The Proud Tower (95 page)

Read The Proud Tower Online

Authors: Barbara Tuchman

BOOK: The Proud Tower
8.11Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
238
“Gradual, tentative, delicate”: Choate, 22.

6. “Neroism Is in the Air”

Bibliography
A
LDRICH
, R
ICHARD
(music critic of the New York
Times
for this period),
Concert Life in New York, 1902–23
, New York, Putnam’s, 1941.
B
AUMONT
, M
AURICE
,
L’Affaire Eulenberg et les Origines de la guerre mondiale
, Paris, Payot, 1933.
B
EECHAM
, S
IR
T
HOMAS
,
A Mingled Chime
, New York, Putnam’s, 1943.
——,
Frederick Delius
, New York, Knopf, 1960.
B
ERTAUX
, F
ELIX
,
A Panorama of German Literature, 1871–1931
, tr., New York, Whittlesey, 1935.
B
IGELOW
, P
OULTNEY
,
Prussian Memories, 1864–1914
, New York, Putnam’s, 1915.
B
RANDES
, G
EORG
,
Friedrich Nietzsche
, New York, Macmillan, n.d.
C
LADEL
, J
UDITH
,
Rodin
, New York, Harcourt, 1937.
*
D
EL
M
AR
, N
ORMAN
,
Richard Strauss
, New York, Free Press of Glencoe, 1962.
D
UKES
, A
SHLEY
,
Modern Dramatists
, Chicago, Sergel, 1912.
E
KMAN
, K
ARL
,
lean Sibelius
, New York, Knopf, 1938.
F
INCK
, H
ENRY
T.,
Grieg and His Music
, London, John Lane, 1909.
*
——,
Richard Strauss
, Boston, Little, Brown, 1917.
——,
Success in Music
, New York, Scribner’s, 1909.
G
ILMAN
, L
AWRENCE
,
Nature in Music and Other Studies
, London, John Lane, 1914.
G
OOCH
, G. P.,
Germany
, New York, Scribner’s, 1925.
G
RIGORIEV
, S. L. (stage manager for Diaghilev),
The Diaghilev Ballet, 1909–29
, London, Penguin Ed., 1960.
H
AMBURGER
,
see
Hofmannsthal.
H
ASKELL
, A
RNOLD
L. (director of the Covent Garden Royal Ballet),
Diagileff
, New York, Simon & Schuster, 1935.
H
ELFFERICH
, K
ARL
,
Germany’s Economic Progress and National Wealth, 1888–1913
, Berlin, Stilke, 1913.
H
OFMANNSTHAL
, H
UGO VON
,
Selected Plays and Libretti
, ed. Michael Hamburger, New York, Bollingen-Pantheon, 1963.
H
UNEKER
, J
AMES
,
Overtones
, New York, Scribner’s, 1904.
J
EFFERSON
, A
LAN
,
The Operas of Richard Strauss in Britain
, London, Putnam’s, 1963.
K
ARSAVINA
, T
AMARA
,
Theatre Street
, London, Constable, 1948.
K
ESSLER
, C
OUNT
H
ARRY
,
Walter Rathenau
, London, Howe, 1929.
K
OHN
, H
ANS
,
The Mind of Germany
, New York, Scribner’s, 1960.
L
AWTON
, M
ARY
,
Schumann-Heink
, New York, Macmillan, 1928.
L
EHMANN
, L
OTTE
,
Five Operas and Richard Strauss
, New York, Macmillan, 1964.
L
OWIE
, R
OBERT
H
ARRY
,
Toward Understanding Germany
, Univ. of Chicago Press, 1954.
M
AY
, A
RTHUR
J.,
The Hapsburg Monarchy
, Harvard Univ. Press, 1951.
M
ILLER
, A
NNA
I
RENE
,
The Independent Theatre in Europe, 1887 to the Present
, New York, Long & Smith, 1931.
N
EMIROVITCH
-D
ANTCHENKO
, V
LADIMIR
,
My Life in the Russian Theatre
, Boston, Little, Brown, 1936.
N
EWMAN
, E
RNEST
,
Richard Strauss
, London, John Lane, 1908. (With a valuable Memoir by Alfred Kalisch.)
N
IJINSKY
, R
OMOLA
,
Nijinsky
, New York, Simon & Schuster, 1934.
P
OLLARD
, P
ERCIVAL
,
Masks and Minstrels of New Germany
, Boston, Luce, 1911.
*
R
OLLAND
, R
OMAIN
,
Correspondance; Fragments de Journal
(No. 3 in
Cahiers Romain Rolland
), Paris, Albin Michel, 1951.
——, “Souvenirs sur Richard Strauss,” in
Les Œuvres Libres
, Nouv. Serie, No. 27, Paris, 1948. (Much of this duplicates material in the
Correspondance
and
Journal
and parts of both appear in Rolland’s
Musicians of Today
, New York, Holt, 1914.)
R
OSENFELD
, P
AUL
,
Musical Portraits
, New York, Harcourt, 1920.
——,
Discoveries of a Music Critic
, New York, Harcourt, 1936.
S
CHOENBERNER
, F
RANZ
,
Confessions of a European Intellectual
, New York, Macmillan, 1946.
S
HAW
, G
EORGE
B
ERNARD
,
The Sanity of Art
(originally published 1895), New York, Boni, 1907.
S
HAW
, S
TANLEY
,
William of Germany
, New York, Macmillan, 1913.
S
OKOLOVA
, L
YDIA
,
Dancing for Diaghilev
, New York, Macmillan, 1961.
S
PEYER
, E
DWARD
,
My Life and Friends
, London, Cobden-Sanderson, 1937.
*
S
TRAUSS
, R
ICHARD
, and H
OFMANNSTHAL
, H
UGO VON
, tr.,
Correspondence
, London, Collins, 1961.
S
TRAVINSKY
, I
GOR
,
Autobiography
, New York, Simon & Schuster, 1936.
T
ERRY
, E
LLEN
,
The Russian Ballet
, London, Sidgwick, 1913.
T
HOMAS
, R
OSE
F
AY
,
Memoirs of Theodore Thomas
, New York, Moffat, Yard, 1911.
T
HOMPSON
, O
SCAR
,
Debussy, Man and Artist
, New York, Dodd, Mead, 1937.
T
OVEY
, D
ONALD
F
RANCIS
,
A Musician Talks
, 2 vols., Oxford Univ. Press, 1941.
V
AN
V
ECHTEN
, C
ARL
, “The Secret of the Russian Ballet” and “Igor Stravinsky: A New Composer,” in
Music After the Great War and Other Studies
, New York, Schirmer, 1915.
W
ERFEL
, A
LMA
M
AHLER
,
And the Bridge Is Love
, New York, Harcourt, 1958.
W
OOD
, S
IR
H
ENRY
,
My Life of Music
, London, Gollancz, 1938.
W
YLIE
, I. A. R.,
The Germans
, Indianapolis, Bobbs-Merrill, 1911.
*
Z
WEIG
, S
TEFAN
,
World of Yesterday
, New York, Viking, 1943.
Notes

All biographical facts about Strauss not otherwise identified and all quoted comments about him by German critics and musicologists are from Finck. Separate references for comments or anecdotes by Rolland, Beecham, Newman, Mme Mahler (Werfel), Speyer, Stravinsky and others whose works are listed above are given
only
when the source is not obvious. By good fortune the celebration by major orchestras of Strauss’s centenary in 1964, the year in which this chapter was written, enabled me to hear all his major works within the space of several months. Many of the program notes for these concerts, though ephemeral and therefore not listed in the Bibliography, were useful.

1
“Tremble as they listened”: Rolland,
Journal
, 125.
2
Frankfurt’s musical life: Speyer, 79.
3
Bayreuth: Stravinsky, 60; Beecham, 55; Ekman, 125.
4
Shades of evening fell three times: Grove’s
Dictionary of Music
, “Program Music.”
5
“Oh, they are only imitators”: q. Speyer, 143.
6
“Stop Hanslick”: Werner Wolff,
Anton Bruckner
, New York, 1942, 103.
7
“So young, so modern”: q.
Current Biography
, 1944, “Strauss.”
8
“Positive horror of his countrymen”: Brandes, 113.
9
Rodin on Nietzsche: Anne Leslie,
Rodin
, New York, 1937, 200.
10
“Too much music in Germany”:
Souvenirs
, 232–33.
11
Brunhilde’s horse: Haskell, 156.
12
Philip Ernst:
Current Biography.
1942, “Max Ernst.”
13
North and South Germans: Wylie, 29–38.
14
Max Liebermann on statues: Frederic William Wile,
Men Around the Kaiser
, Philadelphia, 1913, 168.
15
Berlin Landlady’s bill: Zweig, 113.
16
“Extremely rough”: Chirol (
see
Chap. 5), 266.
17
Berlin women: Wylie, 192–93.
18
Seven meals a day: However unlikely, this was the report of the American Ambassador, James W. Gerard,
My Four Years in Germany
, New York, 1917, 56.
19
Number of university students in Prussia: Charles Singer,
el al., A History of Technology
, Oxford Univ. Press, 1958, V, 787–88.
20
Barnum and Bailey’s circus: Dexter Fellows,
This Way ta the Big Show
, New York, 1936, 22; H. L. Watkins,
Barnum and Bailey in the Old World, 1897–1901
, 45. (I am indebted for these references to Mrs. Janise Shea.)
21
Kaiser at the Moscow Art Theater: Nemirovitch-Dantchenko. Material in this and the following four paragraphs is chiefly from the chapter “The Kaiser and the Arts” in the book by Stanley Shaw. The prize to Wildenbruch is from Lowie, 41; the Rhodes scholars from the
Letters
of Cecil Spring-Rice, II, 119; the adventure with Peer Gynt from Finck’s
Grieg
, 145–46.
22
“Bismarck has broken”: q. Kohn, 187–88.
23
Strauss’s interview with the Kaiser was told to Rolland, q. Del Mar, 280–81.
24
Strauss becomes engaged:
ibid.
, 121–22.
25
Frau Strauss, character and habits: Lehmann, chaps. 2 and 3.
26
“Screaming like hell”: Del Mar, 182.

Other books

The All-Star Joker by David A. Kelly
Children of the Blood by Michelle Sagara West
Crushed by A.M. Khalifa
Catching Falling Stars by Karen McCombie
Sisterland by Curtis Sittenfeld
Arson by Estevan Vega
Demonspawn by Glenn Bullion