But this does not last, and before long there comes,
in the train of the first theme, an outburst of passion
with mighty upheavings and fearful lulls that presage
new eruptions. Thus the ballade rises and falls
on the sea of passion till a mad, reckless rush (presto
con fuoco) brings it to a conclusion. Schumann
tells us a rather interesting fact in his notice of
the “Deuxieme Ballade” (in F major), Op.
38. He heard Chopin play it in Leipzig before
its publication, and at that time the passionate middle
parts did not exist, and the piece closed in F major,
now it closes in A minor. Schumann’s opinion
of this ballade is, that as a work of art it stands
below the first, yet is not less fantastic and geistreich.
If two such wholly dissimilar things can be compared
and weighed in this fashion, Schumann is very likely
right; but I rather think they cannot. The second
ballade possesses beauties in no way inferior to those
of the first. What can be finer than the simple
strains of the opening section! They sound as
if they had been drawn from the people’s storehouse
of song. The entrance of the presto surprises,
and seems out of keeping with what precedes; but what
we hear after the return of the tempo primo—the
development of those simple strains, or rather the
cogitations on them— justifies the presence
of the presto. The second appearance of the latter
leads to an urging, restless coda in A minor, which
closes in the same key and pianissimo with a few bars
of the simple, serene, now veiled, first strain.
The “Troisieme Ballade” (in A flat major),
Op. 47, does not equal its sisters in emotional intensity,
at any rate, not in emotional tumultuousness.
On this occasion the composer shows himself in a fundamentally
caressing mood. But the fine gradations, the
iridescence of feeling, mocks at verbal definition.
Insinuation and persuasion cannot be more irresistible,
grace and affection more seductive. Over everything
in melody, harmony, and rhythm, there is suffused
a most exquisite elegance. A quiver of excitement
runs through the whole piece. The syncopations,
reversions of accent, silences on accented parts of
the bar (sighs and suspended respiration, felicitously
expressed), which occur very frequently in this ballade,
give much charm and piquancy to it. As an example,
I may mention the bewitching subject in F major of
the second section. The appearances of this subject
in different keys and in a new guise are also very
effective. Indeed, one cannot but be struck with
wonder at the ease, refinement, and success with which
Chopin handles here the form, while in almost every
work in the larger forms we find him floundering lamentably.
It would be foolish and presumptuous to pronounce
this or that one of the ballades the finest; but one
may safely say that the fourth (in F minor), Op. 52,
is fully worthy of her sisters. The emotional
key-note of the piece is longing sadness, and this
key-note is well preserved throughout; there are no