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CHOPIN: THE MAN AND HIS MUSIC
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PART I.--THE MAN.
I. POLAND:--YOUTHFUL IDEALS
II. PARIS:--IN THE MAELSTROM
III. ENGLAND, SCOTLAND AND FERE LA CHAISE
IV. THE ARTIST
V. POET AND PSYCHOLOGIST
PART II.--HIS MUSIC.
VI. THE STUDIES:--TITANIC EXPERIMENTS
VII. MOODS IN MINIATURE: THE PRELUDES
VIII. IMPROMPTUS AND VALSES
IX. NIGHT AND ITS MELANCHOLY MYSTERIES: THE NOCTURNES
X. THE BALLADES: FAERY DRAMAS
XI. CLASSICAL CURRENTS
XII. THE POLONAISES: HEROIC HYMNS OF BATTLE
XIII. MAZURKAS: DANCES OF THE SOUL
XIV. CHOPIN THE CONQUEROR
BIBLIOGRAPHY
BOOKS BY JAMES HUNEKER
PART I.--THE MAN
I. POLAND:--YOUTHFUL IDEALS
Gustave Flaubert, pessimist and master of cadenced lyric prose,
urged young writers to lead ascetic lives that in their art they
might be violent. Chopin's violence was psychic, a travailing and
groaning of the spirit; the bright roughness of adventure was
missing from his quotidian existence. The tragedy was within. One
recalls Maurice Maeterlinck: "Whereas most of our life is passed
far from blood, cries and swords, and the tears of men have
become silent, invisible and almost spiritual." Chopin went from
Poland to France--from Warsaw to Paris--where, finally, he was
borne to his grave in Pere la Chaise. He lived, loved and died;
and not for him were the perils, prizes and fascinations of a
hero's career. He fought his battles within the walls of his soul-
-we may note and enjoy them in his music. His outward state was
not niggardly of incident though his inner life was richer,
nourished as it was in the silence and the profound unrest of a
being that irritably resented every intrusion. There were events
that left ineradicable impressions upon his nature, upon his
work: his early love, his sorrow at parting from parents and
home, the shock of the Warsaw revolt, his passion for George
Sand, the death of his father and of his friend Matuszynski, and
the rupture with Madame Sand--these were crises of his history.
All else was but an indeterminate factor in the scheme of his
earthly sojourn. Chopin though not an anchorite resembled
Flaubert, being both proud and timid; he led a detached life,
hence his art was bold and violent. Unlike Liszt he seldom sought
the glamor of the theatre, and was never in such public view as
his maternal admirer, Sand. He was Frederic Francois Chopin,
composer, teacher of piano and a lyric genius of the highest
range.
Recently the date of his birth has been again discussed by
Natalie Janotha, the Polish pianist. Chopin was born in Zelazowa-
Wola, six miles from Warsaw, March 1, 1809. This place is
sometimes spelled Jeliasovaya-Volia. The medallion made for the
tomb by Clesinger--the son-in-law of George Sand--and the watch
given by the singer Catalan! in 1820 with the inscription "Donne
par Madame Catalan! a Frederic Chopin, age de dix ans," have
incited a conflict of authorities. Karasowski was informed by
Chopin's sister that the correct year of his birth was 1809, and
Szulc, Sowinski and Niecks agree with him. Szulc asserts that the
memorial in the Holy Cross Church, Warsaw--where Chopin's heart
is preserved--bears the date March 2, 1809. Chopin, so Henry T.
Finck declares, was twenty-two years of age when he wrote to his
teacher Elsner in 1831. Liszt told Niecks in 1878 that Karasowski
had published the correct date in his biography. Now let us
consider Janotha's arguments. According to her evidence the
composer's natal day was February 22, 1810 and his christening
occurred April 28 of the same year. The following baptismal
certificate, originally in Latin and translated by Finck, is
adduced. It is said to be from the church in which Chopin was
christened: "I, the above, have performed the ceremony of
baptizing in water a boy with the double name Frederic Francois,
on the 22d day of February, son of the musicians Nicolai Choppen,
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