Handel by Dent, Edward J., 1876-1957
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A word from our supporters: File extension ODP | Produced by Stan Goodman, and Distributed Proofreaders HANDEL[Illustration: G. F. HANDEL _from a woodcut by Eric King_] BY EDWARD J. DENTCONTENTS_Chapter_ I Birth and parentage--studies under Zachow at Halle--Hamburg--friendship and duel with Mattheson--_Almira_--departure for Italy. _Chapter_ II Arrival in Italy--_Rodrigo_--Rome: Cardinal Ottoboni and the Scarlattis--Naples: Venice: _Agrippina_--appointment at Hanover--London: _Rinaldo_. _Chapter_ III Second visit to London--Italian opera--George I and the _Water Music_--visit to Germany--Canons and the Duke of Chandos--establishment of the Royal Academy of Music. _Chapter_ IV Buononcini--Cuzzoni, Faustina, and Senesino--death of George I--_The Beggar's Opera_--collapse of the Academy. _Chapter_ V Handel naturalized--partnership with Heidegger--_Esther_--the Opera of the Nobility--visit to Oxford--opera season at Covent Garden--Charles Jennens--collapse of both opera-houses. _Chapter_ VI Bankruptcy and paralysis--visit to Aix-la-Chapelle--the last operas--Vauxhall Gardens--Handel's "borrowings"--visit to Ireland--_Messiah_ and other oratorios. _Chapter_ VII _Judas Maccabaeus_--Gluck--Thomas Morell--incipient blindness--Telemann and his garden--last oratorios--death--character and personality. _Bibliography and List of Works_ CHRONOLOGY1702.... Entered University; organist of the Cathedral. 1703.... Went to Hamburg. 1705.... First opera: _Almira_ (Hamburg). 1707.... Arrival in Italy. 1710.... Appointment at Hanover; first visit to London. 1711.... First London opera: _Rinaldo_. 1712.... Second visit to London. 1717.... Appointment to the Duke of Chandos. 1720.... Opening of Royal Academy of Music (Opera). 1726.... Naturalized as a British subject. 1728.... _The Beggar's Opera_. Collapse of the Academy. 1732.... First public oratorio: _Esther_. 1733.... Festival at Oxford. 1737.... Collapse of Opera; Handel bankrupt and paralysed. 1741.... Last opera: _Deidamia_. 1742.... _Messiah_ at Dublin. 1751.... First signs of blindness. Last oratorio _Jeptha_. 1759.... Death in London. CHAPTER IBirth and parentage--studies under Zachow at Halle--Hamburg--friendship and duel with Mattheson--Almira--departure for Italy. The name of Handel suggests to most people the sound of music unsurpassed in massiveness and dignity, and the familiar portraits of the composer present us with a man whose external appearance was no less massive and dignified than his music. Countless anecdotes point him out to us as a well-known figure in the life of London during the reigns of Queen Anne and the first two Georges. He lies buried in Westminster Abbey. One would expect every detail of his life to be known and recorded, his every private thought to be revealed with the pellucid clarity of his immortal strains. It is not so; to assemble the bare facts of Handel's life is a problem which has baffled the most laborious of his biographers, and his inward personality is more mysterious than that of any other great musician of the last two centuries. The _Memoirs of the Life of the late George Frederic Handel_, written by the Rev. John Mainwaring in 1760, a year after his death, is the first example of a whole book devoted to the biography of a musician. The author had never known Handel himself; he obtained his material chiefly from Handel's secretary, John Christopher Smith the younger. Mainwaring is our only authority for the story of Handel's early life. Many of his statements have been proved to be untrue, but there is undoubtedly a foundation of truth beneath most of them, however misleading either Smith's memory or Mainwaring's imagination may have been. The rest of our knowledge has to be built up from scattered documents of various kinds, helped out by the reminiscences of Dr. Burney and Sir John Hawkins. For the inner life of Mozart and Beethoven we can turn to copious letters and other personal writings; Handel's extant letters do not amount to more than about twenty in all, and it is only rarely that they throw much light on the workings of his mind. |



