+conducted all the rehearsals, and who effaced himself at the last
+moment, and left all the honours to the conductors of foreign
+orchestras. Professor Muench, who is also organist at Saint-Guillaume,
+has done more than anyone else for music in Strasburg, and has trained
+excellent choirs (the "_Choeurs de Saint-Guillaume_") there, and
+organised splendid concerts of Bach's music with the aid of another
+Alsatian, Albert Schweitzer, whose name is well known to musical
+historians. The latter is director of the clerical college of St. Thomas
+(_Thomasstift_), a pastor, an organist, a professor at the University of
+Strasburg, and the author of interesting works on theology and
+philosophy. Besides this he has written a now famous book,
+_Jean-Sebastien Bach_, which is doubly remarkable: first, because it is
+written in French (though it was published in Leipzig by a professor of
+the University of Strasburg), and secondly, because it shows an
+harmonious blend of the French and German spirit, and gives fresh life
+to the study of Bach and the old classic art. It was very interesting to
+me to make the acquaintance of these people, born on Alsatian soil, and
+representing the best Alsatian culture and all that was finest in the
+two civilisations.
+
+The programme for the three days' festival was as follows:
+
+Saturday, May 20th.
+
+ _Oberon Overture_: Weber (conducted by Richard Strauss).
+
+ _Les Beatitudes_: Cesar Franck (conducted by Camille Chevillard).
+
+ _Impressions d'ltalie_: Gustav Charpentier (conducted by Camille
+ Chevillard).
+
+ Three songs by Jean Sibelius, Hugo Wolf, Armas Jaernefelt (sung by
+ Mme. Jaernefelt).
+
+ The last scene from _Die Meistersinger_: Wagner (conducted by
+ Richard Strauss).
+
+Sunday, May 21st.
+
+ _Cinquieme Symphonie_: Gustav Mahler (conducted by Gustav Mahler).
+
+ _Rhapsodie_, for contralto, choir, and orchestra: Johannes Brahms
+ (conducted by Ernst Muench).
+
+ _Strasburg Concerto in G major_, for violin (played by Henri
+ Marteau; conducted by Richard Strauss).
+
+ _Sinfonia domestica_: Richard Strauss (conducted by Richard
+ Strauss).
+
+Monday, May 22nd.
+
+ _Coriolan Overture_: Beethoven (conducted by Gustav Mahler).
+
+ _Concerto in G major_, for piano: Beethoven (played by Ferruccio
+ Busoni).
+
+ _Lieder: An die enfernie Geliebte_: Beethoven (sung by Ludwig
+ Hess).
+
+ _Choral Symphony_: Beethoven (conducted by Gustav Mahler).
+
+ * * * * *
+
+M. Chevillard alone represented our French musicians at the festival;
+and they could have made no better choice of a conductor. But Germany
+had delegated her two greatest composers, Strauss and Mahler, to come to
+conduct their newest compositions. And I think it would not have been
+too much to set up one of our own foremost composers to combat the glory
+which these two enjoy in their own country.
+
+M. Chevillard had been asked to conduct, not one of the works of our
+recent masters, like Debussy or Dukas, whose style he renders to
+perfection, but Franck's _Les Beatitudes_, a work whose spirit he does
+not, to my mind, quite understand. The mystic tenderness of Franck
+escapes him, and he brings out only what is dramatic. And so that
+performance of _Les Beatitudes_, though in many respects fine, left an
+imperfect idea of Franck's genius.
+
+But what seemed inconceivable, and what justly annoyed M. Chevillard,
+was that the whole of _Les Beatitudes_ was not given, but only a section
+of them. And on this subject I shall take the liberty of recommending
+that French artists who are guests at similar festivals should not in
+future agree to a programme with their eyes shut, but have their own
+wishes considered, or refuse their help. If French musicians are to be
+given a place in German _Musikfeste_, French people must be allowed to
+choose the works that are to represent them. And, above all, a French
+conductor must not be brought from Paris, and find on his arrival a
+mutilated score and an arbitrary choice of a few fragments that are not
+even whole in themselves. For they played five out of the eight
+_Beatitudes_, and cuts had been made in the third and eighth
+_Beatitudes_. That showed a want of respect for art, for works should be
+given as they are, or not at all.
+
+And it would have been more seemly if in this three-day festival the
+organisers had had the courteousness to devote the first day to French
+music, and had set aside one whole concert for it. But, without doubt,
+they had carefully sandwiched the French works in between German works
+to weaken their effect, and lessen the probable (and actual) enthusiasm
+with which French music would be received in the presence of the
+Statthalter of Alsace-Lorraine by a section of the Alsatian public. In
+addition to this, and by a choice that neither myself nor anyone else in
+Strasburg could believe was dictated by musical reasons, the German work
+chosen to end the evening was the final scene from _Die Meistersinger_,
+with its ringing couplet from Hans Sachs, in which he denounces foreign
+insincerity and foreign frivolity (_Waelschen Dunst mit waelschen Tand_).
+This lack of courtesy--though the words were really nonsense when this
+very concert was given to show that foreign art could not be
+ignored--would not be worth while raking up if it did not further serve
+to show how regrettable is the indifference of French artists who take
+part in these festivals. And this mistake would never have occurred if
+they had taken care to acquaint themselves with the programme beforehand
+and put their veto upon it.
+
+I have mentioned this little incident partly because my views were
+shared by many Alsatians in the audience, who expressed their annoyance
+to me afterwards. But, putting it aside, our French artists ought not to
+have consented to let our music be represented by a mutilated score of
+_Les Beatitudes_ and by Charpentier's _Impressions d'Italie_, for the
+latter, though a brilliantly clever work, is not of the first rank, and
+was too easily crushed by one of Wagner's most stupendous compositions.
+If people wish to institute a joust between French and German art, let
+it be a fair one, I repeat; let Wagner be matched with Berlioz, and
+Strauss with Debussy, and Mahler with Dukas or Magnard.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Such were the conditions of the combat; and they were, whether
+intentionally or not, unfavourable to France. And yet to the eyes of an
+impartial observer the result was full of hope and encouragement for us.
+
+I have never bothered myself in art with questions of nationality. I
+have not even concealed my preference for German music; and I consider,
+even to-day, that Richard Strauss is the foremost musical composer in
+Europe. Having said this, I am freer to speak of the strange impression
+that I had at the Strasburg festival--an impression of the change that
+is coming over music, and the way that French art is silently setting
+about taking the place of German art.
+
+"_Waelschen Dunst und waelschen Tand_...." How that reproachful speech
+seems to be misplaced when one is listening to the honest thought
+expressed in Cesar Franck's music. In _Les Beatitudes_, nothing, or next
+to nothing, was done for art's sake. It is the soul speaking to the
+soul. As Beethoven wrote, at the end of his mass in D, "_Vom Herzen ...
+zu Herzen_!" ("It comes from the heart to go to the heart"). I know no
+one but Franck in the last century, unless it is Beethoven, who has
+possessed in so high a degree the virtue of being himself and speaking
+only the truth without thought of his public. Never before has
+religious faith been expressed with such sincerity. Franck is the only
+musician besides Bach who has really _seen_ the Christ, and who can make
+other people see him too. I would even venture to say that his Christ is
+simpler than Bach's; for Bach's thoughts are often led away by the
+interest of developing his subject, by certain habits of composition,
+and by repetitions and clever devices, which weaken his strength. In
+Franck's music we get Christ's speech itself, unadorned and in all its
+living force. And in the wonderful harmony between the music and the
+sacred words we hear the voice of the world's conscience. I once heard
+someone say to Mme. Cosima Wagner that certain passages in _Parsifal_,
+particularly the chorus "_Durch Mitleid wissend_," had a quality that
+was truly religious and the force of a revelation. But I find a greater
+force and a more truly Christian spirit in _Les Beatitudes_.
+
+And here is an astonishing thing. At this German musical festival it was
+a Frenchman who represented not only serious music moulded in a
+classical form, but a religious spirit and the spirit of the Gospels.
+The characters of two nations have been reversed. The Germans have so
+changed that they are only able to appreciate this seriousness and
+religious faith with difficulty. I watched the audience on this
+occasion; they listened politely, a little astonished and bored, as if
+to say, "What business has this Frenchman with depth and piety of
+soul?"
+
+"There is no doubt," said Henri Lichtenberger, who sat by me at the
+concert, "our music is beginning to bore the Germans."
+
+It was only the other day that German music enjoyed the privilege of
+boring us in France.
+
+And so, to make up for the austere grandeur of _Les Beatitudes_ they had
+it immediately followed by Gustave Charpentier's _Impressions d'Italie_.
+You should have seen the relief of the audience. At last they were to
+have some French music--as Germans understand it. Charpentier is, of all
+living French musicians, the most liked in Germany; he is indeed the
+only one who is popular with artists and the general public alike. Shall
+I say that the sincere pleasure they take in his orchestration and the
+gay life of his subjects is enhanced a little by a slight disdain for
+French frivolity--_waelschen Tand_?
+
+"Now listen to that," said Richard Strauss to me during the third
+movement of _Impressions d'Italie_; "that is the true music of
+Montmartre, the utterance of fine words ... Liberty!... Love!... which
+no one believes."
+
+And on the whole he found the music quite charming, and, without doubt,
+in the depths of his heart approved of this Frenchman according to
+conventional notions that are current in Germany alone. Strauss is
+really very fond of Charpentier, and was his patron in Berlin; and I
+remember how he showed childish delight in _Louise_ when it was first
+performed in Paris.
+
+But Strauss, and most other Germans, are quite on the wrong track when
+they try to persuade themselves that this amusing French frivolity is
+still the exclusive property of France. They really love it because it
+has become German; and they are quite unconscious of the fact. The
+German artists of other times did not find much pleasure in frivolity;
+but I could have easily shown Strauss his liking for it by taking
+examples from his own works. The Germans of to-day have but little in
+common with the Germans of yesterday.
+
+I am not speaking of the general public only, The German public of
+to-day are devotees of Brahms and Wagner, and everything of theirs seems
+good to them; they have no discrimination, and, while they applaud
+Wagner and encore Brahms, they are, in their hearts, not only frivolous,
+but sentimental and gross. The most striking thing about this public is
+their cult of power since Wagner's death. When listening to the end of
+_Die Meistersinger_ I felt how the haughty music of the great march
+reflected the spirit of this military nation of shop-keepers, bursting
+with rude health and complacent pride.
+
+The most remarkable thing of all is that German artists are gradually
+losing the power of understanding their own splendid classics and, in
+particular, Beethoven. Strauss, who is very shrewd and knows exactly his
+own limitations, does not willingly enter Beethoven's domain, though he
+feels his spirit in a much more living way than any of the other German
+_Kapellmeister_. At the Strasburg festival he contented himself with
+conducting, besides his own symphony, the _Oberon Overture_ and a Mozart
+concerto. These performances were interesting; a personality like his
+is so curious that it is quite amusing to find it coming out in the
+works he conducts. But how Mozart's features took on an offhand and
+impatient air; and how the rhythms were accentuated at the expense of
+the melodic grace. In this case, however, Strauss was dealing with a
+concerto, where a certain liberty of interpretation is allowed. But
+Mahler, who was less discreet, ventured upon conducting the whole of the
+Beethoven concert. And what can be said of that evening? I will not
+speak of the _Concerto for pianoforte, in G major_, which Busoni played
+with a brilliant and superficial execution that took away all breadth
+from the work; it is enough to note that his interpretation was
+enthusiastically received by the public. German artists were not
+responsible for that performance; but they were responsible for that
+fine cycle of _Lieder, An die entfernte Geliebte_, which was bellowed by
+a Berlin tenor at the top of his voice, and for the _Choral Symphony_,
+which was, for me, an unspeakable performance. I could never have
+believed that a German orchestra conducted by the chief _Kapellmeister_
+of Austria could have committed such misdeeds. The time was incredible:
+the scherzo had no life in it; the adagio was taken in hot haste without
+leaving a moment for dreams; and there were pauses in the finale which
+destroyed the development of the theme and broke the thread of its
+thought. The different parts of the orchestra fell over one another, and
+the whole was uncertain and lacking in balance. I once severely
+criticised the neo-classic stiffness of Weingartner; but I should have
+appreciated his healthy equilibrium and his effort to be exact after
+hearing this neurasthenic rendering of Beethoven. No; we can no longer
+hear Beethoven and Mozart in Germany to-day, we can only hear Mahler and
+Strauss. Well, let it be so. We will resign ourselves. The past is past.
+Let us leave Beethoven and Mozart, and speak of Mahler and Strauss.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Gustav Mahler is forty-six years old.[193] He is a kind of legendary
+type of German musician, rather like Schubert, and half-way between a
+school-master and a clergyman. He has a long, clean-shaven face, a
+pointed skull covered with untidy hair, a bald forehead, a prominent
+nose, eyes that blink behind his glasses, a large mouth and thin lips,
+hollow cheeks, a rather tired and sarcastic expression, and a general
+air of asceticism. He is excessively nervous, and silhouette caricatures
+of him, representing him as a cat in convulsions in the conductor's
+desk, are very popular in Germany.
+
+[Footnote 193: This essay was written in 1905.]
+
+
+He was born at Kalischt in Bohemia, and became a pupil of Anton
+Bruckner at Vienna, and afterwards _Hofoperndirecktor_ ("Director of the
+Opera") there. I hope one day to study this artist's work in greater
+detail, for he is second only to Strauss as a composer in Germany, and
+the principal musician of South Germany.
+
+His most important work is a suite of symphonies; and it was the fifth
+symphony of this suite that he conducted at the Strasburg festival. The
+first symphony, called _Titan_, was composed in 1894. The construction
+of the whole is on a massive and gigantic scale; and the melodies on
+which these works are built up are like rough-hewn blocks of not very
+good quality, but imposing by reason of their size, and by the obstinate
+repetition of their rhythmic design, which is maintained as if it were
+an obsession. This heaping-up of music both crude and learned in style,
+with harmonies that are sometimes clumsy and sometimes delicate, is
+worth considering on account of its bulk. The orchestration is heavy and
+noisy; and the brass dominates and roughly gilds the rather sombre
+colouring of the great edifice. The underlying idea of the composition
+is neo-classic, and rather spongy and diffuse. Its harmonic structure is
+composite: we get the style of Bach, Schubert, and Mendelssohn fighting
+that of Wagner and Bruckner; and, by a decided liking for canon form, it
+even recalls some of Franck's work. The whole is like a showy and
+expensive collection of bric-a-brac.
+
+The chief characteristic of these symphonies is, generally speaking, the
+use of choral singing with the orchestra. "When I conceive a great
+musical painting (_ein grosses musikalisches Gemaelde_)," says Mahler,
+"there always comes a moment when I feel forced to employ speech (_das
+Wort_) as an aid to the realisation of my musical conception."
+
+Mahler has got some striking effects from this combination of voices and
+instruments, and he did well to seek inspiration in this direction from
+Beethoven and Liszt. It is incredible that the nineteenth century should
+have put this combination to so little use; for I think the gain may be
+poetical as well as musical.
+
+In the _Second Symphony in C minor_, the first three parts are purely
+instrumental; but in the fourth part the voice of a contralto is heard
+singing these sad and simple words:
+
+ "_Der Mensch liegt in groesster Noth!
+ Der Mensch liegt in groesster Pein!
+ Je lieber moecht ich im Himmel sein_!"[194]
+
+The soul strives to reach God with the passionate cry:
+
+ "_Ich bin von Gott und will wieder zu Gott_."[195]
+
+Then there is a symphonic episode (_Der Rufer in der Wueste_), and we
+hear "the voice of one crying in the wilderness" in fierce and anguished
+tones. There is an apocalyptic finale where the choir sing Klopstock's
+beautiful ode on the promise of the Resurrection:
+
+ "_Aufersteh'n, ja, aufersteh'n wirst du, mein Staub, nach
+ kurzer Ruh_!"[196]
+
+The law is proclaimed with:
+
+ "_Was entstanden ist, dass mus vergehen,
+ Was vergangen, auferstehen_!"[197]
+
+[Footnote 194: Man lies in greatest misery; Man lies in greatest pain; I
+would I were in Heaven!]
+
+[Footnote 195: I come from God, and shall to God return.]
+
+[Footnote 196: Thou wilt rise again, thou wilt rise again, O my dust,
+after a little rest.]
+
+[Footnote 197: What is born must pass away; What has passed away must
+rise again.]
+
+And all the orchestra, the choirs, and the organ, join in the hymn of
+Eternal Life.
+
+In the _Third Symphony_, known as _Ein Sommermorgentraum_ ("A Summer
+Morning's Dream"), the first and the last parts are for the orchestra
+alone; the fourth part contains some of the best of Mahler's music, and
+is an admirable setting of Nietzsche's words:
+
+ "_O Mensch! O Mensch! Gib Acht! gib Acht!
+ Was spricht die tiefe Mitternacht_?"[198]
+
+[Footnote 198:
+
+ O Man! O Man! Have care! Have care!
+ What says dark midnight?
+
+The fifth part is a gay and stirring chorus founded on a popular legend.
+
+In the _Fourth Symphony in G major_, the last part alone is sung, and is
+of an almost humorous character, being a sort of childish description of
+the joys of Paradise.
+
+In spite of appearances, Mahler refuses to connect these choral
+symphonies with programme-music. Without doubt he is right, if he means
+that his music has its own value outside any sort of programme; but
+there is no doubt that it is always the expression of a definite
+_Stimmung_, of a conscious mood; and the fact is, whether he likes it or
+not, that _Stimmung_ gives an interest to his music far beyond that of
+the music itself. His personality seems to me far more interesting than
+his art.
+
+
+
+This is often the case with artists in Germany; Hugo Wolf is another
+example of it. Mahler's case is really rather curious. When one studies
+his works one feels convinced that he is one of those rare types in
+modern Germany--an egoist who feels with sincerity. Perhaps his emotions
+and his ideas do not succeed in expressing themselves in a really
+sincere and personal way; for they reach us through a cloud of
+reminiscences and an atmosphere of classicism. I cannot help thinking
+that Mahler's position as director of the Opera, and his consequent
+saturation in the music that his calling condemns him to study, is the
+cause of this. There is nothing more fatal to a creative spirit than too
+much reading, above all when it does not read of its own free will, but
+is forced to absorb an excessive amount of nourishment, the larger part
+of which is indigestible. In vain may Mahler try to defend the sanctuary
+of his mind; it is violated by foreign ideas coming from all parts, and
+instead of being able to drive them away, his conscience, as conductor
+of the orchestra, obliges him to receive them and almost embrace them.
+With his feverish activity, and burdened as he is with heavy tasks, he
+works unceasingly and has no time to dream. Mahler will only be Mahler
+when he is able to leave his administrative work, shut up his scores,
+retire within himself, and wait patiently until he has become himself
+again--if it is not too late.
+
+His _Fifth Symphony_, which he conducted at Strasburg, convinced me,
+more than all his other works, of the urgent necessity of adopting this
+course. In this composition he has not allowed himself the use of the
+choruses, which were one of the chief attractions of his preceding
+symphonies. He wished to prove that he could write pure music, and to
+make his claim surer he refused to have any explanation of his
+composition published in the concert programme, as the other composers
+in the festival had done; he wished it, therefore, to be judged from a
+strictly musical point of view. It was a dangerous ordeal for him.
+
+Though I wished very much to admire the work of a composer whom I held
+in such esteem, I felt it did not come out very well from the test. To
+begin with, this symphony is excessively long--it lasts an hour and a
+half--though there is no apparent justification for its proportions. It
+aims at being colossal, and mainly achieves emptiness. The _motifs_ are
+more than familiar. After a funeral march of commonplace character and
+boisterous movement, where Beethoven seems to be taking lessons from
+Mendelssohn, there comes a scherzo, or rather a Viennese waltz, where
+Chabrier gives old Bach a helping hand. The adagietto has a rather sweet
+sentimentality. The rondo at the end is presented rather like an idea of
+Franck's, and is the best part of the composition; it is carried out in
+a spirit of mad intoxication and a chorale rises up from it with
+crashing joy; but the effect of the whole is lost in repetitions that
+choke it and make it heavy. Through all the work runs a mixture of
+pedantic stiffness and incoherence; it moves along in a desultory way,
+and suffers from abrupt checks in the course of its development and from
+superfluous ideas that break in for no reason at all, with the result
+that the whole hangs fire.
+
+Above all, I fear Mahler has been sadly hypnotised by ideas about
+power--ideas that are getting to the head of all German artists to-day.
+He seems to have an undecided mind, and to combine sadness and irony
+with weakness and impatience, to be a Viennese musician striving after
+Wagnerian grandeur. No one expresses the grace of _Laendler_ and dainty
+waltzes and mournful reveries better than he; and perhaps no one is
+nearer the secret of Schubert's moving and voluptuous melancholy; and it
+is Schubert he recalls at times, both in his good qualities and certain
+of his faults. But he wants to be Beethoven or Wagner. And he is wrong;
+for he lacks their balance and gigantic force. One saw that only too
+well when he was conducting the _Choral Symphony_.
+
+But whatever he may be, or whatever disappointment he may have brought
+me at Strasburg, I will never allow myself to speak lightly or
+scoffingly of him. I am confident that a musician with so lofty an aim
+will one day create a work worthy of himself.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Richard Strauss is a complete contrast to Mahler. He has always the air
+of a heedless and discontented child. Tall and slim, rather elegant and
+supercilious, he seems to be of a more refined race than most other
+German artists of to-day. Scornful, _blase_ with success, and very
+exacting, his bearing towards other musicians has nothing of Mahler's
+winning modesty. He is not less nervous than Mahler, and while he is
+conducting the orchestra he seems to indulge in a frenzied dance which
+follows the smallest details of his music--music that is as agitated as
+limpid water into which a stone has been flung. But he has a great
+advantage over Mahler; he knows how to rest after his labours. Both
+excitable and sleepy by nature, his highly-strung nerves are
+counterbalanced by his indolence, and there is in the depths of him a
+Bavarian love of luxury. I am quite sure that when his hours of intense
+living are over, after he has spent an excessive amount of energy, he
+has hours when he is only partially alive. One then sees his eyes with a
+vague and sleepy look in them; and he is like old Rameau, who used to
+walk about for hours as if he were an automaton, seeing nothing and
+thinking of nothing.
+
+At Strasburg Strauss conducted his _Sinfonia Domestica_, whose programme
+seems boldly to defy reason, and even good taste. In the symphony he
+pictures himself with his wife and his boy (_"Meiner lieben Frau und
+unserm Jungen gewidmet"_). "I do not see," said Strauss, "why I should
+not compose a symphony about myself; I find myself quite as interesting
+as Napoleon or Alexander." Some people have replied that everybody else
+might not share his interest. But I shall not use that argument; it is
+quite possible for an artist of Strauss's worth to keep us entertained.
+What grates upon me more is the way in which he speaks of himself. The
+disproportion between his subject and the means he has of expressing it
+is too strong. Above all, I do not like this display of the inner and
+secret self. There is a want of reticence in this _Sinfonia Domestica_.
+The fireside, the sitting-room, and the bedchamber, are open to
+all-comers. Is this the family feeling of Germany to-day? I admit that
+the first time I heard the work it jarred upon me for purely moral
+reasons, in spite of the liking I have for its composer. But afterwards
+I altered my first opinion, and found the music admirable. Do you know
+the programme?
+
+The first part shows you three people: a man, a woman, and a child. The
+man is represented by three themes: a _motif_ full of spirit and humour,
+a thoughtful _motif_, and a _motif_ expressing eager and enthusiastic
+action. The woman has only two themes: one expressing caprice, and the
+other love and tenderness. The child has a single _motif_, which is
+quiet, innocent, and not very defined in character; its real value is
+not shown until it is developed.... Which of the two parents is he like?
+The family sit round him and discuss him. "He is just like his father"
+(_Ganz der Papa_), say the aunts. "He is the image of his mother" (_Ganz
+die Mama_), say the uncles.
+
+The second part of the symphony is a scherzo which represents the child
+at play; there are terribly noisy games, games of Herculean gaiety, and
+you can hear the parents talking all over the house. How far we seem
+from Schumann's good little children and their simple-hearted families!
+At last the child is put to bed; they rock him to sleep, and the clock
+strikes seven. Night comes. There are dreams and some uneasy sleep. Then
+a love scene.... The clock strikes seven in the morning. Everybody wakes
+up, and there is a merry discussion. We hear a double fugue in which the
+theme of the man and the theme of the woman contradict each other with
+exasperating and ludicrous obstinacy; and the man has the last word.
+Finally there is the apotheosis of the child and family life.
+
+Such a programme serves rather to lead the listener astray than to guide
+him. It spoils the idea of the work by emphasising its anecdotal and
+rather comic side. For without doubt the comic side is there, and
+Strauss has warned us in vain that he did not wish to make an amusing
+picture of married life, but to praise the sacredness of marriage and
+parenthood; but he possesses such a strong vein of humour that it cannot
+help getting the better of him. There is nothing really grave or
+religious about the music, except when he is speaking of the child; and
+then the rough merriment of the man grows gentle, and the irritating
+coquetry of the woman becomes exquisitely tender. Otherwise Strauss's
+satire and love of jesting get the upper hand, and reach an almost epic
+gaiety and strength.
+
+But one must forget this unwise programme, which borders on bad taste
+and at times on something even worse. When one has succeeded in
+forgetting it one discovers a well-proportioned symphony in four
+parts--Allegro, Scherzo, Adagio, and Finale in fugue form--and one of
+the finest works in contemporary music. It has the passionate
+exuberance of Strauss's preceding symphony, _Heldenleben_, but it is
+superior in artistic construction; one may even say that it is Strauss's
+most perfect work since _Tod und Verklaerung_ ("Death and
+Transfiguration"), with a richness of colouring and technical skill that
+_Tod und Verklaerung_ did not possess. One is dazzled by the beauty of an
+orchestration which is light and pliant, and capable of expressing
+delicate shades of feeling; and this struck me the more after the solid
+massiveness of Mahler's orchestration, which is like heavy unleavened
+bread. With Strauss everything is full of life and sinew, and there is
+nothing wasted. Possibly the first setting-out of his themes has rather
+too schematic a character; and perhaps the melodic utterance is rather
+restricted and not very lofty; but it is very personal, and one finds it
+impossible to disassociate his personality from these vigorous themes
+that burn with youthful ardour, and cut the air like arrows, and twist
+themselves in freakish arabesques. In the adagio depicting night, there
+is, though in very bad taste, much seriousness and reverie and stirring
+emotion. The fugue at the end is of astonishing sprightliness; and is a
+mixture of colossal jesting and heroic pastoral poetry worthy of
+Beethoven, whose style it recalls in the breadth of its development. The
+final apotheosis is filled with life; its joy makes the heart beat. The
+most extravagant harmonic effects and the most abominable discords are
+softened and almost disappear in the wonderful combination of _timbres_.
+It is the work of a strong and sensual artist, the true heir of the
+Wagner of the _Meistersinger_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Upon the whole, these works make one see that, in spite of their
+apparent audacity, Strauss and Mahler are beginning to make a
+surreptitious retreat from their early standpoint, and are abandoning
+the symphony with a programme. Strauss's last work will lose nothing by
+calling itself quite simply _Sinfonia Domestica_, without adding any
+further information. It is a true symphony; and the same may be said of
+Mahler's composition. But Strauss and Mahler are already reforming
+themselves, and are coming back to the model of the classic symphony.
+
+But there are more important conclusions to be drawn from a hearing of
+this kind. The first is that Strauss's talent is becoming more and more
+exceptional in the music of his country. With all his faults, which are
+considerable, Strauss stands alone in his warmth of imagination, in his
+unquenchable spontaneity and perpetual youth. And his knowledge and his
+art are growing every day in the midst of other German art which is
+growing old. German music in general is showing some grave symptoms. I
+will not dwell on its neurasthenia, for it is passing through a crisis
+which will teach it wisdom; but I fear, nevertheless, that this
+excessive nervous excitement will be followed by torpor. What is really
+disquieting is that, in spite of all the talent that still abounds,
+Germany is fast losing her chief musical endowments. Her melodic charm
+has nearly disappeared. One could search the music of Strauss, Mahler,
+or Hugo Wolf, without finding a melody of any real value, or of any true
+originality, outside its application to a text, or a literary idea, and
+its harmonic development. And besides that, German music is daily losing
+its intimate spirit; there are still traces of this spirit in Wolf,
+thanks to his exceptionally unhappy life; but there is very little of it
+in Mahler, in spite of all his efforts to concentrate his mind on
+himself; and there is hardly any at all in Strauss, although he is the
+most interesting of the three composers. German musicians have no longer
+any depth.
+
+I have said that I attribute this fact to the detestable influence of
+the theatre, to which nearly all these artists are attached as
+_Kapellmeister_, or directors of opera. To this they owe the
+melodramatic character of their music, even though it is on the surface
+only--music written for show, and aiming chiefly at effect.
+
+More baneful even than the influence of the theatre is the influence of
+success. These musicians have nowadays too many facilities for having
+their music played. A work is played almost before it is finished, and
+the musician has no time to live with his work in solitude and silence.
+Besides this, the works of the chief German musicians are supported by
+tremendous booming of some kind or another: by their _Musikfeste_, by
+their critics, their press, and their "Musical Guides" (_Musikfuehrer_),
+which are apologetic explanations of their works, scattered abroad in
+millions to set the fashion for the sheep-like public. And with all this
+a musician grows soon contented with himself, and comes to believe any
+favourable opinion about his work. What a difference from Beethoven,
+who, all his life, was hammering out the same subjects, and putting his
+melodies on the anvil twenty times before they reached their final form.
+That is where Mahler is so lacking. His subjects are a rather vulgarised
+edition of some of Beethoven's ideas in their unfinished state. But
+Mahler gets no further than the rough sketch.
+
+And, lastly, I want to speak of the greatest danger of all that menaces
+music in Germany; _there is too much music in Germany_. This is not a
+paradox. There is no worse misfortune for art than a super-abundance of
+it. The music is drowning the musicians. Festival succeeds festival: the
+day after the Strasburg festival there was to be a Bach festival at
+Eisenach; and then, at the end of the week, a Beethoven festival at
+Bonn. Such a plethora of concerts, theatres, choral societies, and
+chamber-music societies, absorbs the whole life of the musician. When
+has he time to be alone to listen to the music that sings within him?
+This senseless flood of music invades the sanctuaries of his soul,
+weakens its power, and destroys its sacred solitude and the treasures of
+its thought.
+
+You must not think that this excess of music existed in the old days in
+Germany. In the time of the great classic masters, Germany had hardly
+any institutions for the giving of regular concerts, and choral
+performances were hardly known. In the Vienna of Mozart and Beethoven
+there was only a single association that gave concerts, and no
+_Chorvereine_ at all, and it was the same with other towns in Germany.
+Does the wonderful spread of musical culture in Germany during the last
+century correspond with its artistic creation? I do not think so; and
+one feels the inequality between the two more every day.
+
+Do you remember Goethe's ballad of _Der Zauberlehrling_ (_L'Apprenti
+Sorcier_) which Dukas so cleverly made into music? There, in the absence
+of his master, an apprentice set working some magic spells, and so
+opened sluice-gates that no one could shut; and the house was flooded.
+
+This is what Germany has done. She has let loose a flood of music, and
+is about to be drowned in it.
+
+
+
+
+CLAUDE DEBUSSY
+
+PELLEAS ET MELISANDE
+
+
+The first performance of _Pelleas et Melisande_ in Paris, on April 30th,
+1902, was a very notable event in the history of French music; its
+importance can only be compared with that of the first performance of
+Lully's _Cadmus et Hermione_, Rameau's _Hippolyte et Aricie_, and
+Quick's _Iphigenie en Aulide_; and it may be looked upon as one of the
+three or four red-letter days in the calendar of our lyric stage.[199]
+
+[Footnote 199: May I be allowed to say that I am trying to write this
+study from a purely historical point of view, by eliminating all
+personal feeling--which would be of no value here. As a matter of fact,
+I am not a Debussyite; my sympathies are with quite another kind of art.
+But I feel impelled to give homage to a great artist, whose work I am
+able to judge with some impartiality.]
+
+The success of _Pelleas et Melisande_ is due to many things. Some of
+them are trivial, such as fashion, which has certainly played its part
+here as it has in all other successes, though it is a relatively weak
+part; some of them are more important, and arise from something innate
+in the spirit of French genius; and there are also moral and aesthetic
+reasons for its success, and, in the widest sense, purely musical
+reasons.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In speaking of the moral reasons of the success of _Pelleas et
+Melisande_, I would like to draw your attention to a form of thought
+which is not confined to France, but which is common nowadays in a
+section of the more distinguished members of European society, and which
+has found expression in _Pelleas et Melisande_. The atmosphere in which
+Maeterlinck's drama moves makes one feel the melancholy resignation of
+the will to Fate. We are shown that nothing can change the order of
+events; that, despite our proud illusions, we are not master of
+ourselves, but the servant of unknown and irresistible forces, which
+direct the whole tragicomedy of our lives. We are told that no man is
+responsible for what he likes and what he loves--that is if he knows
+what he likes and loves--and that he lives and dies without knowing why.
+
+These fatalistic ideas, reflecting the lassitude of the intellectual
+aristocracy of Europe, have been wonderfully translated into music by
+Debussy; and when you feel the poetic and sensual charm of the music,
+the ideas become fascinating and intoxicating, and their spirit is very
+infectious. For there is in all music an hypnotic power which is able to
+reduce the mind to a state of voluptuous submission.
+
+The cause of the artistic success of _Pelleas et Melisande_ is of a more
+specially French character, and marks a reaction that is at once
+legitimate, natural, and inevitable; I would even say it is vital--a
+reaction of French genius against foreign art, and especially against
+Wagnerian art and its awkward representatives in France.
+
+Is the Wagnerian drama perfectly adapted to German genius? I do not
+think so; but that is a question which I will leave German musicians to
+decide. For ourselves, we have the right to assert that the form of
+Wagnerian drama is antipathetic to the spirit of French people--to their
+artistic taste, to their ideas about the theatre, and to their musical
+feeling. This form may have forced itself upon us, and, by the right of
+victorious genius, may have strongly influenced the French mind, and may
+do so again; but nothing will ever make it anything but a stranger in
+our land.
+
+It is not necessary to dwell upon the differences of taste. The
+Wagnerian ideal is, before everything else, an ideal of power. Wagner's
+passional and intellectual exaltation and his mystic sensualism are
+poured out like a fiery torrent, which sweeps away and burns all before
+it, taking no heed of barriers. Such an art cannot be bound by ordinary
+rules; it has no need to fear bad taste--and I commend it. But it is
+easy to understand that other ideals exist, and that another art might
+be as expressive by its proprieties and niceties as by its richness and
+force. And this former art--our own--is not so much a reaction against
+Wagnerian art as a reaction against its caricatures in France and the
+consequent abuse of an ill-regulated power.
+
+Genius has a right to be what it will--to trample underfoot, if it
+wishes, taste and morals and the whole of society. But when those who
+are not geniuses wish to do the same thing they only make themselves
+ridiculous and odious. There have been too many monkey Wagners in
+France. During the last ten or twenty years scarcely one French musician
+has escaped Wagner's influence. One understands only too well the revolt
+of the French mind, in the name of naturalness and good taste, against
+exaggerations and extremes of passion, whether sincere or not. _Pelleas
+et Melisande_ came as a manifestation of this revolt. It is an
+uncompromising reaction against over-emphasis and excess, and against
+anything that oversteps the limits of the imagination. This distaste of
+exaggerated words and sentiments results in what is like a fear of
+showing the feelings at all, even when they are most deeply stirred.
+With Debussy the passions almost whisper; and it is by the imperceptible
+vibrations of the melodic line that the love in the hearts of the
+unhappy couple is shown, by the timid "Oh, why are you going?" at the
+end of the first act, and the quiet "I love you, too," in the last scene
+but one. Think of the wild lamentations of the dying Ysolde, and then of
+the death of Melisande, without cries and without words.
+
+From a scenic point of view, _Pelleas et Melisande_ is also quite
+opposed to the Bayreuth ideal. The vast proportions--almost immoderate
+proportions--of the Wagnerian drama, its compact structure and the
+intense concentration of mind which from beginning to end holds these
+enormous works and their ideology together, and which is often displayed
+at the expense of the action and even the emotions, are as far removed
+as they can be from the French love of clear, logical, and temperate
+action. The little pictures of _Pelleas et Melisande_, small and
+sharply cut, each marking without stress a new stage in the evolution of
+the drama, are built up in quite a different way from those of the
+Wagnerian theatre.
+
+And, as if he wished to accentuate this antagonism, the author of
+_Pelleas et Melisande_ is now writing a _Tristan_, whose plot is taken
+from an old French poem, the text of which has been recently brought to
+light by M. Bedier. In its calm and lofty strain it is a wonderful
+contrast to Wagner's savage and pedantic, though sublime poem.
+
+But it is especially by the manner in which they conceive the respective
+relationships of poetry and music to opera that the two composers
+differ. With Wagner, music is the kernel of the opera, the glowing
+focus, the centre of attraction; it absorbs everything, and it stands
+absolutely first. But that is not the French conception. The musical
+stage, as we conceive it in France (if not what we actually possess),
+should present such a combination of the arts as go to make an
+harmonious whole. We demand that an equal balance shall be kept between
+poetry and music; and if their equilibrium must be a little upset, we
+should prefer that poetry was not the loser, as its utterance is more
+conscious and rational. That was Gluck's aim; and because he realised it
+so well he gained a reputation among the French public which nothing
+will destroy. Debussy's strength lies in the methods by which he has
+approached this ideal of musical temperateness and disinterestedness,
+and in the way he has placed his genius as a composer at the service of
+the drama. He has never sought to dominate Maeterlinck's poem, or to
+swallow it up in a torrent of music; he has made it so much a part of
+himself that at the present time no Frenchman is able to think of a
+passage in the play without Debussy's music singing at the same time
+within him.
+
+But apart from all these reasons that make the work important in the
+history of opera, there are purely musical reasons for its success,
+which are of deeper significance still.[200] _Pelleas et Melisande_ has
+brought about a reform in the dramatic music of France. This reform is
+concerned with several things, and, first of all, with recitative.
+
+[Footnote 200: That is for musicians. But I am convinced that with the
+mass of the public the other reasons have more weight--as is always the
+case.]
+
+In France we have never had--apart from a few attempts in
+_opera-comique_--a recitative that exactly expressed our natural speech.
+Lully and Rameau took for their model the high-flown declamation of the
+tragedy stage of their time. And French opera for the past twenty years
+has chosen a more dangerous model still--the declamation of Wagner, with
+its vocal leaps and its resounding and heavy accentuation. Nothing could
+be more displeasing in French. All people of taste suffered from it,
+though they did not admit it. At this time, Antoine, Gemier, and Guitry
+were making theatrical declamation more natural, and this made the
+exaggerated declamation of the French opera appear more ridiculous and
+more archaic still. And so a reform in recitative was inevitable.
+Jean-Jacques Rousseau had foreseen it in the very direction in which
+Debussy[201] has accomplished it. He showed in his _Lettre sur la
+musique francaise_ that there was no connection between the inflections
+of French speech, "whose accents are so harmonious and simple," and "the
+shrill and noisy intonations" of the recitative of French opera. And he
+concluded by saying that the kind of recitative that would best suit us
+should "wander between little intervals, and neither raise nor lower the
+voice very much; and should have little sustained sound, no noise, and
+no cries of any description--nothing, indeed, that resembled singing,
+and little inequality in the duration or value of the notes, or in their
+intervals." This is the very definition of Debussy's recitative.
+
+[Footnote 201: We must also note that during the first half of the
+seventeenth century people of taste objected to the very theatrical
+declamation of French opera. "Our singers believe," wrote Mersenne, in
+1636, "that the exclamations and emphasis used by the Italians in
+singing savour too much of tragedies and comedies, and so they do not
+wish to employ them."]
+
+The symphonic fabric of _Pelleas et Melisande_ differs just as widely
+from Wagner's dramas. With Wagner it is a living thing that springs from
+one great root, a system of interlaced phrases whose powerful growth
+puts out branches in every direction, like an oak. Or, to take another
+simile, it is like a painting, which though it has not been executed at
+a single sitting, yet gives us that impression; and, in spite of the
+retouching and altering to which it has been subjected, still has the
+effect of a compact whole, of an indestructible amalgam, from which
+nothing can be detached. Debussy's system, on the contrary, is, so to
+speak, a sort of classic impressionism--an impressionism that is
+refined, harmonious, and calm; that moves along in musical pictures,
+each of which corresponds to a subtle and fleeting moment of the soul's
+life; and the painting is done by clever little strokes put in with a
+soft and delicate touch. This art is more allied to that of Moussorgski
+(though without any of his roughness) than that of Wagner, in spite of
+one or two reminiscences of _Parsifal_, which are only extraneous traits
+in the work. In _Pelleas et Melisande_ one finds no persistent
+_leitmotifs_ running through the work, or themes which pretend to
+translate into music the life of characters and types; but, instead, we
+have phrases that express changing feelings, that change with the
+feelings. More than that, Debussy's harmony is not, as it was with
+Wagner and all the German school, a fettered harmony, tightly bound to
+the despotic laws of counterpoint; it is, as Laloy[202] has said, a
+harmony that is first of all harmonious, and has its origin and end in
+itself.
+
+[Footnote 202: No other critic has, I think, discerned so shrewdly
+Debussy's art and genius. Some of his analyses are models of clever
+intuition. The thought of the critic seems to be one with that of the
+musician.]
+
+As Debussy's art only attempts to give the impression of the moment,
+without troubling itself with what may come after, it is free from care,
+and takes its fill in the enjoyment of the moment. In the garden of
+harmonies it selects the most beautiful flowers; for sincerity of
+expression takes a second place with it, and its first idea is to
+please. In this again it interprets the aesthetic sensualism of the
+French race, which seeks pleasure in art, and does not willingly admit
+ugliness, even when it seems to be justified by the needs of the drama
+and of truth. Mozart shared the same thought: "Music," he said, "even in
+the most terrible situations, ought never to offend the ear; it should
+charm it even there; and, in short, always remain music."
+
+As for Debussy's harmonic language, his originality does not consist, as
+some of his foolish admirers have said, in the invention of new chords,
+but in the new use he makes of them. A man is not a great artist because
+he makes use of unresolved sevenths and ninths, consecutive major thirds
+and ninths, and harmonic progressions based on a scale of whole tones;
+one is only an artist when one makes them say something. And it is not
+on account of the peculiarities of Debussy's style--of which one may
+find isolated examples in great composers before him, in Chopin, Liszt,
+Chabrier, and Richard Strauss--but because with Debussy these
+peculiarities are an expression of his personality, and because _Pelleas
+et Melisande_, "the land of ninths," has a poetic atmosphere which is
+like no other musical drama ever written.
+
+Lastly, the orchestration is purposely restrained, light, and divided,
+for Debussy has a fine disdain for those orgies of sound to which
+Wagner's art has accustomed us; it is as sober and polished as a fine
+classic phrase of the latter part of the seventeenth century. _Ne quid
+nimis_ ("Nothing superfluous") is the artist's motto. Instead of
+amalgamating the _timbres_ to get a massive effect, he disengages their
+separate personalities, as it were, and delicately blends them without
+changing their individual nature. Like the impressionist painters of
+to-day, he paints with primary colours, but with a delicate moderation
+that rejects anything harsh as if it were something unseemly.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I have given more than enough reasons to account for the success of
+_Pelleas et Melisande_ and the place that its admirers give it in the
+history of opera. There is every reason to believe that the composer has
+not been as acutely conscious of his musico-dramatic reform as his
+disciples have been. The reform with him has a more instinctive
+character; and that is what gives it its strength. It responds to an
+unconscious yet profound need of the French spirit. I would even venture
+to say that the historical importance of Debussy's work is greater than
+its artistic value. His personality is not without faults, and the
+gravest are perhaps negative faults--the absence of certain qualities,
+and even of the strong and extravagant faults which made the heroes of
+the art world, like Beethoven and Wagner. His voluptuous nature is at
+once changeable and precise; and his dreams are as clear and delicate as
+the art of a poet of the Pleiades in the sixteenth century, or of a
+Japanese painter. But among all his gifts he has a quality which I have
+not found so evident in any other musician--except perhaps Mozart; and
+this quality is a genius for good taste. Debussy has it in excess, so
+that he almost sacrifices the other elements of art to it, until the
+passionate force of his music, even its very life, seems to be
+impoverished. But one must not deceive oneself; that impoverishment is
+only apparent, and in all his work there are evidences that his passion
+is only veiled. It is only the trembling of the melodic line, or the
+orchestration which, like a shadow passing before the eyes, tells us of
+the drama that is being played in the hearts of his characters. This
+lofty shame of emotion is something as rare in opera as a Racine tragedy
+is in poetry--they are works of the same order, and both of them perfect
+flowers of the French spirit. Anyone who lives in foreign parts and is
+curious to know what France is like and understand her genius should
+study _Pelleas et Melisande_ as they would study Racine's _Berenice_.
+
+Not that Debussy's art entirely represents French genius any more than
+Racine's does; for there is quite another side to it which is not
+represented there; and that side is heroic action, the intoxication of
+reason and laughter, the passion for light, the France of Rabelais,
+Moliere, Diderot, and in music, we will say--for want of better
+names--the France of Berlioz and Bizet. To tell the truth, that is the
+France I prefer. But Heaven preserve me from ignoring the other! It is
+the balance between these two Frances that makes French genius. In our
+contemporary music, _Pelleas et Melisande_ is at one end of the pole of
+our art and _Carmen_ is at the other. The one is all on the surface, all
+life, with no shadows, and no underneath. The other is below the
+surface, bathed in twilight, and enveloped in silence. And this double
+ideal is the alternation between the gentle sunlight and the faint mist
+that veils the soft, luminous sky of the Isle of France.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+THE AWAKENING
+
+A SKETCH OF THE MUSICAL MOVEMENT IN PARIS SINCE 1870
+
+
+It is not possible in a few pages to give an account of forty years of
+active and fruitful life without many omissions, and also without a
+certain dryness entailed by lists of names. But I have purposely
+abstained from trying to arouse interest by any artifices of writing and
+treatment, as I wish to let deeds speak for themselves.
+
+I want to show, by this simple account, the splendid efforts made by
+musicians in France since 1870, and the growth of the faith and energy
+that has recreated French music. Such an awakening seems to me a fine
+thing to look upon, and very comforting. But few people in France
+realise it, outside a handful of musicians. It is to the public at large
+I dedicate these pages, so that they may know what a generation of
+artists with large hearts and strong determination have done for the
+honour of our race. The nation must not be allowed to forget what she
+owes to some of her sons.
+
+But you must not accuse me of contradicting myself if in another work,
+which will appear at the same time as this one,[203] I indulge in some
+sarcasm over the failings and absurdities of French music to-day. I
+think that for the last ten years French musicians have rather
+imprudently and prematurely proclaimed their victory, and that, in a
+general way, their works--apart from three or four--are not worth as
+much as their endeavours. But their endeavours are heroic; and I know
+nothing finer in the whole history of France. May they continue! But
+that is only possible by practising a virtue--modesty. The completion of
+a part is not the completion of the whole.
+
+[Footnote 203: _Jean-Christophe a Paris_, 1904.]
+
+
+PARIS AND MUSIC
+
+
+The nature of Paris is so complex and unstable that one feels it is
+presumptuous to try to define it. It is a city so highly-strung, so
+ingrained with fickleness, and so changeable in its tastes, that a book
+that truly describes it at the moment it is written is no longer
+accurate by the time it is published. And then, there is not only one
+Paris; there are two or three Parises--fashionable Paris, middle-class
+Paris, intellectual Paris, vulgar Paris--all living side by side, but
+intermingling very little. If you do not know the little towns within
+the great Town, you cannot know the strong and often inconsistent life
+of this great organism as a whole.
+
+If one wishes to get an idea of the musical life of Paris, one must take
+into account the variety of its centres and the perpetual flow of its
+thought--a thought which never stops, but is always over-shooting the
+goal for which it seemed bound. This incessant change of opinion is
+scornfully called "fashion" by the foreigner. And there is, without
+doubt, in the artistic aristocracy of Paris, as in all great towns, a
+herd of idle people on the watch for new fashions--in art, as well as in
+dress--who wish to single out certain of them for no serious reason at
+all. But, in spite of their pretensions, they have only an infinitesimal
+share in the changes of artistic taste. The origin of these changes is
+in the Parisian brain itself--a brain that is quick and feverish, always
+working, greedy of knowledge, easily tired, grasping to-day the
+splendours of a work, seeing to-morrow its defects, building up
+reputations as rapidly as it pulls them down, and yet, in spite of all
+its apparent caprices, always logical and sincere. It has its momentary
+infatuations and dislikes, but no lasting prejudices; and, by its
+curiosity, its absolute liberty, and its very French habit of
+criticising everything, it is a marvellous barometer, sensitive to all
+the hidden currents of thought in the soul of the West, and often
+indicating, months in advance, the variations and disturbances of the
+artistic and political world.
+
+And this barometer is registering what is happening just now in the
+world of music, where a movement has been making itself felt in France
+for several years, whose effect other nations--perhaps more musical
+nations--will not feel till later. For the nations that have the
+strongest artistic traditions are not necessarily those that are likely
+to develop a new art. To do that one must have a virgin soil and spirits
+untrammelled by a heritage from the past. In 1870 no one had a lighter
+heritage to bear than French musicians; for the past had been forgotten,
+and such a thing as real musical education did not exist.
+
+The musical weakness of that time was a very curious thing, and has
+given many people the impression that France has never been a musical
+nation. Historically speaking, nothing could be more wrong. Certainly
+there are races more gifted in music than others; but often the seeming
+differences of race are really the differences of time; and a nation
+appears great or little in its art according to what period of its
+history we consider. England was a musical nation until the Revolution
+of 1688; France was the greatest musical nation in the sixteenth
+century; and the recent publications of M. Henry Expert have given us a
+glimpse of the originality and perfection of the Franco-Belgian art
+during the Renaissance. But without going back as far as that, we find
+that Paris was a very musical town at the time of the Restoration, at
+the time of the first performance of Beethoven's symphonies at the
+Conservatoire, and the first great works of Berlioz, and the Italian
+Opera. In Berlioz's _Memoires_ you can read about the enthusiasm, the
+tears, and the feeling, that the performances of Gluck's and Spontini's
+operas aroused; and in the same book one sees clearly that this musical
+warmth lasted until 1840, after which it died down little by little, and
+was succeeded by complete musical apathy in the second Empire--an apathy
+from which Berlioz suffered cruelly, so that one may even say he died
+crushed by the indifference of the public. At this time Meyerbeer was
+reigning at the Opera. This incredible weakening of musical feeling in
+France, from 1840 to 1870, is nowhere better shown than in its romantic
+and realistic writers, for whom music was an hermetically sealed door.
+All these artists were "_visuels_," for whom music was only a noise.
+Hugo is supposed to have said that Germany's inferiority was measured by
+its superiority in music.[204] "The elder Dumas detested," Berlioz says,
+"even bad music."[205] The journal of the Goncourts calmly reflects the
+almost universal scorn of literary men for music. In a conversation
+which took place in 1862 between Goncourt and Theophile Gautier,
+Goncourt said:
+
+"We confessed to him our complete infirmity, our musical deafness--we
+who, at the most, only liked military music."
+
+[Footnote 204: One must at least do Hugo the justice of saying that he
+always spoke of Beethoven with admiration, although he did not know him.
+But he rather exalts him in order to take away from the importance of a
+poet--the only one in the nineteenth century--whose fame was shading his
+own; and when he wrote in his _William Shakespeare_ that "the great man
+of Germany is Beethoven" it was understood by all to mean "the great man
+of Germany is not Goethe."]
+
+[Footnote 205: Written in a letter to his sister, Nanci, on 3 April,
+1850.]
+
+ "Well," said Gautier, "what you tell me pleases me very much. I am
+ like you; I prefer silence to music. I have only just succeeded,
+ after having lived part of my life with a singer, in being able to
+ tell good music from bad; but it is all the same to me."[206]
+
+And he added:
+
+ "But it is a very curious thing that all other writers of our time
+ are like this. Balzac hated music. Hugo could not stand it. Even
+ Lamartine, who himself is like a piano to be hired or sold, holds
+ it in horror!"
+
+It needed a complete upheaval of the nation--a political and moral
+upheaval--to change that frame of mind. Some indication of the change
+was making itself felt in the last years of the second Empire. Wagner,
+who suffered from the hostility or indifference of the public in 1860,
+at the time when _Tannhaeuser_ was performed at the Opera, had already
+found, however, a few understanding people in Paris who discerned his
+genius and sincerely admired him. The most interesting of the writers
+who first began to understand musical emotion is Charles Baudelaire. In
+1861, Pasdeloup gave the first _Concerts populaires de musique
+classique_ at the Cirque d'Hiver. The Berlioz Festival, organised by M.
+Reyer, on March 23rd, 1870, a year after Berlioz's death, revealed to
+France the grandeur of its greatest musical genius, and was the
+beginning of a campaign of public reparation to his memory.
+
+[Footnote 206: We remark, nevertheless, that that did not prevent
+Gautier from being a musical critic.]
+
+The disasters of the war in 1870 regenerated the nation's artistic
+spirit. Music felt its effect immediately.[207] On February 24th, 1871,
+the _Societe nationale de Musique_ was instituted to propagate the works
+of French composers; and in 1873 the _Concerts de l'Association
+artistique_ were started under M. Colonne's direction; and these
+concerts, besides making people acquainted with the classic composers of
+symphonies and the masters of the young French school, were especially
+devoted to the honouring of Berlioz, whose triumph reached its summit
+about 1880.[208]
+
+[Footnote 207: I wish to make known from the beginning that I am only
+noticing here the greater musical doings of the nation, and making no
+mention of works which have not had an important influence on this
+movement.]
+
+[Footnote 208: In the meanwhile France saw the brilliant rise and
+extinction of a great artist--the most spontaneous of all her
+musicians--Georges Bizet, who died in 1875, aged thirty-seven. "Bizet
+was the last genius to discover a new beauty," said Nietzsche; "Bizet
+discovered new lands--the Southern lands of music," _Carmen_ (1875) and
+_L'Arlesienne_ (1872) are masterpieces of the lyrical Latin drama. Their
+style is luminous, concise, and well-defined; the figures are outlined
+with incisive precision. The music is full of light and movement, and is
+a great contrast to Wagner's philosophical symphonies, and its popular
+subject only serves to strengthen its aristocratic distinction. By its
+nature and its clear perception of the spirit of the race it was well in
+advance of its time. What a place Bizet might have taken in our art if
+he had only lived twenty years longer!]
+
+At this time Wagner's success, in its turn, began to make itself felt.
+For this M. Lamoureux, whose concerts began in 1882, was chiefly
+responsible. Wagner's influence considerably helped forward the progress
+of French art, and aroused a love for music in people other than
+musicians; and, by his all-embracing personality and the vast domain of
+his work in art, not only engaged the interest of the musical world, but
+that of the theatrical world, and the world of poetry and the plastic
+arts. One may say that from 1885 Wagner's work acted directly or
+indirectly on the whole of artistic thought, even on the religious and
+intellectual thought of the most distinguished people in Paris. And a
+curious historical witness of its world-wide influence and momentary
+supremacy over all other arts was the founding of the _Revue
+Wagnerienne_, where, united by the same artistic devotion, were found
+writers and poets such as Verlaine, Mallarme, Swinburne, Villiers de
+l'Isle Adam, Huysmans, Richepin, Catulle Mendes, Edouard Rod, Stuart
+Merrill, Ephraim Mikhael, etc., and painters like Fantin-Latour, Jacques
+Blanche, Odilon Redon; and critics like Teodor de Wyzewa, H.S.
+Chamberlain, Hennequin, Camille Benoit, A. Ernst, de Fourcaud, Wilder,
+E. Schure, Soubies, Malherbe, Gabriel Mourey, etc. These writers not
+only discussed musical subjects, but judged painting, literature, and
+philosophy, from a Wagnerian point of view. Hennequin compared the
+philosophic systems of Herbert Spencer and Wagner. Teodor de Wyzewa made
+a study of Wagnerian literature--not the literature that commentated and
+the paintings that illustrated Wagner's works, but the literature and
+the painting that were inspired by Wagner's principles--from Egyptian
+statuary to Degas's paintings, from Homer's writings to those of
+Villiers de l'Isle Adam! In a word, the whole universe was seen and
+judged by the thought of Bayreuth. And though this folly scarcely lasted
+more than three or four years--the length of the life of that little
+magazine--Wagner's genius dominated nearly the whole of French art for
+ten or twelve years.[209] An ardent musical propaganda by means of
+concerts was carried on among the public; and the young intellectuals of
+the day were won over. But the finest service that Wagnerism rendered to
+French art was that it interested the general public in music; although
+the tyranny its influence exercised became, in time, very stifling.
+
+[Footnote 209: Its influence is shown, in varying degrees, in works such
+as M. Reyer's _Sigurd_ (1884), Chabrier's _Gwendoline_ (1886), and M.
+Vincent d'Indy's _Le Chant de la Cloche_ (1886).]
+
+Then, in 1890, there were signs of a movement that was in revolt against
+its despotism. The great wind from the East began to drop, and veered to
+the North. Scandinavian and Russian influences were making themselves
+felt. An exaggerated infatuation for Grieg, though limited to a small
+number of people, was an indication of the change in public taste. In
+1890, Cesar Franck died in Paris. Belgian by birth and temperament, and
+French in feeling and by musical education, he had remained outside the
+Wagnerian movement in his own serene and fecund solitude. To his
+intellectual greatness and the charm his personal genius held for the
+little band of friends who knew and revered him he added the authority
+of his knowledge. Unconsciously he brought back to us the soul of
+Sebastian Bach, with its infinite richness and depth; and through this
+he found himself the head of a school (without having wished it) and the
+greatest teacher of contemporary French music. After his death, his
+name was the means of rallying together the younger school of
+musicians. In 1892, the _Chanteurs de Saint-Gervais_, under the
+direction of M. Charles Bordes, reinstated to honour and popularised
+Gregorian and Palestrinian music; and, following the initiative of their
+director, the _Schola Cantorum_ was founded in 1894 for the revival of
+religious music. Ambition grew with success; and from the _Schola_
+sprang the _Ecole Superieure de Musique_, under the direction of
+Franck's most famous pupil, M. Vincent d'Indy. This school, founded on a
+solid knowledge, not only of the classics, but of the primitives in
+music, took from its very beginning in 1900 a frankly national
+character, and was in some ways opposed to German art. At the same time,
+performances of Bach and seventeenth-and eighteenth-century music became
+more and more frequent; and more intimate relationship with the artists
+of other countries, repeated visits of the great _Kapellmeister_,
+foreign virtuosi and composers (especially Richard Strauss), and,
+lastly, of Russian composers, completed the education of the Parisian
+musical public, who, after repeated rebukes from the critics, became
+conscious of the awakening of a national personality, and of an
+impatient desire to free itself from German tutelage. By turns it
+gratefully and warmly received M. Bruneau's _Le Reve_ (1891), M.
+d'Indy's _Fervaal_ (1898), M. Gustave Charpentier's _Louise_ (1900)--all
+of which seemed like works of liberation. But, as a matter of fact,
+these lyric dramas were by no means free from foreign influences, and
+especially from Wagnerian influences. M. Debussy's _Pelleas et
+Melisande_, in 1902, seemed to mark more truly the emancipation of
+French music. From this time on, French music felt that it had left
+school, and claimed to have founded a new art, which reflected the
+spirit of the race, and was freer and suppler than the Wagnerian art.
+These ideas, which were seized upon and enlarged by the press, brought
+about rather quickly a conviction in French artists of France's
+superiority in music. Is that conviction justified? The future alone can
+tell us. But one may see by this brief outline of events how real is the
+evolution of the musical spirit in France since 1870, in spite of the
+apparent contradictions of fashion which appear on the surface of art.
+It is the spirit of France that is, after long oppression and by a
+patient but eager initiation, realising its power and wishing to
+dominate in its turn.
+
+I wanted at first to trace the broad line of the movement which for the
+last thirty years has been affecting French music; and now I shall
+consider the musical institutions that have had their share in this
+movement. You will not be surprised if I ignore some of the most
+celebrated, which have lost their interest in it, in order that I may
+consider those that are the true authors of our regeneration.
+
+
+MUSICAL INSTITUTIONS BEFORE 1870
+
+
+It is not by any means the oldest and most celebrated musical
+institutions which have taken the largest share in this evolution of
+music in the last thirty years.
+
+The _Academie des Beaux-Arts_, where six chairs are reserved for the
+musical section, could have played a very important part in the musical
+organisation of France by the authority of its name, and by the many
+prizes that it gives for composition and criticism, especially by the
+_Prix de Rome_, which it awards every year. But it does not play its
+part well, partly because of the antiquated statutes that govern it, by
+which a handful of musicians are associated with a great number of
+painters, sculptors, and architects, who are ignorant of music and mock
+at the musicians, as they did in the time of Berlioz; and partly because
+it is the custom of the Academy that the little group of musicians shall
+be trained in a very conservative way. One of the names of these
+musicians is justly celebrated--that of M. Saint-Saens; but there are
+others whose fame is of poorer quality, and others still who have no
+fame at all. And the whole forms a little group, which though it does
+not put any actual obstacles in the way of the progress of art, yet does
+not look upon it favourably, but remains rather apart in an indifferent
+or even hostile spirit.
+
+The _Conservatoire national de Musique et de Declamation_, which dates
+from the last years of the _Ancien Regime_ and the Revolution, was
+designed by its patriotic and-democratic origin to serve the cause of
+national art and free progress.[210]
+
+[Footnote 210: One knows that the Conservatoire originated in _L'Ecole
+gratuite de musique de la garde nationale parisienne_, founded in 1792
+by Sarrette, and directed by Gossec. It was then a civic and military
+school, but, according to Chenier, was changed into the _Institut
+national de musique_ on 8 November, 1793, and into the _Conservatoire_
+on 3 August, 1795. This Republican Conservatoire made it its business to
+keep in contact with the spirit of the country, and was directly opposed
+to the Opera, which was of monarchical origin. See M. Constant Pierre's
+work _Le Conservatoire national de musique_ (1900), and M. Julien
+Tiersot's very interesting book _Les Fetes et les Chants de la
+Revolution francaise_ (1908).]
+
+It was for a long time the corner-stone of the edifice of music in
+Paris. But although it has always numbered in its ranks many illustrious
+and devoted professors--among whom it recognised, a little late, the
+founder of the young French school, Cesar Franck--and though the
+majority of artists who have made a name in French music have received
+its teaching, and the list of laureates of Rome who have come from its
+composition classes includes all the heads of the artistic movement
+to-day in all its diversity, and ranges from M. Massenet to M. Bruneau,
+and from M. Charpentier to M. Debussy--in spite of all this, it is no
+secret that, since 1870, the official action with regard to the movement
+amounts to almost nothing; though we must at least do it justice, and
+say that it has not hindered it.[211]
+
+[Footnote 211: You must remember that I am speaking here of _official_
+action only; for there have always been masters among the Conservatoire
+teaching staff who have united a fine musical culture with a
+broad-minded and liberal spirit. But the influence of these independent
+minds is, generally speaking, small; for they have not the disposing of
+academic successes; and when, by exception, they have a wide influence,
+like that of Cesar Franck, it is the result of personal work outside the
+Conservatoire--work that is, as often as not, opposed to Conservatoire
+principles.]
+
+But if the spirit of this academy has often destroyed the effect of the
+excellent teaching there, by making success in academic competitions the
+chief aim of the professors and their pupils, yet a certain freedom has
+always reigned in the institution. And though this freedom is mainly the
+result of indifference, it has, however, permitted the more independent
+temperaments to develop in peace--from Berlioz to M. Ravel. One should
+be grateful for this. But such virtues are too negative to give the
+Conservatoire a high place in the musical history of the Third Republic;
+and it is only lately, under the direction of M. Gabriel Faure, that it
+has endeavoured, not without difficulty, to get back its place at the
+head of French art, which it had lost, and which others had taken.
+
+The _Societe des Concerts du Conservatoire_, founded in 1828 under the
+direction of Habeneck, has had its hour of glory in the musical history
+of Paris. It was through this society that Beethoven's greatness was
+revealed to France.[212] It was at the Conservatoire that the early
+important works of Berlioz were first given: _La Fantastique_, _Harold_,
+and _Romeo et Juliette_. It was there, nearer our own time, that
+Saint-Saens's _Symphonie avec Orgue_ and Cesar Franck's _Symphonie_ were
+played for the first time. But for a long time the Conservatoire seemed
+to take its name too literally, and to restrict its sphere to that of a
+museum for classical music.
+
+[Footnote 212: It is to be noted that since 1807 the Conservatoire
+pupils have made Beethoven's symphonies familiar to Parisians. The
+_Symphony in C minor_ was performed by them in 1808; the _Heroic_ in
+1811. It was in connection with one of these performances that the
+_Tablettes de Polymnie_ gave a curious appreciation of Beethoven, which
+is quoted by M. Constant Pierre: "This composer is often grotesque and
+uncouth, and sometimes flies majestically like an eagle and sometimes
+crawls along stony paths. It is as though one had shut up doves and
+crocodiles together."]
+
+In later years, however, the _Societe des Concerts_, with M. Marty,
+began to consider new works. Its orchestra, composed of eminent
+instrumentalists, enjoys a classical fame; though it is now no longer
+alone in the excellence of its performances, and has perhaps lost a
+little the secret that it claimed to possess for the interpretation of
+great classical works. It excels in works of a neo-classic character,
+like those of M. Saint-Saens, which are stronger in style and taste than
+in life and passion. The Conservatoire concerts have also a relative
+superiority over other concerts in Paris in the performance of choral
+works, which up to the present have been very second-rate. But these
+concerts are not easy of access for the general public, as the number of
+seats for sale is very limited. And so the society is representative of
+a little public whose taste is, broadly speaking, conservative and
+official; and the noise of the strife outside its doors only reaches its
+ears slowly, and with a deadened sound.
+
+The influence of the Conservatoire is, in music especially, an influence
+of the past and of the Government. One may say much the same of the
+Opera. This ancient association, which bears the imposing name of
+_Academie nationale de Musique_ and dates from 1669, is a sort of
+national institution which is more concerned with the history of
+official art than with living art. The satire with which Jean-Jacques
+describes, in his _Nouvelle Heloise_, the stiff solemnity and mournful
+pomp of its performances has not lost much of its truth. What is lacking
+in the Opera to-day is the enthusiasm that accompanied its former
+musical struggles in the times of the "_Encyclopedistes_" and the
+"_guerre des coins_." The great battles of art are now fought outside
+its doors; and it has become by degrees a showy _salon_, a little faded
+perhaps, where the public is more interested in itself than in the
+performance. In spite of the enormous sums that it swallows up every
+year (nearly four million francs),[213] only one or two new pieces are
+produced in a year, and they are rarely works that are representative of
+the modern school. And though it has at last admitted Wagner's dramas
+into its repertory, one can no longer consider these works, half a
+century old, to be in the vanguard of music. The most esteemed masters
+of the French school, such as Massenet, Reyer, Chausson, and Vincent
+d'Indy, had to seek refuge in the Theatre de la Monnaie at Brussels
+before they could get their works received at the Opera in Paris. And
+the classical composers fare no better. Neither _Fidelio_ nor Gluck's
+tragedies--with the exception of _Armide_, which was put on under
+pressure of fashion--are represented; and when by chance they give
+_Freischuetz_ or _Don Juan_, one wonders if it would not have been better
+to let them rest in oblivion, rather than treat them sacrilegiously by
+adding, cutting, introducing ballets and new recitatives, and deforming
+their style so as to bring them "up to date."[214]
+
+[Footnote 213: This is according to M. Rivet's report on the
+_Beaux-Arts_ in 1906. The Opera employs 1370 people, and its expenses
+are about 3,988,000 francs. The annual grant of the State comes to about
+800,000 francs.]
+
+[Footnote 214: On the occasion of the revival of _Don Juan_ in 1902, the
+_Revue Musicale_ counted up the pages that had been added to the
+original score. They came to two hundred and twenty-eight.]
+
+In spite of the changes of taste and the campaign of the press, the
+Opera has remained to this day as it was in the time of Meyerbeer and
+Gounod and their disciples. But it would be foolish to pretend that it
+has not its public. The receipts show well enough that _Faust_ is in
+greater favour than _Siegfried_ or _Tristan_, not to speak of the more
+recent works of the new French school, which cannot be acclimatised
+there.
+
+Without doubt, the enormous stage at the Opera does not lend itself well
+to modern musical dramas, which are intimate and concentrated, and would
+be lost in its immense space, which is more adapted for formal
+processions like the marches in the _Prophete_ and _Aida_. Besides this,
+there is the conventional acting of the majority of the singers, the
+dull lifelessness of the choruses, the defective acoustics, and the
+exaggerated utterance and gestures of the actors, demanded by the great
+dimensions of the place--all of which is a serious obstacle to the
+conception of a living and simple art. But the chief obstacle will
+always lie in the very nature of such a theatre--a theatre of luxury and
+vanity, created for a set of snobs, whose least interest is the music,
+who have not enough intellect to create a fashion, but who servilely
+follow every fashion after it is thirty years old. Such a theatre no
+longer counts in the history of French music; and its next directors
+will need a vast amount of ingenuity and energy to get a semblance of
+life into such a dead colossus.
+
+But it is quite another affair with the Opera-Comique. This theatre has
+taken a very active part in the development of modern music. Without
+renouncing its classic traditions, or its delightful repertory of the
+old _opera-comiques_, it has had understanding enough, under the
+judicious management of M. Albert Carre, to hold itself open for any
+interesting productions in dramatic music. It takes no side among the
+different schools; and the representatives of the old-fashioned light
+opera with their songs elbow the leaders of the advanced school. No
+association has done more important work, among musical dramas as well
+as musical comedies, during the last twenty years. In this theatre,
+which produced _Carmen_ in 1875, _Manon_ in 1884, and the _Roi d'Ys_ in
+1888, were played the principal dramas of M. Bruneau, as well as M.
+Charpentier's _Louise_, M. Debussy's _Pelleas et Melisande_, and M.
+Dukas's _Ariane et Barbebleue_. It may seem astonishing that such works
+should have found a place at the Opera-Comique and not at the Opera. But
+if two musical theatres of different kinds exist, one of which pretends
+to have the monopoly of great art, while the other with a simpler and
+more intimate character seeks only to please, it is always the latter
+that has a better chance of development and of making new discoveries;
+for the first is oppressed by traditions that become ever stiffer and
+more pedantic, while the other with its simplicity and lack of
+pretension is able to accommodate itself to any manner of life. How many
+artists have revolutionised their times while they were merely looked
+upon as people who amused! Frescobaldi and Philipp Emanuel Bach brought
+fresh life to art, but were scorned by the so-called representatives of
+fine art; Mozart's _opere buffe_ have more of truth and life in them
+than his _opere serie_; and there is as much dramatic power in an
+_opera-comique_ like _Carmen_ as in all the repertory of grand Opera
+to-day. And so the Opera-Comique theatre has become the home of the
+boldest experiments in musical drama. The most daring or the most
+violent ventures into musical realism, after the manner of Charpentier
+or Bruneau, and the subtle fantasies of a delicate art of dreams, like
+that of Debussy, have found a welcome there. It has also been open to
+various kinds of foreign art: Humperdinck's _Haensel und Gretel_, Verdi's
+_Falstaff_, the works of Puccini, Mascagni, and the young Italian
+school, Richard Strauss's _Feuersnot_, Rimsky-Korsakow's
+_Snegourotchka_, have all been played. And they have even given the
+classic masterpieces of opera there: _Fidelio_, _Orfeo_, _Alceste_, the
+two _Iphigenies_; and taken more pains with them and mounted them with
+more pious zeal than they do at the Opera. The operas themselves are
+more at home there, too, for the size of the theatre is more like that
+of the eighteenth-century theatres. It is true that the stage rather
+lacks depth; but the ingenuity of the director and the admirable scenic
+artists he employs has succeeded in making one forget this defect, and
+accomplished marvels. No theatre in Paris has more artistic staging, and
+some of the scenery that has been designed lately is a masterpiece of
+its kind. The Opera-Comique has also the advantage of excellent
+conductors, and one of them, M. Messager, who is now Director, has, by
+his clever interpretations, greatly contributed to the success of the
+works of the new school.
+
+
+NEW MUSICAL INSTITUTIONS
+
+
+1. _The Societe Nationale_
+
+Before 1870, French music had already in the Opera and the Opera-Comique
+(without counting the various endeavours of the Theatre Lyrique) an
+outlet which was nearly enough for the needs of her dramatic
+productions. Even when musical taste was most decadent, the works of
+Gounod, Ambroise Thomas, and Masse, had always upheld the name of French
+_opera-comique_. But what was almost entirely lacking was an outlet for
+symphonic music and chamber-music. "Before 1870," wrote M. Saint-Saens
+in _Harmonie et Melodie_, "a French composer who was foolish enough to
+venture on to the ground of instrumental music had no other means of
+getting his works performed than by himself arranging a concert for
+them." Such was Berlioz's case; for he had to gather together an
+orchestra and hire a room each time he wished to get a hearing for his
+great symphonies. The financial result was often disastrous: the
+performance of the _Damnation de Faust_ in 1846 was, for example, a
+complete failure, and he had to give it up. The Conservatoire, which was
+formerly more hospitable, rather reluctantly performed a portion of
+_L'Enfance du Christ_; but it gave young composers no encouragement.
+
+The first man who attempted to make the symphony popular, M. Saint-Saens
+tells us in his _Portraits et Souvenirs_, was Seghers, a dissentient
+member of the _Societe des Concerts du Conservatoire_, who during
+several years (1848-1854) was conductor of the _Societe de
+Sainte-Cecile_, which had its quarters in a room in the rue de la
+Chaussee d'Antin. There he had performed Mendelssohn's _Symphonie
+Italienne_, the overtures to _Tannhaeuser_ and _Manfred_, Berlioz's
+_Fuite en Egypte_, and Gounod's and Bizet's early, works. But lack of
+money cut short his efforts.
+
+Pasdeloup took up the work. After having been conductor for the _Societe
+des jeunes artistes du Conservatoire_ since 1851, in the Salle Herz, he
+founded, in 1861, at the Cirque d'Hiver, with the financial support of a
+rich moneylender, the first _Concerts populaires de musique classique_.
+Unhappily, says M. Saint-Saens, Pasdeloup, even up to 1870, made an
+almost exclusive selection of German classical works. He raised an
+impenetrable barrier before the young French school, and the only French
+works he played were symphonies by Gounod and Gouvy, and the overtures
+of _Les Francs-Juges_ and _La Muette_. It was impossible to set up a
+rival society against him; and an exclusive monopoly in music was,
+therefore, held by him. According to M. Saint-Saens he was a mediocre
+musician, and had, in spite of his passion for music, "immense
+incapacity." In _Harmonie et Melodie_ M. Saint-Saens says: "The few
+chamber-music societies that existed were also closed to all new-comers;
+their programmes only contained the names of undisputed celebrities, the
+writers of classic symphonies. In those times one had really to be
+devoid of all common sense to write music."
+
+A new generation was growing up, however,--a generation that was serious
+and thoughtful, that was more attracted by pure music than by the
+theatre, that was filled with a burning desire to found a national art.
+To this generation M. Saint-Saens and M. Vincent d'Indy belong. The war
+of 1870 strengthened these ideas about music, and, while the war was
+still raging, there sprang from them the _Societe Nationale de Musique_.
+
+One must speak of this society with respect, for it was the cradle and
+sanctuary of French art.[215] All that was great in French music from
+1870 to 1900 found a home there. Without it, the greater part of the
+works that are the honour of our music would never have been played;
+perhaps they would not ever have been written. The Society possessed the
+rare merit of being able to anticipate public opinion by ten or eleven
+years, and in some ways it has formed the public mind and obliged it to
+honour those whom the Society had already recognised as great musicians.
+
+[Footnote 215: The facts which follow are taken from the archives of the
+_Societe Nationale de Musique_, and have been given me by M. Pierre de
+Breville, the Society's secretary.]
+
+The two founders of the Society were Romaine Bussine, professor of
+Singing at the Conservatoire, and M. Camille Saint-Saens. And, following
+their initiative, Cesar Franck, Ernest Guiraud, Massenet, Garcin,
+Gabriel Faure, Henri Duparc, Theodore Dubois, and Taffanel, joined
+forces with them, and at a meeting on 25 February, 1871, agreed to found
+a musical society that should give hearings to the works of living
+French composers exclusively. The first meetings were interrupted by the
+doings of the Commune; but they began again in October, 1871. The
+Society's early statutes were drawn up by Alexis de Castillon, a
+military officer and a talented composer, who, after having served in
+the war of 1870 at the head of the _mobiles_ of Eure-et-Loire, was one
+of the founders of French chamber-music, and died prematurely in 1873,
+aged thirty-five. It was these statutes, signed by Saint-Saens,
+Castillon, and Garcin, that gave the Society its title of _Societe
+Nationale de Musique_, and its device, "_Ars gallica_." This is what the
+statutes say about the aims of the Society:
+
+ "The aim of the Society is to aid the production and the
+ popularisation of all serious musical works, whether published or
+ unpublished, of French composers; to encourage and bring to light,
+ so far as is in its power, all musical endeavour, whatever form it
+ may take, on condition that there is evidence of high, artistic
+ aspiration on the part of the author.... It is in brotherly love,
+ with complete forgetfulness of self, and with the firm intention of
+ aiding one another as far as they can, that the members of the
+ Society will co-operate, each in his own sphere of action, for the
+ study and performance of the works which they shall be called upon
+ to select and to interpret."
+
+The first Committee was made up as follows: President, Bussine;
+Vice-President, Saint-Saens; Secretary, Alexis de Castillon;
+Under-Secretary, Jules Garcin; Treasurer, Lenepveu. The members of the
+Committee were: Cesar Franck, Theodore Dubois, E. Guiraud, Fissot,
+Bourgault-Ducoudray, Faure, and Lalo.
+
+The first concert was given on 25 November, 1871, in the Salle Pleyel;
+and it is worthy of note that the first work played was a trio of Cesar
+Franck's. Since then the Society has given three hundred and fifty
+performances of chamber-music or orchestral works. The best known French
+composers and virtuosi have taken part as executants, among others:
+Cesar Franck, Saint-Saens, Massenet, Bizet, Vincent d'Indy, Faure,
+Chabrier, Guiraud, Debussy, Lekeu, Lamoureux, Chevillard, Taffanel,
+Widor, Messager, Diemer, Sarasate, Risler, Cortot, Ysaye, etc. And among
+the compositions that have been played for the first time it is enough
+to mention the following:
+
+Cesar Franck: Nearly the whole of his works, including his Sonata, Trio,
+Quartette, Quintette, Symphonic Variations, Preludes and Fugues, Mass,
+_Redemption_, _Psyche_, and a part of _Les Beatitudes_.
+
+Saint-Saens: _Phaeton_, _Second Symphony_, Sonatas, Persian Melodies,
+the _Rapsodie d'Auvergne_, and a quartette.
+
+Vincent d'Indy: The trilogy of _Wallenstein_, the _Poeme des Montagues_,
+the _Symphonie sur un theme montagnard_, and quartettes.
+
+Chabrier: Part of _Gwendoline_.
+
+Lalo: Fragments of the _Roi d'Ys_, Rhapsodies and Symphonies.
+
+Bruneau: _Penthesilee_, _La Belle au Bois Dormant_.
+
+Chausson: _Viviane_, _Helene_, _La Tempete_, a quartette and a symphony.
+
+Debussy: _La Damoiselle elue_, the _Prelude a l'apres-midi d'un faune_,
+a quartette, pieces for the pianoforte, and melodies.
+
+Dukas: _L'Apprenti Sorcier_, and a sonata for the pianoforte.
+
+Lekeu: _Andromede_.
+
+Alberic Magnard: Symphonies and a quartette.
+
+Ravel: _Scheherazade_, _Histoires Naturelles_, etc.
+
+Saint-Saens was director with Bussine until 1886. But from 1881 the
+influence of Franck and his disciples became more and more felt; and
+Saint-Saens began to lose interest in the efforts of the new school. In
+1886 there was a division of opinion about a proposition of Vincent
+d'Indy's to introduce the works of classical masters and foreign
+composers into the programmes. This proposition was adopted; but
+Saint-Saens and Bussine sent in their resignations. Franck then became
+the true president, although he refused the title; and after his death,
+in 1890, Vincent d'Indy took his place. Under these two directors a
+quite important place was given to old and classical music by composers
+such as Palestrina, Vittoria, Josquin, Bach, Haendel, Rameau, Gluck,
+Beethoven, Schumann, Liszt, and Brahms. Foreign contemporary music only
+occupied a very limited place. Wagner's name only appears once, in a
+transcription of the _Venusberg_ for the pianoforte; and Richard
+Strauss's name figures only against his Quartette. Grieg had his hour of
+popularity there about 1887, as well as the Russians--Moussorgski,
+Borodine, Rimsky-Korsakow, Liadow, and Glazounow--whom M. Debussy has
+perhaps helped to make known to us. At the present moment the Society
+seems more exclusively French than ever; and the influence of M. Vincent
+d'Indy and the school of Franck is predominant. That is only natural;
+the _Societe Nationale_ most truly earned its title to glory by
+discerning Cesar Franck's genius; for the Society was a little sanctuary
+where the great artist was honoured at a time when he was ignored or
+laughed at by the rest of the world. This character of a sanctuary was
+kept even after victory. In its general programme of 1903-1904, the
+Society reminded us with pride that it had remained faithful to the
+promises made in 1871; and it added that if, in order to permit its
+members to keep abreast of the general progress of art, it had little by
+little allowed classical masterpieces and modern foreign works of
+interest on its programmes, it had, however, always kept its
+guest-chamber open, and shaped many a future reputation there.
+
+Nothing is truer. The _Societe Nationale_ is indeed a guest-chamber,
+where for the past thirty years a guest-chamber art and guest-chamber
+opinions have been formed; and from it some of the profoundest and most
+poetic French music has been derived, such as Franck's and Debussy's
+chamber-music. But its atmosphere is becoming daily more rarefied. That
+is a danger. It is to be feared that this art and thought may be
+absorbed by the decadent subtleties or pedantic scholasticism which is
+apt to accompany all coteries--in short, that its music will be
+salon-music rather than chamber-music. Even the Society itself seems to
+have felt this at times; and at different periods has sought contact
+with the general public, and put itself into direct communication with
+it. "It becomes more and more necessary," wrote M. Saint-Saens, "that
+French composers should find something intermediate between an intimate
+hearing of their music and a performance of it before the general
+public--something which would not be a speculative thing like a big
+concert, but which would be analogous to the artistic attraction of an
+exhibition of painting, and which would dare everything. It is a new aim
+for the _Societe Nationale_." But it does not seem that it has yet
+attained this goal, nor that it is near attaining it, despite some not
+quite happy attempts.
+
+But at least the _Societe Nationale_ has gloriously achieved the task it
+set itself. In thirty years it has created in Paris a little centre of
+earnest composers of symphonies and chamber-music, and a cultured public
+that seems able to understand them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+2. _The Grand Symphony Concerts_
+
+Although it was an urgent matter that young French composers should
+unite to withstand the general indifference of the public, it was more
+urgent still that that indifference should be attacked, and that music
+should be brought within reach of ordinary people. It was a matter of
+taking up and completing Pasdeloup's work in a more artistic and more
+modern spirit.
+
+A publisher of music, Georges Hartmann, feeling the forces that were
+drawing together in French art, gathered about him the greater part of
+the talented men of the young school--Franck, Bizet, Saint-Saens,
+Massenet, Delibes, Lalo, A. de Castillon, Th. Dubois, Guiraud, Godard,
+Paladilhe, and Joncieres--and undertook to produce their works in
+public. He rented the Odeon theatre, and got together an orchestra, the
+conductorship of which he entrusted to M. Edouard Colonne. And on 2
+March, 1873, the _Concert National_ was inaugurated in a musical
+matinee, where M. Saint-Saens played his _Concerto in G minor_ and Mme.
+Viardot sang Schubert's _Roi des Aulnes_. In the first year six ordinary
+concerts were given, and, besides that, two sacred concerts with choirs,
+at which Cesar Franck's _Redemption_ and Massenet's _Marie-Magdeleine_
+were performed. In 1874 the Odeon was abandoned for the Chatelet. This
+venture attracted some attention, and the concerts were patronised by
+the public; but the financial results were not great.[216] Hartmann was
+discouraged and wished to give the whole thing up. But M. Edouard
+Colonne conceived the idea of turning his orchestra into a society, and
+of continuing the work under the name of _Association Artistique_. Among
+the artist-founders were MM. Bruneau, Benjamin Godard, and Paul
+Hillemacher. Its early days were full of struggle; but owing to the
+perseverance of the Association all obstacles were finally overcome. In
+1903 a festival was held to celebrate its thirtieth anniversary. During
+these thirty years it had given more than eight hundred concerts, and
+had performed the works of about three hundred composers, of which half
+were French. The four composers most frequently heard at the Chatelet
+were Saint-Saens, Wagner, Beethoven, and Berlioz.[217]
+
+[Footnote 216: It must be remembered that the prices of the seats were
+much cheaper than they are to-day; the best were only three francs.]
+
+[Footnote 217: There were about 340 performances of Saint-Saens' works,
+380 of Wagner's, 390 of Beethoven's, and 470 of Berlioz's. I owe these
+details to the kind information of M. Charles Malherbe and M. Leon
+Petitjean, the secretary of the Colonne concerts.]
+
+Berlioz is almost the exclusive property of the Chatelet. Not only have
+they performed his works there more frequently than anywhere else,[218]
+but they are better understood there than in other places. The Colonne
+orchestra and its conductor, gifted with great warmth of spirit,--though
+it is sometimes a little intemperate--are rather bothered by works of a
+classic nature and by those that show contemplative feeling; but they
+give wonderful expression to Berlioz's tumultuous romanticism, his
+poetic enthusiasm, and the bright and delicate colouring of his
+paintings and his musical landscapes. Although Berlioz has his place at
+the Chevillard and Conservatoire concerts, it is to the Chatelet that
+his followers flock; and their enthusiasm has not been affected by the
+campaign that for several years has been directed against Berlioz by
+some French critics under the influence of the younger musical
+party--the followers of d'Indy and Debussy.
+
+[Footnote 218: The _Damnation de Faust_ alone was given in its entirety
+a hundred and fifty times in thirty years.]
+
+It is also at the Chatelet that the keenest musical passion has been
+preserved in the public, even to this day. Thanks to the size of the
+theatre, which is one of the largest in Paris, and to the great number
+of cheap seats, you may always find there a number of young students who
+make the most interested kind of public possible. And the music is
+something more than a pleasure to them--it is a necessity. There are
+some that make great sacrifices in order to have a seat at the Sunday
+concerts. And many of these young men and women live all the week on the
+thought of forgetting the world for a few hours in musical enjoyment.
+Such a public did not exist in France before 1870. It is to the honour
+of the Chatelet and the Pasdeloup concerts to have created it.
+
+Edouard Colonne has done more than educate musical taste in France; for
+no one has worked harder than he to break down the barriers that
+separated the French public from the art of other lands; and, at the
+same time, he has himself helped to make French art known to
+foreigners. When he himself was conducting concerts all over Europe he
+entrusted the conductorship at the Chatelet to the great German
+_Kapellmeister_ and to foreign composers--to Richard Strauss, Grieg,
+Tschaikowsky, Hans Richter, Hermann Levi, Mottl, Nikisch, Mengelberg,
+Siegfried Wagner, and many others. No other conductor has done so much
+for Parisian music during the last thirty years; and we must not forget
+it.[219]
+
+[Footnote 219: It is known that M. Colonne has now a helper in M.
+Gabriel Pierne, who will succeed him when he retires.]
+
+The Lamoureux concerts have had from the beginning a very different
+character from the Colonne concerts. That difference lies partly in the
+personality of the two conductors, and partly in the fact that the
+Lamoureux concerts, although of later date than the Colonne concerts by
+less than ten years, represent a new generation in music. The progress
+of the musical public was singularly rapid: hardly had they explored the
+rich treasure-house of Berlioz's music than they were making discoveries
+in the world of Wagner. And in that world they needed a new guide, who
+had intimate knowledge of Wagner's art and of German art in general.
+Charles Lamoureux was that guide. In 1873 he conducted special
+performances of Bach and Haendel, given by the _Societe de l'Harmonie
+sacree_. After leaving the conductorship of the Opera, he inaugurated,
+on 21 October, 1881, at the Chateau-d'Eau theatre, the _Societe des
+Nouveaux Concerts_. These concerts had at first very comprehensive
+programmes of every kind of music and every kind of school. At the
+first concert there were works of Beethoven, Haendel, Gluck, Sacchini,
+Cimarosa, and Berlioz. In the first year Lamoureux had Beethoven's
+_Ninth Symphony_ performed, as well as a large part of _Lohengrin_, and
+numerous works of young French musicians. Various compositions of Lalo,
+Vincent d'Indy, and Chabrier, were performed there for the first time.
+But it was especially to the study of Wagner's works that Lamoureux most
+gladly devoted himself. It was he who gave the first hearings of Wagner
+in their entirety in France, such as the first and second act of
+_Tristan_, in 1884-1885. The Wagnerian battle was still going on at that
+time, as the notice printed at the head of the programme of _Tristan_
+shows.
+
+ "The management of the _Societe des Nouveaux Concerts_ is desirous
+ of avoiding any disturbance during the performance of the second
+ act of _Tristan_, and urgently and respectfully begs that the
+ audience will abstain from giving any mark of their approval or
+ disapproval before the end of the act."
+
+The same year, in the Eden theatre, to which the concerts had been
+transferred, Lamoureux conducted, for the first time in Paris, the first
+act of the _Walkuere_. In these concerts the tenor, Van Dyck, made his
+_debut_; later, he was one of the leading performers at Bayreuth. In
+1886-1887 Lamoureux rehearsed and conducted the only performance of
+_Lohengrin_ at the Eden theatre. Disturbances in the streets prevented
+further performances. Lamoureux then established himself in the
+concert-room of the Cirque des Champs Elysees, where for eleven years he
+has given what are called the _Concerts-Lamoureux_. He continued to
+spread the knowledge of Wagner's works, and has sometimes had the help
+of some of the most celebrated of the Bayreuth artists, among others,
+that of Mme. Materna and Lilli Lehmann. At the end of the season of 1897
+Lamoureux wished to disband his orchestra in order to conduct concerts
+abroad. But the members of the orchestra decided to remain together
+under the name of the _Association des Concerts-Lamoureux_, with
+Lamoureux's son-in-law, M. Camille Chevillard, as conductor. But
+Lamoureux was not long before he returned to the conductorship of the
+concerts, which had now returned to the Chateau-d'Eau theatre; and a few
+months before his death, in 1899, he conducted the first performance of
+_Tristan_ at the Nouveau theatre. And so he had the happiness of being
+present at the complete triumph of the cause for which he had fought so
+stubbornly for nearly twenty years.[220]
+
+[Footnote 220: My statements may be verified by the account published in
+the _Revue Eolienne_ of January, 1902, by M. Leon Bourgeois, secretary
+of the Committee of the _Association des Concerts-Lamoureux_.]
+
+Lamoureux's performances of Wagner's works have been among the best that
+have ever been given. He had a regard for the work as a whole and a care
+for its details, to which the Colonne orchestra did not quite attain. On
+the other hand, Lamoureux's defect was the exuberant liveliness with
+which he interpreted compositions of a romantic nature. He did not fully
+understand these works; and although he knew much more about classic art
+than his rival, he rendered its letter rather than its spirit, and paid
+such sedulous attention to detail that music like Beethoven's lost its
+intensity and its life. But both his talents and his defects fitted him
+to be an excellent interpreter of the young neo-Wagnerian school, the
+principal representatives of which in France were then M. Vincent d'Indy
+and M. Emmanuel Chabrier. Lamoureux had need, to a certain extent, to be
+himself directed either by the living traditions of Bayreuth, or by the
+thought of modern and living composers; and the greatest service he
+rendered to French music was his creation, thanks to his extreme care
+for material perfection, of an orchestra that was marvellously equipped
+for symphonic music.
+
+This seeking for perfection has been carried on by his successor, M.
+Camille Chevillard, whose orchestra is even more refined still. One may
+say, I think, that it is to-day the best in Paris. M. Chevillard is more
+attracted by pure music than Lamoureux was; and he rightly finds that
+dramatic music has been occupying too large a place in Parisian
+concerts. In a letter published by the _Mercure de France_, in January,
+1903, he reproaches the educators of public taste with having fostered a
+liking for opera, and with not having awakened a respect for pure music:
+"Any four bars from one of Mozart's quartettes have," he says, "a
+greater educational value than a showy scene from an opera." No one in
+Paris conducts classic works better than he, especially the works that
+possess clean, plastic beauty; and in Germany itself it would be
+difficult to find anyone who would give a more delicate interpretation
+of some of Haendel's and Mozart's symphonic works. His orchestra has
+kept, moreover, the superiority that it had already acquired in its
+repertory of Wagner's works. But M. Chevillard has communicated a warmth
+and energy of rhythm to it that it did not possess before. His
+interpretations of Beethoven, even if they are somewhat superficial, are
+very full of life. Like Lamoureux, he has hardly caught the spirit of
+French romantic works--of Berlioz, and still less of Franck and his
+school; and he seems to have but lukewarm sympathy for the more recent
+developments of French music. But he understands well the German
+romantic composers, especially Schumann, for whom he has a marked
+liking; and he tried, though without great success, to introduce Liszt
+and Brahms into France, and was the first among us to attract real
+attention to Russian music, whose brilliant and delicate colouring he
+excels in rendering. And, like M. Colonne, he has brought the great
+German _Kapellmeister_ among us--Weingartner, Nikisch, and Richard
+Strauss, the last mentioned having directed the first performance in
+Paris of his symphonic poems, _Zarathustra_, _Don Quixote_, and
+_Heldenleben_, at the Lamoureux concerts.
+
+Nothing could have better completed the musical education of the public
+than this continuous defile, for the past ten years, of _Kapellmeister_
+and foreign virtuosi, and the comparisons that their different styles
+and interpretations afforded. Nothing has better helped forward the
+improvement of Parisian orchestras than the emulation brought about by
+the meetings between Parisian conductors and those of other countries.
+At present our own conductors are worthy rivals of the best in Germany.
+The string instruments are good; the wood has kept its old French
+superiority; and though the brass is still the weakest part of our
+orchestras, it has made great progress. One may still criticise the
+grouping of orchestras at concerts, for it is often defective; there is
+a disproportion between the different families of instruments and, in
+consequence, between their different sonorities, some of which are too
+thin and others too dull. But these defects are fairly common all over
+Europe to-day. Unhappily, more peculiar to France is the insufficiency
+or poor quality of the choirs, whose progress has been far from keeping
+pace with that of the orchestras. It is to this side of music that the
+directors of concerts must now bring their efforts to bear.
+
+The Lamoureux Concerts have not had as stable a dwelling-place as the
+Chatelet Concerts. They have wandered about Paris from one room to
+another--from the Cirque d'Hiver to the Cirque d'Ete, and from the
+Chateau-d'Eau to the Nouveau Theatre. At the present moment they are in
+the Salle Gaveau, which is much too small for them. In spite of the
+progress of music and musical taste, Paris has not yet a concert-hall,
+as the smallest provincial towns in Germany have; and this shameful
+indifference, unworthy of the artistic renown of Paris, obliges the
+symphonic societies to take refuge in circuses or theatres, which they
+share with other kinds of performers, though the acoustics of these
+places are not intended for concerts. And so it happens that for six
+years the Chevillard Concerts have been given at the back of a
+music-hall, which has the same entrance, and which is only separated
+from the concert-room by a small passage, so that the roaring choruses
+of a _danse du venire_ may mingle with an adagio of Beethoven's or a
+scene from the Tetralogy. Worse than this, the smallness of the place
+into which these concerts have been crammed has been a serious obstacle
+in the way of making them popular. Nevertheless, in the promenade and
+galleries of the Nouveau Theatre, in later years, arose what may be
+called a little war over concertos. It was rather a curious episode in
+the history of the musical taste of Paris, and merits a few words here.
+In every country, but especially in those countries that are least
+musical, a virtuoso profits by public favour, often to the detriment of
+the work he is performing; for what is most liked in music is the
+musician. The virtuoso--whose importance must not be underrated, and who
+is worthy of honour when he is a reverential and sympathetic interpreter
+of genius--has too often taken a lamentable part, especially in Latin
+countries, in the degrading of musical taste; for empty virtuosity makes
+a desert of art. The fashion of inept fantasias and acrobatic
+variations has, it is true, gone by; but of late years virtuosity has
+returned in an offensive way, and, sheltering itself under the solemn
+classical name of "concertos," it usurped a place of rather exaggerated
+importance in symphony concerts, and especially in M. Chevillard's
+concerts--a place which Lamoureux would never have given it. Then the
+younger and more enthusiastic part of the public began to revolt; and
+very soon, with perfect impartiality and quite indiscriminately, began
+to hiss famous and obscure virtuosi alike in their performance of any
+concerto, whether it was splendid or detestable. Nothing found favour
+with them--neither the playing of Paderewski, nor the music of
+Saint-Saens and the great masters. The management of the concerts went
+its own way and tried in vain to put out the disturbers, and to forbid
+them entry to the concert-room; and the battle went on for a long time,
+and critics were drawn into it. But in spite of its ridiculous excesses,
+and the barbarism of the methods by which the parterre expressed its
+opinions, that quarrel is not without interest. It proved how a passion
+and enthusiasm for music had been roused in France; and the passion,
+though unjust in its expression, was more fruitful and of far greater
+worth than indifference.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+3. _The Schola Cantorum_
+
+The Lamoureux Concerts had served their purpose, and, in their turn,
+their heroic mission came to an end. They had forced Wagner on Paris;
+and Paris, as always, had overshot the mark, and could swear by no one
+but Wagner. French musicians were translating Gounod's or Massenet's
+ideas into Wagner's style; Parisian critics repeated Wagner's theories
+at random, whether they understood them or not--generally when they did
+not understand them. A reaction was inevitable directly Paris was well
+saturated with Wagner; and it came about in 1890, among a chosen few,
+some of whom had been, and were even still, under Wagner's influence. It
+was at first only a mild reaction, and showed itself in a return to the
+classics of the past and to the great primitives in music.
+
+There had been several attempts in this direction before, but none of
+them had succeeded in making any impression on the mass of the public.
+In 1843, Joseph Napoleon Ney, Prince of Moszkowa, founded in Paris a
+society for the performance of religious and classical vocal music. This
+society, which the Prince himself conducted in his own house, set itself
+to perform the vocal works of the sixteenth and seventeenth
+centuries.[221]
+
+[Footnote 221: It published, in eleven volumes, the ancient works that
+it performed. Before this experiment there had been the _Concerts
+historiques de Fetis_, preceded by lectures, which were inaugurated in
+1832, and failed; and these were followed by Amedee Mereaux's _Concerts
+historiques_ in 1842-1844.]
+
+In 1853, Louis Niedermeyer founded in Paris an _Ecole de musique
+religieuse et classique_, which strove "to form singers, organists,
+choir-masters, and composers of music, by the study of the classic works
+of the great masters of the fifteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth
+centuries." This school, subsidised by the State, was a nursery for
+some real musicians. It reckoned among its pupils some noted composers,
+conductors, organists, and historians; among others, M. Gabriel Faure,
+M. Andre Messager, M. Eugene Gigout, and M. Henry Expert. M. Saint-Saens
+was a professor there, and became its president. Nearly five hundred
+organists, choir-masters, and professors of music of the Conservatoire
+and other French colleges were trained there. But this school, serious
+in intention, and a refuge for the classic spirit in the midst of the
+prevailing bad taste, did not trouble itself about influencing the
+public, and, in fact, almost ignored it.
+
+Lamoureux attempted in 1873 to perform the great choral works of Bach
+and Haendel; and in 1878 the celebrated French organist, M. Alexandre
+Guilmant, ventured to give concerts at the Trocadero for the organ and
+orchestra, which were devoted to religious music of the seventeenth and
+eighteenth centuries. But the deplorable acoustics of the concert-room
+had a prejudicial effect on the works that were performed there; and the
+public did not respond very warmly to M. Guilmant's efforts, and seemed
+from the first only to find an historical interest in the masterpieces,
+and to miss their depth and life altogether.
+
+Then a pupil of Franck's, M. Henry Expert, who began his admirable works
+on Musical History in 1882, laid the foundation of the _Societe J.S.
+Bach_, in order to spread the knowledge of ancient music written between
+the twelfth and eighteenth centuries. And he succeeded in interesting
+in his undertaking, not only the principal French musicians, such as
+Cesar Franck, Saint-Saens, and Gounod, but also foreigners, such as Hans
+von Buelow, Tschaikowsky, Grieg, Sgambati, and Gevaert. Unhappily this
+society never got farther than arranging what it wanted to do, and only
+sketched out the plans that were realised later by Charles Bordes.
+
+The general public were not really interested in the art of the old
+musicians until the _Association des Chanteurs de Saint-Gervais_ was
+founded in 1892 by Charles Bordes, the choirmaster of the church of
+Saint-Gervais. The immediate success and the noisy renown of the Society
+were due to other things besides the talent of its conductor, who
+combined with a lively artistic intelligence both common-sense and
+energy and a remarkable gift for organisation--it was due partly to the
+help of favourable circumstances, partly to the surfeit of Wagnerism, of
+which I have just spoken, and partly to the birth of a new religious
+art, which had sprung up since the death of Cesar Franck round the
+memory of that great musician.
+
+It is not my intention here to write an appreciation of Cesar Franck's
+genius, but it is not possible to understand the musical movement in
+Paris of the last fifteen years if one does not take into account the
+importance of his teaching. The organ class at the Conservatoire, where
+in 1872 Franck succeeded his old master Benoist, was for a long time, as
+M. Vincent d'Indy says, "the true centre for the study of Composition
+at the Conservatoire. Many of his fellow-workers could never bring
+themselves to look upon him as one of themselves, because he had the
+boldness to see in art something other than the means of earning a
+living. Indeed, Cesar Franck was not of them; and they made him feel
+this." But the young students made no mistake about the matter. "At this
+time," M. d'Indy also tells us,[222] "that is to say from 1872 to 1876,
+the three courses of Advanced Musical Composition were given by three
+professors who were not at all fitted for their work. One was Victor
+Masse, a composer of simple light operas and a man with no understanding
+of a symphony, who was very frequently ill and had to entrust his
+teaching to one of his pupils; another was Henri Reber, an oldish
+musician with narrow and dogmatic ideas; and the third was Francois
+Bazin, who was not capable of distinguishing in his pupil's fugues a
+false answer from a true one, and whose highest title to glory is
+derived from a composition called _Le Voyage en Chine_. So it is not
+surprising that Cesar Franck's teaching, founded on that of Bach and
+Beethoven, but admitting, as well, imagination and all new and liberal
+ideas, did, at that time, draw to him all young minds that had lofty
+ambitions and that were really in love with their art. And so, quite
+unconsciously, the master attracted to himself all the sincere and
+artistic talent that was scattered about the different classes of the
+Conservatoire, as well as that of his outside pupils."
+
+[Footnote 222: The following information was given by M. Vincent d'Indy
+at a lecture held on 20 February, 1903, at the _Ecole des Hautes Etudes
+sociales_--a lecture which later became a chapter in M. d'Indy's book,
+_Cesar Franck_ (1906).]
+
+Among those who received his direct teaching[223] were Henri Duparc,
+Alexis de Castillon, Vincent d'Indy, Ernest Chausson, Pierre de
+Breville, Augusta Holmes, Louis de Serres, Charles Bordes, Guy Ropartz,
+and Guillaume Lekeu. And if to these we add the pupils in the organ
+classes, who also came under his influence, we have, among others,
+Samuel Rousseau, Gabriel Pierne, Auguste Chapuis, Paul Vidal, and
+Georges Marty; and also the virtuosi who were for some time intimate
+with him, such as Armand Parent and Eugene Ysaye, to whom Franck
+dedicated his violin sonata. And if one thinks, too, of the artists who,
+though not his pupils, felt his power--artists such as Gabriel Faure,
+Alexandre Guilmant, Emmanuel Chabrier, and Paul Dukas--one may see that
+nearly the whole musical generation of Paris of that time took its
+inspiration from Cesar Franck. And it was largely with the intention of
+perpetuating his teaching that his pupils, Charles Bordes and Vincent
+d'Indy, and his friend, Alexandre Guilmant, founded in 1894, four years
+after his death, the _Schola Cantorum_, which has kept his memory alive
+ever since.
+
+"Our revered father, Franck," said Vincent d'Indy, in a speech, "is in
+some ways the grandfather of the _Schola Cantorum_; for it is his system
+of teaching that we apply and try to carry on here."[224]
+
+[Footnote 223: A complete list may be found in M. d'Indy's book.]
+
+[Footnote 224 2: _Tribune de Saint-Gervais_, November, 1900.]
+
+The influence of Franck was twofold: it was artistic and moral. On the
+one hand he was, if I may so put it, an admirable professor of musical
+architecture; he founded a school of symphony and chamber-music such as
+France had never had before, which in certain directions was newer and
+more daring than that of the German symphony writers. And, on the other
+hand, he exercised by his own character a memorable influence over all
+those who came into contact with him. His profound faith, that fine,
+indulgent, and calm faith, shone round him like a glory. The Catholic
+party, who were awakening to new life in France just then, tried, after
+his death, to identify his ideals with their own. But this was, as we
+have said elsewhere,[225] to narrow Franck's mind; for its great charm
+lay in its harmonious union of religion and liberty, which never limited
+its artistic sympathies to an exclusive ideal. The composer's son, M.
+Georges Cesar-Franck, has in vain protested against this monopoly of his
+father, and says:
+
+ "According to certain writers, who wish to reduce everything to a
+ dead level and deduce all things from a single cause, Cesar Franck
+ was a mystic whose true domain was religious music. Nothing could
+ be wider of the mark. The public is given to generalisations, and
+ is too easily gulled. They will judge a composer on a single work,
+ or a group of works, and class him once and for all.... In
+ reality, my father was a man of all-round accomplishments. As a
+ finished musician, he was master of every form of composition. He
+ wrote both religious and secular music--melodies, dances,
+ pastorales, oratorios, symphonic poems, symphonies, sonatas, trios,
+ and operas. He did not confine his attention to any particular kind
+ of work to the exclusion of other kinds; he was able to express
+ himself in any way he chose."[226]
+
+
+But as what was really religious in him found itself in agreement with a
+current of thought that was rather powerful at that time, it was
+inevitable that this one side of his genius should be first brought to
+light, and that religious music should be the first to benefit by his
+work. And also one of the early manifestos[227] of the _Schola Cantorum_
+dealt with the reform of sacred music by carrying it back to great
+ancient models; and its first decision was as follows: "Gregorian chant
+shall rest for all time the fountain-head and the base of the Church's
+music, and shall constitute the only model by which it may be truly
+judged."[228]
+
+[Footnote 225: See the Essay on _Vincent d'Indy_.]
+
+[Footnote 226: _Revue d'histoire et de critique musicale_,
+August-September, 1901.]
+
+[Footnote 227: "The _Schola Cantorum_ aims at creating a modern music
+truly worthy of the Church" (First number of the _Tribune de
+Saint-Gervais_, the monthly bulletin of the _Schola Cantorum_, January,
+1895).]
+
+[Footnote 228: The Schola had in mind here the vigorous work of the
+French Benedictines, which had been done in silence for the past fifty
+years; it was thinking, too, of the restoration of the Gregorian chant
+during 1850 and 1860 by Dom Gueranger, the first abbot of Solesmes, a
+work continued by Dom Jausions and Dom Pothier, the abbot of
+Saint-Wandrille, who published in 1883 the _Melodies Gregoriennes_, the
+_Liber Gradualis_, and the _Liber Antiphonarius_. This work was finally
+brought to a happy conclusion by Dom Schmitt, and Dom Mocqucreau, the
+prior of Solesmes, who in 1889 began his monumental work, the
+_Paleo-graphie Musicals_, of which nine volumes had appeared in 1906.
+This great Benedictine school is an honour to France by the scientific
+work it has lately done in music. The school is at present exiled from
+France.]
+
+They added to this, however, music _a la Palestrina_, and any music
+that conformed to its principles or was inspired by its example. Such
+archaic ideas would certainly never create a new kind of religious
+music, but at least they have helped to restore the old art; and they
+received their official consecration in the famous letter written by
+Pope Pius X on the Re-form of Sacred Music.
+
+The achievement of an artistic ideal so restricted as this would not
+have sufficed, however, to assure the success of the _Schola Cantorum_,
+nor establish its authority with a public that was, whatever people may
+say, only lukewarm in its religion, and that would only interest itself
+in the religious art of other days as it would in a passing fashion. But
+the spirit of curiosity and the meaning of modern life began to weigh
+little by little with the Schola's principles. After singing
+Palestrinian and Gregorian chants at the Church of Saint-Gervais during
+Holy Week, they played Carissimi, Schuetz, and the Italian and German
+masters of the seventeenth century. Then came Bach's cantatas; and their
+performance, given by M. Bordes in the Salle d'Harcourt, attracted large
+audiences and started the cult of this master in Paris. Then they sang
+Rameau and Gluck; and, finally, all ancient music, sacred or secular,
+was approved. And so this little school, which had been consecrated to
+the cult of ancient religious music, and had made so modest a
+beginning,[229] developed into a School of Art capable of satisfying
+modern wants; and in 1900, when M. Vincent d'Indy became president of
+the _Schola_, it was decided to move the school into larger premises in
+the Rue Saint-Jacques.
+
+The programme of this new school was explained by M. Vincent d'Indy in
+his Inauguration speech on 2 November, 1900, and showed how he based the
+foundations of musical teaching upon history.
+
+ "Art, in its journey across the ages, is a microcosm which has,
+ like the world itself, successive stages of youth, maturity, and
+ old age; but it never dies--it renews itself perpetually. It is not
+ like a perfect circle; it is like a spiral, and in its growth is
+ always mounting higher. I believe in making students follow the
+ same path that art itself has followed, so that they shall undergo
+ during their term of study the same transformations that music
+ itself has undergone during the centuries. In this way they will
+ come out much better armed for the difficulties of modern art,
+ since they will have lived, so to speak, the life of art, and
+ followed the natural and inevitable order of the forms that made up
+ the different epochs of artistic development."
+
+[Footnote 229: When Charles Bordes opened the first _Schola Cantorum_ in
+the Rue Stanislas he was without help or resources, and had exactly
+thirty-seven francs and fifty centimes in hand. I mention this detail to
+give an idea of the splendidly courageous and confident spirit that
+Charles Bordes possessed.]
+
+M. d'Indy claims that this system may be applied as successfully to
+instrumentalists and singers as to future composers. "For it is as
+profitable for them to know," he says, "how to sing a liturgic monody
+properly, or to be able to play a Corelli sonata in a suitable style, as
+it is for composers to study the structure of a motet or a suite." M.
+d'Indy, moreover, obliged all students, without distinction, to attend
+the lectures on vocal music; and, besides that, he instituted a special
+class to teach the conducting of orchestras--which was something quite
+new to France. His object, as he clearly said, was to give a new form to
+modern music by means of a knowledge of the music of the past.
+
+On this subject he says:
+
+ "Where shall we find the quickening life that will give us fresh
+ forms and formulas? The source is not really difficult to discover.
+ Do not let us seek it anywhere but in the decorative art of the
+ plain-song singers, in the architectural art of the age of
+ Palestrina, and in the expressive art of the great Italians of the
+ seventeenth century. It is there, and _there alone_, that we shall
+ find melodic craft, rhythmic cadences, and a harmonic magnificence
+ that is really new--if our modern spirit can only learn how to
+ absorb their nutritious essence. And so I prescribe for all pupils
+ in the School the careful study of classic forms, because _they
+ alone_ are able to give the elements of a new life to our music,
+ which will be founded on principles that are sane, solid, and
+ trustworthy."[230]
+
+[Footnote 230: _Tribune de Saint-Gervais_, November, 1900.]
+
+This fine and intelligent eclecticism was likely to develop a critical
+spirit, but was rather less adapted to form original personalities. In
+any case, however, it was excellent discipline in the formation of
+musical taste; and, in truth, the _Ecole Superieure de musique_ of the
+Rue Saint-Jacques became a new Conservatoire, both more modern and more
+learned than the old Conservatoire, and freer, and yet less free,
+because more self-satisfied. The school developed very quickly. From
+having twenty-one pupils in 1896, it had three hundred and twenty in
+1908. Eminent musicians and professors learned in the history and
+science of music taught there, and M. d'Indy himself took the
+Composition classes.[231] And in its short career the _Schola_ may
+already be credited with the training of young composers, such as MM.
+Roussel, Deodat de Severac, Gustave Bret, Labey, Samazeuilh, R. de
+Castera, Serieyx, Alquier, Coindreau, Estienne, Le Flem, and Groz; and
+to these may be added M. d'Indy's private pupils, Witkowski, and one of
+the foremost of modern composers, Alberic Magnard.
+
+
+[Footnote 231: There are actually nine courses of Composition at the
+_Schola_--five for men and four for women. M. d'Indy takes eight of
+them, as well as a mixed class for orchestra.]
+
+Outside the influence that the School exercises by its teaching, its
+propaganda by means of concerts and publications is very active. From
+its foundation up to 1904 it had given two hundred performances in one
+hundred and thirty provincial towns; more than one hundred and fifty
+concerts in Paris, of which fifty were of orchestral and choral music,
+sixty of organ music, and forty of chamber-music. These concerts have
+been well attended by enthusiastic and appreciative audiences, and have
+been a school for public taste. One does not look for perfect execution
+there,[232] but for intelligent interpretations and a thirst for a
+fuller knowledge of the great works of the past. They have revived
+Monteverde's _Orfeo_ and his _Incoronazione di Poppea_, which had been
+forgotten these three centuries; and it was following an interest
+created by repeated performances of Rameau at the _Schola_[233] that
+_Dardanus_ was performed at Dijon under M. d'Indy's direction, _Castor
+et Pollux_ at Montpellier under M. Charles Bordes' direction, and that
+in 1908 the Opera at Paris gave _Hippolyte et Aricie_. Branches of the
+_Schola_ have, been started at Lyons, Marseilles, Bordeaux, Avignon,
+Montpellier, Nancy, Epinal, Montlucon, Saint-Chamond, and
+Saint-Jean-deLuz.[234] A publishing house has been associated with the
+School at Paris; and from this we get Reviews, such as the _Tribune de
+Saint-Gervais_; publications of old music, such as the _Anthologie des
+maitres religieux primitifs des XVe, XVIe, et XVIIe siecles_, edited by
+Charles Bordes; the _Archives des maitres de l'orgue des XVIe, XVIIe, et
+XVIIIe siecles_, edited by Alexandre Guilmant and Andre Pirro; the
+_Concerts spirituels de la Schola_, the new editions of _Orfeo_, and the
+_Incoronazione di Poppea_, edited by M. Vincent d'Indy; and publications
+of modern music, such as the _Collection du chant populaire_, the
+_Repertoire moderne de musique vocale et d'orgue_, and, notably, the
+_Edition mutuelle_, published by the composers themselves, whose
+property it is.
+
+[Footnote 232: The orchestra is mainly composed of pupils; and, by a
+generous arrangement, the financial profits from rehearsals and
+performances are divided among the pupils who take part in them, and
+credited to their account. And so besides the exhibitioners the _Schola_
+has a great number of pupils who are not well off, but who manage by
+these concerts to defray almost the entire expenses of their education
+there. "The concerts serve more especially as aesthetic exercises for
+the pupils, and as a means of according them teaching at small expense
+to themselves." I owe this information and all that precedes it to the
+kindness of M. J. de la Laurencie, the general secretary of the
+_Schola_, whom I should like to thank.]
+
+[Footnote 233: The _Schola_ has even performed, in an open-air theatre,
+Ramcau's _La Guirlande_.]
+
+[Footnote 234: One may add to this list the choral societies of Nantes
+and Besancon, which are bodies of the same order as the _Chanteurs de
+Saint-Gervais_. And we may also attribute to the influence of the
+_Schola_ an independent society, the _Societe J.S. Bach_, started in
+Paris by an old _Schola_ pupil, M. Gustave Bret, which, since 1905, has
+devoted itself to the performance of the great works of Bach. It is not
+one of the least merits of the _Schola_ that it has helped to form good
+amateur choirs of the same type as the choral societies of Germany.]
+
+And all this shows such a marvellous activity and gives evidence of such
+whole-hearted enthusiasm that I cannot bring myself to join issue with
+the critics who have lately attacked the _Schola_, though their attacks
+have been in some degree merited. Pettiness is to be found even in great
+artists, and imperfection in every human work; and defects reveal
+themselves most clearly after a victory has been won. The _Schola_ has
+not escaped the critical periods that accompany growth, through which
+every work must pass if it is to triumph and endure. Without doubt, the
+sudden illness and premature retirement of the founder of the work, M.
+Charles Bordes, deprived the _Schola_ of one of its most active
+forces--a force that was perhaps necessary for the school's successful
+development. For this man had been the school's life and soul, and
+retired, worn out by the heavy labours which he had borne alone during
+ten years.[235]
+
+[Footnote 235: M. Charles Bordes did not even then give up his labours
+altogether. Though obliged to retire to the south of France for his
+health's sake, he founded, in November, 1905, the _Schola_ of
+Montpellier. This _Schola_ has given about fifteen concerts a year, and
+has performed some of Bach's cantatas, scenes from Rameau's and Gluck's
+operas, Franck's oratorios, and Monteverde's _Orfeo_. In 1906 M. Bordes
+organised an open-air performance of Rameau's _Guirlande_. In January,
+1908, he produced _Castor et Pollux_ at the Montpellier theatre. The
+man's activity was incredible, and nothing seemed to tire him. He was
+planning to start a dramatic training-school at Montpellier for the
+production of seventeenth and eighteenth century operas, when he died,
+in November, 1909, at the age of forty-four, and so deprived French art
+of one of its best and most unselfish servants.]
+
+But M. d'Indy, like a courageous apostle, has continued the direction of
+the _Schola_ with a firm hand and unwearying care, despite his varied
+activities as composer, professor, and _Kapellmeister_; and he is one of
+the surest and most reliable guides for a young school of French music.
+And if his mind is rather given to abstractions, and his moods are
+sometimes rather combative, and certain prejudices (which are not always
+musical ones) make him lean towards ideals of reason and immovable
+faith--and if at times his followers unconsciously distort his ideas,
+and try to dam the stream which flows from life itself, I am convinced
+it is only the passing evidence of a reaction, perhaps a natural one,
+against the exaggerations they have encountered, and that the _Schola_
+will always know how to avoid the rocks where revolutionaries of the
+past have run aground and become the conservatives of the morrow. I hope
+the _Schola_ will never grow into the kind of aristocratic school that
+builds walls about itself, but will always open wide its doors and
+welcome every new force in music, even to such as have ideals opposed to
+its own. Its future renown and the well-being of French art can only
+thus be maintained.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+4. _The Chamber-Music Societies_
+
+
+On parallel lines with the big symphony concerts and the new
+_conservatoires_, societies were formed to spread the knowledge of, and
+form a taste for, chamber-music. This music, so common in Germany, was
+almost unknown in Paris before 1870. There was nothing but the Maurin
+Quartette, which gave five or six concerts every winter in the Salle
+Pleyel, and played Beethoven's last quartettes there. But these
+performances only attracted a small number of artists;[236] and so far
+as the general public was concerned the _Societe des derniers quartuors
+de Beethoven_ had the reputation for devoting itself to a singular and
+incomprehensible kind of music that had been written by a deaf man.
+
+[Footnote 236: The quality of the audience atoned, it is true, for its
+small numbers. Berlioz used to come to these concerts with his friends,
+Damcke and Stephen Heller; and it was after one of these performances,
+when he had been very stirred by an _adagio_ in the E flat quartette,
+that he burst out with, "What a man! He could do everything, and the
+others nothing!"]
+
+The true founder of chamber-music concerts in Paris was M. Emile
+Lemoine, who started the society called _La Trompette_. He has given us
+a history of his work in the _Revue Musicale_ (15 October, 1903). He was
+an engineer at the Ecole Poly-technique; and after he had left school he
+formed, about 1860, a quartette society of earnest amateurs, though they
+were not very skilled performers. This little society continued to meet
+regularly, and after perfecting itself little by little, finally opened
+its doors to the general public, which attended the concerts in
+gradually increasing numbers. Then _La Trompette_ came into being. It
+prospered from the day that M. Saint-Saens--who was at that time a young
+man--made its acquaintance. He was pleased with these gatherings, and
+became an intimate friend of Lemoine; and he interested himself in the
+society, and induced other celebrated artists to take an interest in it,
+too. Among its early friends were MM. Alphonse Duvernoy, Diemer, Pugno,
+Delsart, Breitner, Delaborde, Ch. de Beriot, Fissot, Marsick, Loeb,
+Remy, and Holmann. With such patronage, _La Trompette_ soon acquired
+fame in the musical world, and "it represented in classical
+chamber-music the semi-official part played by the _Societe des Concerts
+du Conservatoire_ in classical orchestral music. Rubinstein, Paderewski,
+Eugene d'Albert, Hans von Buelow, Arthur de Greef, Mme. Essipoff, and
+Mme. Menter, never missed getting a hearing there when their tours led
+them to Paris; and to figure on the programme of _La Trompette_ was like
+the consecration of an artist." Such a society naturally contributed a
+great deal to the spread of classical chamber-music in Paris. M. Lemoine
+writes:
+
+ "Classical music was so little known to the musical public that
+ even the audiences of _La Trompette_, cultured as they were, did
+ not at all understand Beethoven's last quartettes; and my friends
+ jeered at my taste for enigmas. This only made me the more
+ determined that they should hear one of these great works at each
+ concert. And sometimes I would give the same work at two or three
+ concerts running if I thought it had not been properly appreciated.
+ In that case I used to say before the performance: 'It seems to me
+ that such-and-such a work has not been quite understood at the last
+ hearing; and as it is a really marvellous work, I am sure that your
+ feeling is that you do not know it sufficiently. So I have included
+ it in to-day's programme.'"[237]
+
+[Footnote 237: The name, _La Trompette_, was also the pretext for
+embellishing chamber-music, by introducing the trumpet among the other
+instruments. To this end M. Saint-Saens wrote his fine septette for
+piano, trumpet, two violins, viola, violoncello, and double bass; and M.
+Vincent d'Indy his romantic suite in D for trumpet, two flutes, and
+string instruments.]
+
+These performances of sonatas, trios, and quartettes, were attentively
+listened to by an audience of five or six hundred persons, the greater
+part of them cultured people, students from the poly-technics and
+universities, who formed the kernel of a very discerning and
+enthusiastic public for chamber-music.
+
+By degrees, following the example of Emile Lemoine, other quartette
+societies were formed; and at present they are so numerous that it would
+be difficult to name them all. And then there sprang up the same spirit
+of intelligent curiosity that had induced the French _Kapellmeister_ of
+the symphony concert societies sometimes to introduce their German and
+Russian colleagues as conductors; and for this purpose the _Nouvelle
+Societe Philharmonique de Paris_ was founded, in 1901, on the initiative
+of Dr. Fraenkel and under the direction of M. Emmanuel Rey, to give a
+hearing in Paris to the principal foreign quartette players. And the
+profit was as great in one case as in the other; and the friendly
+rivalry between French quartette players and those of other countries
+bore good fruit, and gave us a fuller understanding of the inner
+character of German music.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+5. _Musical Learning and the University_
+
+
+While this movement was going on in the artistic world, scholars were
+taking their share in it, and music was beginning to invade the
+University.
+
+But the thing was brought about with some difficulty; for among these
+serious people music did not count as a serious study. Music was thought
+of as an agreeable art, a social accomplishment, and the idea of making
+it the subject of scientific teaching must have been received with some
+amusement. Even up to the present time, general histories of Art have
+refused to accord music a place, so little was thought of it; and other
+arts were indignant at being mentioned in the same breath with it. This
+is illustrated in the eternal dispute among M. Jourdain's masters, when
+the fencing-master says:
+
+ "And from this we know what great consideration is due to us in a
+ State; and how the science of Fencing is far above all useless
+ sciences, such as dancing and music."
+
+The first lectures on Aesthetics and Musical History were not given in
+France until after the war of 1870.[238] They were then given at the
+Conservatoire, and, until quite lately, were the only lectures on Music
+of any importance in Paris. Since 1878 they have been given in a very
+excellent way by M. Bourgault-Ducoudray; but, as is only natural in a
+school of music, their character is artistic rather than scientific, and
+takes the form of a sort of illustration of the practical work that is
+done at the Conservatoire. And as for Parisian musical criticism as a
+whole, it had, thirty years ago, an almost exclusively literary
+character, and was without technical precision or historical knowledge.
+
+[Footnote 238: On 12 September, 1871, at the suggestion of Ambroise
+Thomas. The first lecturer was Barbereau, who, however, only lectured
+for a year. He was succeeded by Gautier, Professor of Harmony and
+Accompaniment, who in turn was replaced, in 1878, by M.
+Bourgault-Ducoudray.]
+
+There again, on the territory of science, as on that of art, a new
+generation of musicians had sprung up since the war, a group of men
+versed in the history and aesthetics of music such as France had never
+known before. About 1890 the result of their labours began to appear.
+Henry Expert published his fine work, _Maitres Musiciens de la
+Renaissance_, in which he revived a whole century of French music.
+Alexander Guilmant and Andre Pirro brought to daylight the works of our
+seventeenth and eighteenth century organists. Pierre Aubry studied
+mediaeval music. The admirable publications of the Benedictines of
+Solesmes awoke at the _Schola_ and in the world outside it a taste for
+the study of religious music. Michel Brenet attacked all epochs of
+musical history, and produced, by his solid learning, some fine work.
+Julien Tiersot began the history of French folk-song, and rescued the
+music of the Revolution from oblivion. The publisher Durand set to work
+on his great editions of Rameau and Couperin. Towards 1893 the study of
+Music was introduced at the Sorbonne by some young professors, who made
+the subject the theses for their doctor's degree.[239]
+
+[Footnote 239: The first three theses on Music accepted at the Sorbonne
+were those of M. Jules Combarieu on _The Relationship of Poetry and
+Music_, of M. Romain Holland on _The Beginnings of Opera before Lully
+and Scarlatti_, and of M. Maurice Emmanuel on _Greek Orchestics_. There
+followed, several years afterwards, M. Louis Laloy's _Aristoxenus of
+Tarento and Greek Music_ and M. Jules Ecorcheville's _Musical
+Aesthetics, from Lully to Rameau_ and _French Instrumental Music of the
+Seventeenth Century_, M. Andre Pirro's _Aesthetics of Johann Sebastian
+Bach_, and M. Charles Lalo's _Sketch of Scientific Musical
+Aesthetics_.]
+
+This movement with regard to musical study grew rapidly; and the first
+International Congress of Music, held in Paris at the time of the
+Universal Exhibition of 1900, gave historians of music an opportunity of
+realising their influence. In a few years, teaching about music was to
+be had everywhere. At first there were the free lectures of M. Lionel
+Dauriac and M. Georges Houdard at the Sorbonne, those of MM. Aubry,
+Gastoue, Pirro, and Vincent d'Indy at the _Schola_ and the _Institut
+Catholique_; and then, at the beginning of 1902, there was the little
+Faculty of Music of the _Ecole des Hautes Etudes sociales_, making a
+centre for the efforts of French scholars of music; and, in 1900, two
+official courses of lectures on Musical History and Aesthetics were
+given at the College de France and the Sorbonne.
+
+The progress of musical criticism was just as rapid. Professors of
+faculties, old pupils of the Ecole Normale Superieure, or the Ecole des
+Chartes, such as Henri Lichtenberger, Louis Laloy, and Pierre Aubrey,
+examined works of the past, and even of the present, by the exact
+methods of historical criticism. Choir-masters and organists of great
+erudition, such as Andre Pirro and Gastoue, and composers like Vincent
+d'Indy, Dukas, Debussy, and some others, analysed their art with the
+confidence that the intimate knowledge of its practice brings. A
+perfect efflorescence of works on music appeared. A galaxy of
+distinguished writers and a public were found to support two separate
+collections of Biographies of Musicians (which were issued at the same
+time by different publishers), as well as five or six good musical
+journals of a scientific character, some of which rivalled the best in
+Germany. And, finally, the French section of the _Societe Internationale
+de Musique_, which was founded in 1899 in Berlin to establish
+communication between the scholars of all countries, found so favourable
+a ground with us that the number of its adherents in Paris alone is now
+over one hundred.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+6. _Music and the People_
+
+Thus music had almost come back to its own, as far as the higher kind of
+teaching and the intellectual world were concerned. It remained for a
+place to be found for it in other kinds of teaching; for there, and
+especially in secondary education, its advance was less sure. It
+remained for us to make it enter into the life of the nation and into
+the people's education. This was a difficult task, for in France art has
+always had an aristocratic character; and it was a task in which neither
+the State nor musicians were very interested. The Republic still
+continued to regard music as something outside the people. There had
+even been opposition shown during the last thirty years towards any
+attempt at popular musical education. In the old days of the Pasdeloup
+concerts one could pay seventy-five centimes for the cheapest places,
+and have a seat for that; but at some of the symphony concerts to-day
+the cheapest seats are two and four francs. And so the people that
+sometimes came to the Pasdeloup concerts never come at all to the big
+concerts to-day.
+
+And that is why one should applaud the enterprise of Victor Charpentier,
+who, in March, 1905, founded a Symphonic Society of amateurs called
+_L'Orchestre_, to give free hearings for the benefit of the people. And
+in that Paris, where forty years ago one would have had a good deal of
+trouble to get together two or three amateur quartettes, Victor
+Charpentier has been able to count on one hundred and fifty good
+performers,[240] who under his direction, or that of Saint-Saens or
+Gabriel Faure, have already given seventeen free concerts, of which ten
+were given at the Trocadero.[241] It is to be hoped that the State will
+help forward such a generous work for the people in a rather more
+practical way than it has done up till now.[242]
+
+[Footnote 240: There are ninety violins, fifteen violas, and fifteen
+violoncellos. Unfortunately it is much more difficult to get recruits
+for the wood wind and brass.]
+
+[Footnote 241: They have performed classical music of composers like
+Bach, Haendel, Gluck, Rameau, and Beethoven; and modern music of
+composers like Berlioz, Saint-Saens, Dukas, etc. This Society has just
+installed itself in the ancient chapel of the Dominicans of the
+Faubourg-Saint-Honore, who have given them the use of it.]
+
+[Footnote 242: Of late years there has been a veritable outburst of
+concerts at popular prices--some of them in imitation of the German
+_Restaurationskonzerte_, such as the Concerts-Rouge, the
+Concerts-Touche, etc., where classical and modern symphony music may be
+heard. These concerts are increasing fast, and have great success among
+a public that is almost exclusively _bourgeois_, but they are yet a long
+way behind the popular performances of Haendel in London, where places
+may be had for sixpence and threepence.
+
+I do not attach very much importance to the courageous, though not
+always very intelligent movement of the Universites Populaires, where
+since 1886 a collection of amateurs, of fashionable people and artists,
+meet to make themselves heard, and pretend to initiate the people into
+what are sometimes the most complicated and aristocratic works of a
+classic or decadent art. While honouring this propaganda--whose ardour
+has now abated somewhat--one must say that it has shown more good-will
+than common-sense. The people do not need amusing, still less should
+they be bored; what they need is to learn something about music. This is
+not always easy; for it is not noisy deeds we want, but patience and
+self-sacrifice. Good intentions are not enough. One knows the final
+failure of the _Conservatoire populaire de Mimi Pinson_, started by
+Gustave Charpentier, for giving musical education to the work-girls of
+Paris.]
+
+Attempts have been made at different times to found a _Theatre Lyrique
+Populaire_. But up to the present time none has succeeded. The first
+attempts were made in 1847. M. Carvalho's old Theatre-Lyrique was never
+a financial success, though quite distinguished performances of operas
+were given there, such as Gounod's _Faust_ and Gluck's _Orfeo_, with
+Mme. Viardot as an interpreter and Berlioz as conductor; and the
+directors who followed Carvalho--Rety, Pasdeloup, etc.--did not succeed
+any better. In 1875 Vizentini took over the Gaite, with a grant of two
+hundred thousand francs and excellent artists; but he had to give it up.
+Since then all sorts of other schemes have been tried by Viollet-le-Duc,
+Guimet, Lamoureux, Melchior de Voguee and Julien Goujon, Gabriel Parisot,
+Colonne and Milliet, Deville, Lagoanere, Corneille, Gailhard, and
+Carre; but none of them achieved any success. At the moment, a new
+attempt is being made; and this time the thing seems to show every sign
+of being a success.
+
+But whatever may be the educational value of the theatre and concerts,
+they are not complete enough in themselves for the people. To make their
+influence deep and enduring it must be combined with teaching. Music, no
+less than every other expression of thought, has no use for the
+illiterate.
+
+So in this case there was everything to be done. There was no other
+popular teaching but that of the numerous Galin-Paris-Cheve schools.
+These schools have rendered great service, and are continuing to render
+it; but their simplified methods are not without drawbacks and gaps.
+Their purpose is to teach the people a musical language different from
+that of cultured people; and although it may not be as difficult as is
+supposed to go from a knowledge of the one to a knowledge of the other,
+it is always wrong to raise up a fresh barrier--however small it
+is--between the cultured people and the other people, who in our own
+country are already too widely separated.
+
+And besides, it is not enough to know one's letters; one must also have
+books to read. What books have the people had?--so far songs sung at the
+cafe concerts and the stupid repertoires of choral societies. The
+folk-song had practically disappeared, and was not yet ready for
+re-birth; for the populace, even more readily than the cultured people,
+are inclined to blush at anything which suggests "popularity."[243]
+
+[Footnote 243: M. Maurice Buchor relates an anecdote which typifies what
+I mean. "I begged the conductor of a good men's choral society," he
+says, "to have one of Haendel's choruses sung. But he seemed to hesitate.
+I had made the suggestion tentatively, and then tried to enlarge on the
+sincerity and breadth of its musical idea. 'Ah, very good,' he said, 'if
+you really want to hear it, it is easily done; but I was afraid that
+perhaps it was rather too popular.'" (_Poeme de la Vie Humaine_:
+Introduction to the Second Series, 1905.) One may add to this the words
+of a professor of singing in a primary school for Higher Education in
+Paris: "Folk-music--well, it is very good for the provinces." (Quoted by
+Buchor in the Introduction to the Second Series of the _Poeme_, 1902.)]
+
+It is nearly twenty-five years since M. Bourgault-Ducoudray, who was one
+of the people who fostered the growth of choral singing in France,
+pointed out, in an account of the teaching of singing, the usefulness of
+making children sing the old popular airs of the French provinces, and
+of getting the teachers to make collections of them. In 1895, as the
+result of a meeting organised by the _Correspondance generale de
+l'Instruction primaire_, delightful collections of folk-songs were
+distributed in the schools. The melodies were taken from old airs
+collected by M. Julien Tiersot, and M. Maurice Buchor had put some fresh
+and sparkling verses to them. "M. Buchor," I wrote at the time, "will
+enjoy a pleasure not common to poets of our day: his songs will soar up
+into the open air, like the lark in his _Chanson de labour_. The
+populace may even recognise its own spirit in them, and one day take
+possession of them, as if they were of their own contriving."[244] This
+prediction has been almost completely realised, and M. Buchor's songs
+are now the property of all the people of France.
+
+[Footnote 244: Taken from the _Supplement a la Correspondance generale
+de l'Instruction primaire_, 15 December, 1894.]
+
+But M. Buchor did not remain content to be a poet of popular song.
+During the last twelve years he has made, with untiring energy, a tour
+of all the Ecoles Normales in France, returning several times to places
+where he found signs of good vocal ability. In each school he made the
+pupils sing his songs--in unison, or in two or three parts, sometimes
+massing the boys' and girls' schools of one town together. His ambition
+grew with his success; and to the folk-song melodies[245] he began
+gradually to add pieces of classical music. And to impress the music
+better on the singers he changed the existing words, and tried to find
+others, which by their moral and poetic beauty more exactly translated
+the musical feeling.[246]
+
+[Footnote 245: Three series of these _Chants populaires pour les Ecoles_
+have already been published.]
+
+[Footnote 246: I reserve my opinion, from an artist's point of view, on
+this plagiarising of the words of songs. On principle I condemn it
+absolutely. But, in this case, it is Hobson's choice. _Primum vivere,
+deinde philosophari_. If our contemporary musicians really wished the
+people to sing, they would have written songs for them; but they seem to
+have no desire to achieve honour that way. So there is nothing else to
+be done but to have recourse to the musicians of other days; and even
+there the choice is very limited. For France formerly, like the France
+of to-day, had very few musicians who had any understanding of a great
+popular art. Berlioz came nearest to understanding the meaning of it;
+and he is not yet public property, so his airs cannot be used. It is
+curious, and rather sad, that out of eighty pieces chosen by M. Buchor
+only nine of them are French; and this is reckoning the Italians, Lully
+and Cherubini, as Frenchmen. M. Buchor has had to go to German classical
+musicians almost entirely, and, generally speaking, his choice has been
+a happy one. With a sure instinct he has given the preference to popular
+geniuses like Haendel and Beethoven. We may ask why he did not keep their
+words; but we must remember that at any rate they had to be translated;
+and though it may seem rash to change the subject of a musical
+masterpiece, it is certain that M. Buchor's clever adaptations have
+resulted in driving the fine thoughts of Haendel and Schubert and Mozart
+and Beethoven into the memories of the French people, and making them
+part of their lives. Had they heard the same music at a concert they
+would probably not have been very much moved. And that makes M. Buchor
+in the right. Let the French people enrich themselves with the musical
+treasures of Germany until the time comes when they are able to create a
+music of their own! This is a kind of peaceful conquest to which our art
+is accustomed. "Now then, Frenchmen," as Du Bellay used to say, "walk
+boldly up to that fine old Roman city, and decorate (as you have done
+more than once) your temples and altars with its spoils." Besides, let
+us remember that the German masters of the eighteenth century, whose
+words M. Buchor has plagiarised, did not hesitate to plagiarise
+themselves; and in turning the Berceuse of the _Oratorio de Noel_ into a
+_Sainte famille humaine_, M. Buchor has respected the musical ideas of
+Bach much more than Bach himself did when he turned it into a _Dialogue
+between Hercules and Pleasure_.]
+
+And at last he composed and grouped together twenty-four poems in his
+_Poeme de la Vie humaine_[247]--fine odes and songs, written for classic
+airs and choruses, a vast repertory of the people's joys and sorrows,
+fitting the momentous hours of family or public life. With a people that
+has ancient musical traditions, as Germany has, music is the vehicle for
+the words and impresses them in the heart; but in France's case it is
+truer to say that the words have brought the music of Haendel and
+Beethoven into the hearts of French school-children. The great thing is
+that the music has really got hold of them, and that now one may hear
+the provincial Ecoles Normales performing choruses from _Fidelio, The
+Messiah_, Schumann's _Faust_, or Bach cantatas.[248] The honour of this
+remarkable achievement, which no one could have believed possible twenty
+years ago, belongs almost entirely to M. Maurice Buchor.[249]
+
+[Footnote 247: The _Poeme_ has been published in four parts:--I. _De la
+naissance au mariage_ ("From Birth to Marriage"); II. _La Cite_ ("The
+City"); III. _De l'age viril jusqu'a la mort_ ("From Manhood to Death");
+IV. _L'Ideal_ ("Ideals"). 1900-1906.]
+
+[Footnote 248: The last chorus of _Fidelio_ has been recently sung by
+one hundred and seventy school-children at Douai; a grand chorus from
+_The Messiah_ by the Ecoles Normales of Angouleme and Valence; and the
+great choral scene and the last part of Schumann's _Faust_ by the two
+Ecoles Normales of Limoges. At Valence, performances are given every
+year in the theatre there before an audience of between eight hundred
+and a thousand teachers.
+
+Outside the schools, especially in the North, a certain number of
+teachers of both sexes have formed choral societies among work-girls and
+co-operative societies, such as _La Fraternelle_ at Saint Quentin.
+
+In a general way one may say that M. Maurice Buchor's campaign has
+especially succeeded in departments like that of Aisne and Drome, where
+the ground has been prepared by the Academy Inspector. Unhappily in many
+districts the movement receives a lively opposition from music-teachers,
+who do not approve of this mnemotechnical way of learning poetry with
+music, without any instruction in solfeggio or musical science. And it
+is quite evident that this method would have its defects if it were a
+question of training musicians. But it is really a matter of training
+people who have some music in them; and so the musicians must not be too
+fastidious. I hope that great musicians will one day spring from this
+good ground--musicians more human than those of our own time, musicians
+whose music will be rooted in their hearts and in their country.]
+
+[Footnote 249: We must not forget M. Bourgault-Ducoudray, who was his
+forerunner with his _Chants de Fontenoy_, collections of songs for the
+Ecoles Normales.]
+
+M. Buchor's endeavours have been the most extensive and the most
+fruitful, but he is not alone in individual effort. There was, twenty
+years ago, in the suburbs of Paris and in the provinces, a large number
+of well-meaning people who devoted themselves to the work of musical
+education with sincerity and splendid enthusiasm. But their good works
+were too isolated, and were swamped by the apathy of the people about
+them; though sometimes they kindled little fires of love and
+understanding in art, which only needed coaxing in order to burn
+brightly; and even their less happy efforts generally succeeded in
+lighting a few sparks, which were left smouldering in people's
+hearts.[250]
+
+At length, as a result of these individual efforts, the State began to
+show an interest in this educational movement, although it had for so
+long stood apart from it.[251] It discovered, in its turn, the
+educational value of singing. A musical test was instituted at the
+examination for the _Brevet superieur_[252] which made the study of
+solfeggio a more serious matter in the Ecoles Normales. In 1903 an
+endeavour was made to organise the teaching of music in the schools and
+colleges in a more rational way.[253]
+
+[Footnote 250: Mention must especially be made of little groups of young
+students, pupils of the Universities or the larger schools, who are
+devoting themselves at present to the moral and musical instruction of
+the people. Such an effort, made more than a year ago at Vaugirard,
+resulted in the _Manecanterie des petits chanteurs de la Croix de bois_,
+a small choir of the children of the people, who in the poor parishes go
+from one church to another singing Gregorian and Palestrinian music.]
+
+[Footnote 251: It is hardly necessary to recall the unfortunate statute
+of 15 March, 1850, which says: "Primary instruction _may_ comprise
+singing."]
+
+[Footnote 252: By the decree of 4 August, 1905. At the same time, a
+programme and pedagogic instructions were issued. The importance of
+musical dictation and the usefulness of the Galin methods for beginners
+were urged. Let us hope that the State will decide officially to support
+M. Buchor's endeavours, and that it will gradually introduce into
+schools M. Jacques-Delacroze's methods of rhythmic gymnastics, which
+have produced such astonishing results in Switzerland.]
+
+[Footnote 253: M. Chaumie's suggestion. See the _Revue Musicale_, 15
+July, 1903.]
+
+In 1904, following the suggestions of M. Saint-Saens and M.
+Bourgault-Ducoudray, class-singing was incorporated with other subjects
+in the programme of teaching,[254] and a free school of choral singing
+was started in Paris under the honorary chairmanship of M. Henry Marcel,
+director of the Beaux-Arts, and under the direction of M. Radiguer.
+Quite lately a choral society for young school-girls has been formed,
+with the Vice-Provost as president and a membership of from six to seven
+hundred young girls, who since 1906 have given an annual concert under
+the direction of M. Gabriel Pierne. And lastly, at the end of 1907, an
+association of professors was started to undertake the teaching of music
+in the institutions of public instruction; its chairman was the
+Inspector-General, M. Gilles, and its honorary presidents were M. Liard
+and M. Saint-Saens. Its object is to aid the progress of musical
+instruction by establishing a centre to promote friendly relations among
+professors of music; by centralising their interests and studies; by
+organising a circulating library of music and a periodical magazine in
+which questions relating to music may be discussed; by establishing
+communication between French professors and foreign professors; and by
+seeking to bring together professors of music and professors in other
+branches of public teaching.
+
+[Footnote 254: _Revue Musicale_, December 15, 1903, and 1 and 15
+January, 1904.]
+
+All this is not much, and we are yet terribly behindhand, especially as
+regards secondary teaching, which is considered less important than
+primary teaching.[255] But we are scrambling out of an abyss of
+ignorance, and it is something to have the desire to get out of it. We
+must remember that Germany has not always been in its present plethoric
+state of musical prosperity. The great choral societies only date from
+the end of the eighteenth century. Germany in the time of Bach was
+poor--if not poorer--in means for performing choral works than France
+to-day. Bach's only executants were his pupils at the Thomasschule at
+Leipzig, of which barely a score knew how to sing.[256] And now these
+people gather together for the great _Maennergesangsfeste_ (choral
+festivals) and the _Musikfeste_ (music festivals) of Imperial Germany.
+
+[Footnote 255: "In this," says M. Buchor, "as in many other things, the
+children of the people set an example to the children of the middle
+classes." That is true; but one must not blame the middle-class children
+so much as those in authority, who, "in this, as in many other things,"
+have not fulfilled their duties.]
+
+[Footnote 256: _The Passion according to St. Matthew_ was given first of
+all by two little choirs, consisting of from twelve to sixteen students,
+including the soloists.]
+
+Let us hope on and persevere. The main thing is that a start has been
+made; the thing that remains is to have patience and--persistence.
+
+
+THE PRESENT CONDITION OF FRENCH MUSIC
+
+We have seen how the musical education of France is going on in
+theatres, in concerts, in schools, by lectures and by books; and the
+Parisian's rather restless desire for knowledge seems to be satisfied
+for the moment. The mind of Paris has made a journey--a hasty journey,
+it is true through the music of other countries and other times,[257]
+and is now becoming introspective. After a mad enthusiasm over
+discoveries in strange lands, music and musical criticism have regained
+their self-possession and their jealous love of independence. A very
+decided reaction against foreign music has been shown since the time of
+the Universal Exhibition of 1900. This movement is not unconnected,
+consciously or unconsciously, with the nationalist train of thought,
+which was stirred up in France, and especially in Paris, somewhere about
+the same time. But it is also a natural development in the evolution of
+music. French music felt new vigour springing up within her, and was
+astonished at it; her days of preparation were over, and she aspired to
+fly alone; and, in accordance with the eternal rule of history, the
+first use she made of her newly-acquired strength was to defy her
+teachers. And this revolt against foreign influences was directed--one
+had expected it--against the strongest of the influences--the influence
+of German music as personified by Wagner. Two discussions in magazines,
+in 1903 and 1904, brought this state of mind curiously to light: one was
+an enquiry held by M. Jacques Morland in the _Mercure de France_
+(January, 1903) as to _The Influence of German Music in France_; and the
+other was that of M. Paul Landormy in the _Revue Bleue_ (March and
+April, 1904) as to _The Present Condition of French Music_. The first
+was like a shout of deliverance, and was not without exaggeration and a
+good deal of ingratitude; for it represented French musicians and
+critics throwing off Wagner's influence because it had had its day; the
+second set forth the theories of the new French school, and declared the
+independence of that school.
+
+[Footnote 257: It is hardly necessary to mention the curious attraction
+that some of our musicians are beginning to feel for the art of
+civilisations that are quite opposed to those of the West. Slowly and
+quietly the spirit of the Far East is insinuating itself into European
+music.]
+
+For several years the leader of the young school, M. Claude Debussy,
+has, in his writings in the _Revue Blanche_ and _Gil Blas_, attacked
+Wagnerian art. His personality is very French--capricious, poetic, and
+_spirituelle_, full of lively intelligence, heedless, independent,
+scattering new ideas, giving vent to paradoxical caprice, criticising
+the opinions of centuries with the teasing impertinence of a little
+street boy, attacking great heroes of music like Gluck, Wagner, and
+Beethoven, upholding only Bach, Mozart, and Weber, and loudly professing
+his preference for the old French masters of the eighteenth century. But
+in spite of this he is bringing back to French music its true nature and
+its forgotten ideals--its clearness, its elegant simplicity, its
+naturalness, and especially its grace and plastic beauty. He wishes
+music to free itself from all literary and philosophic pretensions,
+which have burdened German music in the nineteenth century (and perhaps
+have always done so); he wishes music to get away from the rhetoric
+which has been handed down to us through the centuries, from its heavy
+construction and precise orderliness, from its harmonic and rhythmic
+formulas, and the exercises of oratorical embroidery. He wishes that
+all about it shall be painting and poetry; that it shall explain its
+true feeling in a clear and direct way; and that melody, harmony, and
+rhythm shall develop broadly along the lines of inner laws, and not
+after the pretended laws of some intellectual arrangement. And he
+himself preaches by example in his _Pelleas et Melisande_, and breaks
+with all the principles of the Bayreuth drama, and gives us the model of
+the new art of his dreams. And on all sides discerning and well-informed
+critics, such as M. Pierre Lalo of _Le Temps_, M. Louis Laloy of the
+_Revue Musicale_ and the _Mercure Musicale_, and M. Marnold of _Le
+Mercure de France_, have championed his doctrines and his art. Even the
+_Schola Cantorum_, whose eclectic and archaic spirit is very different
+from that of Debussy, seemed at first to be drawn into the same current
+of thought; and this school which had so helped to propagate the foreign
+influences of the past, did not seem to be quite insensible to the
+nationalistic preoccupation of the last few years. So the _Schola_
+devoted itself more and more--as was moreover its right and duty--to the
+French music of the past, and filled its concert programmes with French
+works of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries--with Marc Antoine
+Charpentier, Du Mont, Leclair, Clerambault, Couperin, and the French
+primitive composers for the organ, the harpsichord, and the violin; and
+with the works of dramatic composers, especially of the great Rameau,
+who, after a period of complete oblivion, suddenly benefited by this
+excessive reaction, to the detriment of Gluck, whom the young critics,
+following M. Debussy's example, severely abused.[258] There was even a
+moment when the _Schola_ took a decided share in the battle, and,
+through M. Charles Bordes, issued a manifesto--_Credo_, as they called
+it--about a new art founded on the ancient traditions of French music:
+
+ "We wish to have free speech in music--a sustained recitative,
+ infinite variety, and, in short, complete liberty in musical
+ utterance. We wish for the triumph of natural music, so that it
+ shall be as free and full of movement as speech, and as plastic and
+ rhythmic as a classical dance."
+
+It was open war against the metrical art of the last three centuries, in
+the name of national tradition (more or less freely interpreted), of
+folk-song, and of Gregorian chant. And "the constant and avowed purpose
+of all this campaign was the triumph of French music, and its
+cult."[259]
+
+[Footnote 258: There is no need to say that Rameau's genius justified
+all this enthusiasm; but one cannot help believing that it was aroused,
+not so much on account of his musical genius as on account of his
+supposed championship of the French music of the past against foreign
+art; though that art was well adapted to the laws of French opera, as we
+may see for ourselves in Gluck's case.]
+
+[Footnote 259: _La Tribune de Saint-Gervais_, September, 1903.]
+
+This manifesto reflects in its own way the spirit of Debussy and his
+untrammelled musical impressionism; and though it shows a good deal of
+naivete and some intolerance, there was in it a strength of youthful
+enthusiasm that accorded with the great hopes of the time, and foretold
+glorious days to come and a splendid harvest of music.
+
+Not many years have passed since then; yet the sky is already a little
+clouded, the light not quite so bright. Hope has not failed; but it has
+not been fulfilled. France is waiting, and is getting a little
+impatient. But the impatience is unnecessary; for to found an art we
+must bring time to our aid; art must ripen tranquilly. Yet tranquillity
+is what is most lacking in Parisian art. The artists, instead of working
+steadily at their own tasks and uniting in a common aim, are given up to
+sterile disputes. The young French school hardly exists any longer, as
+it has now split up into two or three parties. To a fight against
+foreign art has succeeded a fight among themselves: it is the
+deep-rooted evil of the country, this vain expenditure of force. And
+most curious of all is the fact that the quarrel is not between the
+conservatives and the progressives in music, but between the two most
+advanced sections: the _Schola_ on the one hand, who, should it gain the
+victory, would through its dogmas and traditions inevitably develop the
+airs of a little academy; and, on the other hand, the independent party,
+whose most important representative is M. Debussy. It is not for us to
+enter into the quarrel; we would only suggest to the parties in question
+that if any profit is to result from their misunderstanding, it will be
+derived by a third party--the party in favour of routine, the party that
+has never lost favour with the great theatre-going public,--a party
+that will soon make good the place it has lost if those who aim at
+defending art set about fighting one another. Victory has been
+proclaimed too soon; for whatever the optimistic representatives of the
+young school may say, victory has not yet been gained; and it will not
+be gained for some time yet--not until public taste is changed, not
+while the nation lacks musical education, nor until the cultured few are
+united to the people, through whom their thoughts shall be preserved.
+For not only--with a few rare and generous exceptions--do the more
+aristocratic sections of society ignore the education of the people, but
+they ignore the very existence of the people's soul. Here and there, a
+composer--such as Bizet and M. Saint-Saens, or M. d'Indy and his
+disciples--will build up symphonies and rhapsodies and very difficult
+pieces for the piano on the popular airs of Auvergne, Provence, or the
+Cevennes; but that is only a whim of theirs, a little ingenious pastime
+for clever artists, such as the Flemish masters of the fifteenth century
+indulged in when they decorated popular airs with polyphonic
+elaborations. In spite of the advance of the democratic spirit, musical
+art--or at least all that counts in musical art--has never been more
+aristocratic than it is to-day. Probably the phenomenon is not peculiar
+to music, and shows itself more or less in other arts; but in no other
+art is it so dangerous, for no other has roots less firmly fixed in the
+soil of France. And it is no consolation to tell oneself that this is
+according to the great French traditions, which have nearly always been
+aristocratic. Traditions, great and small, are menaced to-day; the axe
+is ready for them. Whoever wishes to live must adapt himself to the new
+conditions of life. The future of art is at stake. To continue as we are
+doing is not only to weaken music by condemning it to live in unhealthy
+conditions, but also to risk its disappearing sooner or later under the
+rising flood of popular misconceptions of music. Let us take warning by
+the fact that we have already had to defend music[260] when it was
+attacked at some of the parliamentary assemblies; and let us remember
+the pitifulness of the defence. We must not let the day come when a
+famous speech will be repeated with a slight alteration--"The Republic
+has no need of musicians."
+
+[Footnote 260: At any rate, certain forms of music--the highest. See the
+discussions at the Chambre des Deputes on the budget of the Beaux-Arts
+in February, 1906; and the speeches of MM. Theodore Denis, Beauquier,
+and Dujardin-Beaumetz, on Religious Music, the Niedermeyer School, and
+the civic value of the organ.]
+
+It is the historian's duty to point out the dangers of the present hour,
+and to remind the French musicians who have been satisfied with their
+first victory that the future is anything but sure, and that we must
+never disarm while we have a common enemy before us, an enemy especially
+dangerous in a democracy--mediocrity.
+
+The road that stretches before us is long and difficult. But if we turn
+our heads and look back over the way we have come we may take heart.
+Which of us does not feel a little glow of pride at the thought of what
+has been done in the last thirty years? Here is a town where, before
+1870, music had fallen to the most miserable depths, which to-day teems
+with concerts and schools of music--a town where one of the first
+symphonic schools in Europe has sprung from nothing, a town where an
+enthusiastic concert-going public has been formed, possessing among its
+members some great critics with broad interests and a fine, free
+spirit--all this is the pride of France. And we have, too, a little band
+of musicians; among them, in the first rank, that great painter of
+dreams, Claude Debussy; that master of constructive art, Dukas; that
+impassioned thinker, Alberic Magnard; that ironic poet, Ravel; and those
+delicate and finished writers, Albert Roussel and Deodat de Severac;
+without mention of the younger musicians who are in the vanguard of
+their art. And all this poetic force, though not the most vigorous, is
+the most original in Europe to-day. Whatever gaps one may find in our
+musical organisation, still so new, whatever results this movement may
+lead to, it is impossible not to admire a people whom defeat has
+aroused, and a generation that has accomplished the magnificent work of
+reviving the nation's music with such untiring perseverance and such
+steadfast faith. The names of Camille Saint-Saens, Cesar Franck, Charles
+Bordes, and Vincent d'Indy, will remain associated before all others
+with this work of national regeneration, where so much talent and so
+much devotion, from the leaders of orchestras and celebrated composers
+down to that obscure body of artists and music-lovers, have joined
+forces in the fight against indifference and routine. They have the
+right to be proud of their work. But for ourselves, let us waste no time
+in thinking about it. Our hopes are great. Let us justify them.
+
+
+WILLIAM BRENDON AND SON, LTD PRINTERS, PLYMOUTH
+
+
+THE MUSICIAN'S BOOKSHELF.
+
+A NEW SERIES.
+
+_Crown 8vo. Occasionally Illustrated._
+
+EDITED BY CLAUDE LANDI, L.R.A.M., A.R.C.M.
+
+MUSICIANS OF TO-DAY. By ROMAIN ROLLAND, Author of "Jean-Christophe."
+Translated by MARY BLAIKLOCK.
+
+PRACTICAL SINGING. By CLIFTON COOKE and CLAUDE LANDI.
+
+THE UNREST IN THE MUSIC WORLD. By SYDNEY BLAKISTON.
+
+THE SONATA IN MUSIC. By A. EAGLEFIELD HULL, Mus. Doc.
+
+THE SYMPHONY IN MUSIC. By the same.
+
+ON LISTENING TO MUSIC. By E. MARKHAM LEE, M.A., Mus. Doc.
+
+COUNTERPOINT. By G.G. BERNARDI. Translated by C. LANDI.
+
+OPERA. By HARRY BURGESS.
+
+_Other Volumes in preparation_.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Musicians of To-Day, by Romain Rolland
+
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