Despite his
reputation as an irascible teacher, Charles Villiers Stanford had a developed
sense of humour. Coupled to this was an eye for journalistic detail. He penned
three books of “memoirs”: Studies and Memories (1908), Pages from an
Unwritten Diary (1914), and Interludes, Records and Reflections
(1922). This present anecdote is taken
from the Unwritten Diary (p.206f).
Stanford explains that after the Birmingham Festival of 1882 he travelled with his wife to Switzerland. He wrote:
After the 1882
Festival we went to Monte Generoso and had experience of the worst floods I
have ever seen. After a long spell of doubtful weather, three thunderstorms met
over our devoted hotel, and over most of the rest of the range of mountains to
the North of Italy and deluged the plains below. We got with difficulty to the
station outside Verona, and made our entry into the town between two banks of mud
standing three feet high on either side of the
streets. The only
bridge left was the old Roman structure. The buildings on each side were mostly
like dolls' houses with the front taken off. Two or three fell into the Adige
as I watched.
Going on to Venice
the next day, we were turned out at Padua and had to drive along an
interminable road between two muddy lakes, which extended at least half-way to
the sea-city, in a most rickety vehicle, drawn by a shying horse.
Venice made up for the risky journey, and the floods to an unusual extent counteracted the perfumes at low tide. There was a pleasing uncertainty as to our exit; so many were the broken bridges, and so dangerous the sunken and (far from) permanent way on the railways. But we contrived to escape from an unduly long imprisonment by way of Trieste and Vienna. I saw one sight in Venice which alone repaid the journey: Charles Hallé in a frockcoat and a white top hat reading the Daily Telegraph while seated in a gondola and floating under the Bridge of Sighs.
Monte Generoso is a mountain located on the Swiss-Italian border. At the time of Stanford’s visit, the mountain railway had not been built.
Charle Hallé
(1819-95) was an Anglo-German pianist and conductor. He studied at Darmstadt
and later in Paris. In 1848 he arrived in Manchester where he took on several
conducting posts. Nine years later he founded the orchestra that bears his
name.
It is interesting
to recall that Stanford’s reference to the Roman bridge at Verona, being the
only one left standing. Sixty-three years later the structure was blown up by
the retreating German army. It was rebuilt in 1957, using rubble recovered from
the River Adige.
No comments:
Post a Comment