his stay in Stuttgart, being inspired by the capture
of Warsaw by the Russians, which took place on September
8, 1831. Whether looked at from the aesthetical
or technical point of view, Chopin’s studies
will be seen to be second to those of no composer.
Were it not wrong to speak of anything as absolutely
best, their excellences would induce one to call them
unequalled. A striking feature in them compared
with Chopin’s other works is their healthy freshness
and vigour. Even the slow, dreamy, and elegiac
ones have none of the faintness and sickliness to be
found in not a few of the composer’s pieces,
especially in several of the nocturnes. The diversity
of character exhibited by these studies is very great.
In some of them the aesthetical, in others the technical
purpose predominates; in a few the two are evenly
balanced: in none is either of them absent.
They give a summary of Chopin’s ways and means,
of his pianoforte language: chords in extended
positions, wide-spread arpeggios, chromatic progressions
(simple, in thirds, and in octaves), simultaneous combinations
of contrasting rhythms, &c—nothing is wanting.
In playing them or hearing them played Chopin’s
words cannot fail to recur to one’s mind:
“I have composed a study in my own manner.”
Indeed, the composer’s demands on the technique
of the executant were so novel at the time when the
studies made their first public appearance that one
does not wonder at poor blind Rellstab being staggered,
and venting his feelings in the following uncouthly-jocular
manner: “Those who have distorted fingers
may put them right by practising these studies; but
those who have not, should not play them, at least
not without having a surgeon at hand.” In
Op. 10 there are three studies especially noteworthy
for their musical beauty. The third (Lento ma
non troppo, in E major) and the sixth (Andante, in
E flat minor) may be reckoned among Chopin’s
loveliest compositions. They combine classical
chasteness of contour with the fragrance of romanticism.
And the twelfth study (Allegro con fuoco, in C minor),
the one composed at Stuttgart after the fall of Warsaw,
how superbly grand! The composer seems to be
fuming with rage: the left hand rushes impetuously
along and the right hand strikes in with passionate
ejaculations. With regard to the above-named Lento
ma non troppo (Op. 10, No. 3), Chopin said to Gutmann
that he had never in his life written another such
beautiful melody (chant); and on one occasion
when Gutmann was studying it the master lifted up his
arms with his hands clasped and exclaimed: “O,
my fatherland!” ("O, me patrie!”) I share
with Schumann the opinion that the total weight of
Op. 10 amounts to more than that of Op. 25. Like
him I regard also Nos. 1 and 12 as the most important
items of the latter collection of studies: No.
1 (Allegro sostenuto, in A flat major)—a
tremulous mist below, a beautiful breezy melody floating
above, and once or twice a more opaque body becoming