is difficult to say which I like best,” replied
Heller, “for I like them all; but if I were
pressed for an answer I would probably say the one
in A minor.” This gave Chopin much pleasure.
“I am glad you do,” he said; “it
is also my favourite.” And in an exuberance
of amiability he invited Heller to lunch with him,
an invitation which was accepted, the two artists
taking the meal together at the Cafe Riche. The
third waltz (in F major; Vivace) shows a character
very different from the preceding one. What a
stretching of muscles! What a whirling!
Mark the giddy motions of the melody beginning at
bar seventeen! Of this waltz of Chopin’s
and the first it is more especially true what Schumann
said of all three: “Such flooding life
moves within these waltzes that they seem to have
been improvised in the ball-room.” And the
words which the same critic applies to Op. 34 may
be applied to all the waltzes Chopin published himself—“They
must please; they are of another stamp than the usual
waltzes, and in the style in which they can only be
conceived by Chopin when he looks in a grandly-artistic
way into the dancing crowd, which he elevates by his
playing, thinking of other things than of what is
being danced.” In the A flat major waltz
which bears the opus number 42, the duple rhythm of
the melody along with the triple one of the accompaniment
seems to me indicative of the loving nestling and tender
embracing of the dancing couples. Then, after
the smooth gyrations of the first period, come those
sweeping motions, free and graceful like those of
birds, that intervene again and again between the
different portions of the waltz. The D flat major
part bubbles over with joyousness. In the sostenuto,
on the other hand, the composer becomes sentimental,
protests, and heaves sighs. But at the very height
of his rising ardour he suddenly plunges back into
that wild, self-surrendering, heaven and earth-forgetting
joyousness—a stroke of genius as delightful
as it is clever. If we do not understand by the
name of scherzo a fixed form, but rather a state of
mind, we may say that Chopin’s waltzes are his
scherzos and not the pieces to which he has given
that name. None of Chopin’s waltzes is more
popular than the first of Op. 64 (in D flat major).
And no wonder! The life, flow, and oneness are
unique; the charm of the multiform motions is indescribable.
That it has been and why it has been called valse
au petit chien need here only be recalled to the reader’s
recollection (see Chapter XXVI., p. 142). No.
2 (in C sharp minor); different as it is, is in its
own way nearly as perfect as No. 1. Tender, love-sick
longing cannot be depicted more truthfully, sweetly,
and entrancingly. The excellent No. 3 (in A flat
major), with the exquisite serpentining melodic lines,
which play so important a part in Chopin’s waltzes,
and other beautiful details, is in a somewhat trying
position beside the other two waltzes. The non-publication
by the composer of the waltzes which have got into