Part 8 (2/2)
New Acquaintances
Haydn made several new acquaintances during this visit, the most notable being, perhaps, Dragonetti, the famous double-ba.s.s player, who had accompanied Banti, the eminent prima donna, to London in 1794. Banti had been discovered as a chanteuse in a Paris cafe, and afterwards attracted much notice by her fine voice both in Paris and London. ”She is the first singer in Italy, and drinks a bottle of wine every day,” said one who knew her. In her journeys through Germany, Austria and Italy she won many triumphs. Haydn composed for her an air, ”Non Partir,” in E, which she sang at his benefit. As for ”Old Drag,” the familiar designation of the distinguished ba.s.sist, his eccentricities must have provided Haydn with no little amus.e.m.e.nt. He always took his dog Carlo with him into the orchestra, and Henry Phillips tells us that, having a strange weakness for dolls, he often carried one of them to the festivals as his wife!
On his way to Italy in 1798 Dragonetti visited Haydn in Vienna, and was much delighted with the score of ”The Creation,” just completed. Several eminent violinists were in London at the time of Haydn's visit. The most distinguished of them was perhaps Felice de Giardini, who, at the age of fourscore, produced an oratorio at Ranelagh Gardens, and even played a concerto. He had a perfectly volcanic temper, and hated Haydn as the devil is said to hate holy water. ”I don't wish to see the German dog,”
he remarked in the composer's hearing, when urged to pay him a visit.
Haydn, as a rule, was kindly disposed to all brother artists, but to be called a dog was too much, He went to hear Giardini, and then got even with him by noting in his diary that he ”played like a pig.”
The accounts preserved of Haydn's second visit to England are, as already remarked, far less full than those of the first visit.
Unconnected memoranda appear in his diary, some of which are given by Griesinger and Dies; but they are of comparatively little interest.
During the summer of 1794 he moved about the country a good deal. Thus, about the 26th of August, he paid a visit to Waverley Abbey, whose ”Annales Waverliensis” suggested to Scott the name of his first romance.
The ruined condition of the venerable pile--it dates from 1128--set Haydn moralizing on the ”Protestant heresy” which led the ”rascal mob”
to tear down ”what had once been a stronghold of his own religion.”
Haydn at Bath
In the following month he spent three days in Bath with Dr Burney, and Rauzzini, the famous tenor, who had retired to the fas.h.i.+onable watering-place after a successful career of thirteen years as a singer and teacher in London. Rauzzini is little more than a name now, but for Haydn's sake it is worth recalling his memory. Born at Rome in 1747, his striking beauty of face and figure had drawn him into certain entanglements which made it expedient for him to leave his native land.
He was as fond of animals as Dragonetti was of dolls, and had erected a memorial tablet in his garden to his ”best friend,” otherwise his dog.
”Turk was a faithful dog and not a man,” ran the inscription, which reminds one of Schopenhauer's cynical observation that if it were not for the honest faces of dogs, we should forget the very existence of sincerity. When Haydn read the inscription he immediately proceeded to make use of the words for a four-part canon. It was presumably at this time that he became acquainted with Dr Henry Harington, the musician and author, who had removed to Bath in 1771, where he had founded the Harmonic Society. Haydn dedicated one of his songs to him in return for certain music and verses, which explains the following otherwise cryptic note of Clementi's, published for the first time recently by Mr J. S.
Shedlock: ”The first Dr [Harington] having bestowed much praise on the second Dr [Haydn], the said second Dr, out of doctorial grat.i.tude, returns the 1st Dr thanks for all favours recd., and praises in his turn the said 1st Dr most handsomely.” The t.i.tle of Haydn's song was ”Dr Harington's Compliments.”
Opera Concerts
The composer returned to London at the beginning of October for the winter season's concerts. These began, as before, in February, and were continued once a week up to the month of May. This time they took the form of opera concerts, and were given at the ”National School of Music”
in the new concert-room of the King's Theatre. No fresh symphonies were contributed by Haydn for this series, though some of the old ones always found a place in the programmes. Two extra concerts were given on May 21 and June 1, at both of which Haydn appeared; but the composer's last benefit concert was held on May 4. On this occasion the programme was entirely confined to his own compositions, with the exception of concertos by Viotti, the violinist, and Ferlendis, the oboist. Banti sang the aria already mentioned as having been written expressly for her, but, according to the composer, ”sang very scanty.” The main thing, however, was that the concert proved a financial success, the net receipts amounting to 400 pounds. ”It is only in England,” said Haydn, ”that one can make 4000 gulden in one evening.”
Haydn did indeed remarkably well in London. As Pohl says, ”he returned from it with increased powers, unlimited fame, and a competence for life. By concerts, lessons, and symphonies, not counting his other compositions, he had again made 1200 pounds, enough to relieve him from all anxiety as to the future. He often said afterwards that it was not till he had been to England that he became famous in Germany; by which he meant that although his reputation was high at home, the English were the first to give him public homage and liberal remuneration.”
Kingly Courtesies
It is superfluous to say that Haydn was as much of a ”lion” in London society during his second visit as he had been on the previous occasion.
The attention bestowed on him in royal circles made that certain, for ”society” are sheep, and royalty is their bell-wether. The Prince of Wales had rather a fancy for him, and commanded his attendance at Carlton House no fewer than twenty-six times. At one concert at York House the programme was entirely devoted to his music. George III and Queen Caroline were present, and Haydn was presented to the King by the Prince. ”You have written a great deal, Dr Haydn,” said the King. ”Yes, sire,” was the reply; ”more than is good for me.” ”Certainly not,”
rejoined His Majesty. He was then presented to the Queen, and asked to sing some German songs. ”My voice,” he said, pointing to the tip of his little finger, ”is now no bigger than that”; but he sat down to the pianoforte and sang his song, ”Ich bin der Verliebteste.” He was repeatedly invited by the Queen to Buckingham Palace, and she tried to persuade him to settle in England. ”You shall have a house at Windsor during the summer months,” she said, and then, looking towards the King, added, ”We can sometimes make music tete-a-tete.” ”Oh! I am not jealous of Haydn,” interposed the King; ”he is a good, honourable German.” ”To preserve that reputation,” replied Haydn, ”is my greatest pride.”
Most of Haydn's appearances were made at the concerts regularly organized for the entertainment of royalty at Carlton House and Buckingham Palace, and Haydn looked to be paid for his services. Whether the King and the Prince expected him to give these services in return for the supposed honour they had conferred upon him does not appear.
At all events, Haydn sent in a bill for 100 guineas sometime after his return to Vienna, and the amount was promptly paid by Parliament.
A Valuable Parrot
Among the other attentions bestowed upon him while in London, mention should be made of the present of a talking parrot. Haydn took the bird with him, and it was sold for 140 pounds after his death. Another gift followed him to Vienna. A Leicester manufacturer named Gardiner--he wrote a book on The Music of Nature, and other works--sent him half a dozen pairs of cotton stockings, into which were woven the notes of the Austrian Hymn, ”My mother bids me bind my hair,” the Andante from the ”Surprise” Symphony, and other thematic material. These musical stockings, as a wit has observed, must have come as a REAL surprise to Haydn. It was this same Leicester manufacturer, we may remark parenthetically, who annotated the translation of Bombet's Life of Haydn, made by his fellow-townsman, Robert Brewin, in 1817.
Haydn's return from London was hastened by the receipt of a communication from Esterhaz. Prince Anton had been succeeded by his son Nicolaus, who was as fond of music as the rest of his family, and desired to keep his musical establishment up to the old standard. During the summer of 1794 he had written to Haydn, asking if the composer would care to retain his appointment as director. Haydn was only too glad to a.s.sent; and now that his London engagements were fulfilled, he saw no reason for remaining longer in England. Accordingly he started for home on the 15th of August 1795, travelling by way of Hamburg, Berlin and Dresden, and arriving at Vienna in the early days of September.
Rohrau Reminiscences
Soon after his return he was surprised to receive an invitation to visit his native Rohrau. When he arrived there he found that a monument, with a marble bust of himself, had been erected to his honour in a park near his birthplace. This interesting memorial consists of a square pillar surmounting three stone steps, with an inscription on each side. The visit was productive of mingled feelings to Haydn. He took his friends to see the old thatch-roofed cottage, and, pointing to the familiar stove, still in its place, modestly remarked that there his career as a musician began--a reminiscence of the now far-away time when he sat by his father's side and sawed away on his improvised fiddle.
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