[Footnote: In most of the pieces where,
as in this one, the left-hand accompaniment consists
of an undulating figure, Chopin wished it to be played
very soft and subdued. This is what Gutmann said.]
As to the one in D flat, nothing can equal the finish
and delicacy of execution, the flow of gentle feeling,
lightly rippled by melancholy, and spreading out here
and there in smooth expansiveness. But all this
sweetness enervates; there is poison in it. We
should not drink in these thirds, sixths, &c., without
taking an antidote of Bach or Beethoven. Both
the nocturnes of Op. 32 are pretty specimens of Chopin’s
style of writing in the tender, calm, and dreamy moods.
Of the two (in B major and A flat major) I prefer the
quiet, pellucid first one. It is very simple,
ornaments being very sparingly introduced. The
quietness and simplicity are, however, at last disturbed
by an interrupted cadence, sombre sounds as of a kettle-drum,
and a passionate recitative with intervening abrupt
chords. The second nocturne has less originality
and pith. Deux Nocturnes (in G minor and G major),
Op. 37, are two of the finest, I am inclined to say,
the two finest, of this class of Chopin’s pieces;
but they are of contrasting natures. The first
and last sections of the one in G minor are plaintive
and longing, and have a wailing accompaniment; the
chord progressions of the middle section glide along
hymn-like. [Footnote: Gutmann played this
section quicker than the rest, and said that Chopin
forgot to mark the change of movement.] Were it possible
to praise one part more emphatically than another
without committing an injustice, I would speak of
the melodic exquisiteness of the first motive.
But already I see other parts rise reproachfully before
my repentant conscience. A beautiful sensuousness
distinguishes the nocturne in G major: it is
luscious, soft, rounded, and not without a certain
degree of languor. The successions of thirds
and, sixths, the semitone progressions, the rocking
motion, the modulations (note especially those of
the first section and the transition from that to
the second), all tend to express the essential character.
The second section in C major reappears in E major,
after a repetition of part of the first section; a
few bars of the latter and a reminiscence of the former
conclude the nocturne. But let us not tarry too
long in the treacherous atmosphere of this Capua--it
bewitches and unmans. The two nocturnes (in C
minor and F sharp minor) which form Op. 48 are not
of the number of those that occupy foremost places
among their companions. Still, they need not
be despised. The melody of the C minor portion
of the first is very expressive, and the second has
in the C sharp minor portion the peculiar Chopinesque
flebile dolcezza. In playing these nocturnes
there occurred to me a remark of Schumann’s,
made when he reviewed some nocturnes by Count Wielhorski.
He said, on that occasion, that the quicker middle
movements which Chopin frequently introduces into