Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-8ctnn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T06:07:46.606Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Ernest Newman's Draft of a Berlioz Biography (1899) and its Appropriation of Emile Hennequin's Style Theory

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 June 2013

Paul Watt*
Affiliation:
Monash University Email: [email protected]

Abstract

Ernest Newman (1868–1959) first proposed a biography of Berlioz in the 1890s. A schedule for its research and writing was hatched, an agreement was made with a publisher for its manufacture, and Newman promptly set to work on the project. Alas, like so many other book projects Newman commenced in the 1890s, the Berlioz biography was never completed. Even though sketches or drafts of the book do not survive, there is plenty of evidence of the methodology and structure that Newman proposed for the book, for a work-in-progress article, ‘The prose of Berlioz,’ was published in the Chord in June 1899. It is a remarkable essay for its engagement with Berlioz's prose works and for its theorizing on musical biography. I illustrate that Newman's biographical method was partly inspired by the work of Emile Hennequin (1858–93), and was an approach that Newman had previously used in some of his literary criticism. However, I argue that despite Newman's claim of Hennequin's influence, the article's wider influence came from a larger pool of writers working on style theory, including Walter Pater, Walter Raleigh and J.A. Symonds.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2013 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

This article grew out of a presentation entitled ‘Ernest Newman's plans for a Berlioz biography in the 1890s’, delivered at the fifth biannual conference on nineteenth-century British music held at the University of Birmingham, 5–8 July 2007. Research for the article was completed in June–July 2009 while I was a Visiting Fellow at the Institute of Musical Research, University of London, funded by a Monash University Travel Grant. I am very grateful to the anonymous assessor of this article for comments that improved the final version.

1 Plans for the history of music, which appear to have been first raised in 1921, are recorded in Vera Newman's Ernest Newman: A Memoir by his Wife (London, 1963), 25.

Mention is made of Newman's planned Parsifal book on p. 269 of the book. It is well known that Newman had planned to write a Berlioz biography; see, for example, Berlioz, Romantic and Classic, ed. Peter Heyworth (London, 1972), 11: ‘He [Newman] did in fact intend to write a full-length study of Berlioz's music. That even in the last years of his life he had not abandoned this project is clear from the fact that he allowed no articles on Berlioz to be included in the two anthologies of his writings in the Sunday Times, which appeared near the end of his life …’.

2 Heyworth, Berlioz, Romantic and Classic.

3 Watt, Paul, ‘The Intellectual life of Ernest Newman in the 1890s’ (PhD diss., University of Sydney, 2009)Google Scholar

4 Pekacz, Jolanta T., ‘Memory, history and meaning: musical biography and its discontents’, Journal of Musicological Research 23/1 (2004), 39–80Google Scholar

5 See his Gluck and the Opera: A Study in Musical History (London, 1895); Richard Strauss (London, 1904); Elgar (London, 1906); Hugo Wolf (London, 1907); The Unconscious Beethoven (London, 1927). The Wagner biographies are A Study of Wagner (London, 1899); Wagner (London, 1904); Wagner as Man and Artist (London, 1914); The Life of Richard Wagner, 4 vols (New York, 1936–47) and Wagner (London, 1940).

6 Edmund Gurney, The Power of Sound (London, 1880)Google Scholar

7 Cooke, Bill, The Gathering of Infidels: A Hundred Years of the Rationalist Press Association (Amherst: Prometheus, 2004)Google Scholar

8 Edward B. Tylor's Researches into the Early History of Mankind and the Development of Civilization (London, 1865)Google Scholar

H.M. Posnett's, Comparative Literature (London, 1886)Google Scholar

Watt, ‘The Intellectual Life of Ernest Newman in the 1890s’, chapter 6Google Scholar

9 Remak, Henry H., ‘Comparative literature, its definition and function’, in Comparative Literature: Method and Perspective, ed. Newton P. Stallknecht and Horst Frenz (Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1968)Google Scholar

10 Newman, Gluck and the Opera, 1Google Scholar

11 Susan Bassnett, Comparative Literature: A Critical Introduction (Oxford, 1993)Google Scholar

D.R. Oldroyd, Darwinian Impacts: An Introduction to the Darwinian Revolution (Milton Keynes, 1980), pp. 14–16Google Scholar

12 Woodruff D. Smith, Politics and the Science of Culture in Germany, 1840–1920 (New York, 1991), 59–62Google Scholar

Stocking, George W., Victorian Anthropology (New York: The Free Press, 1987)Google Scholar

13 Mugglestone, Erica, ‘Guido Adler's “The Scope, Method, and Aim of Musicology” (1885): An English Translation with an Historico-Analytical Commentary’, Yearbook for Traditional Music 13 (1981), 1–21Google Scholar

14 Correspondence from Ernest Newman to Bertram Dobell, 7 August 1898. MS Dobell 38484–5 (c. 37–38), Bodleian Library, Oxford. The vast majority of letters in this collection are from Newman to Dobell; very few letters from Dobell to Newman have survived.

15 Robertson, John M., ‘The problem of publishing’, Free Review, May 1895, 97–112Google Scholar

16 Correspondence, Newman to Dobell, 7 August 1898.

17 Further particulars of this essay are unknown.

18 Newman to Dobell, 26 November 1898.

19 Ibid.

20 Ibid., 7 February 1899.

21 Ibid., 10 February 1899.

22 Ibid., 16 April 1899.

23 Ibid.

24 The date in Newman's hand is indecipherable but it was written some time between 16 April 1899 and 14 May 1899.

25 Newman, Ernest, ‘The Prose of Berlioz’, Chord, June 1899, 48–55Google Scholar

26 Camlot, Jason, Style and the Nineteenth-Century British Critic: Sincere Mannerisms (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2008)Google Scholar

27 Catherine LeGouis, Positivism and Imagination: Scientism and its limits in Emile Hennequin, Wilhelm Scherer, and Dmitri Pisarev (Lewisburg, 1997)Google Scholar

28 John M. Robertson, A History of Freethought Ancient and Modern, to the Period of the French Revolution, vol. 2, 4th edn (London, 1969 [1936])Google Scholar

29 John M. Robertson, Essays Towards a Critical Method (London, 1890)Google Scholar

30 Hennequin, Emile, ‘L'esthétique de Wagner et de la doctrine Spencérienne’, Revue Wagnérienne, 8 November 1885, 282–288Google Scholar

Bujić, Bojaned., Music in European Thought 1851–1912 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988)CrossRefGoogle Scholar

Watt, Paul, ‘The catalogue of Ernest Newman's library: revelations about his early life in the 1890s’, Script & Print 31/2 (2007), 81–103Google Scholar

31 Catherine LeGouis, Positivism and Imagination: scientism and its limits in Emile Hennequin, Wilhelm Scherer, and Dmitrii Pisarev (Lewisburg, PA: Bucknell University Press), 84Google Scholar

32 Wellek, A History of Modern Criticism: 1750–1850, vol. 4: The Later Nineteenth Century (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1955)Google Scholar

33 LeGouis quoting Hennequin's Quelques écrivains français, (p. 28) in Positivism and Imagination, 85.

34 LeGouis, Positivism and Imagination, 85Google Scholar

35 ‘Après avoir fait l'analyse du vocabulaire, de la syntaxe, de la métrique, de la composition de Flaubert, nous avons énuméré ses procédés de description et de psychologie qui se réduisent à ceux du réalisme …’: Hennequin, ‘Gustave Flaubert’, 51.

36 Dowden, Edward, ‘Literary criticism in France’, in Studies in European Literature being the Taylorian Lectures, 1889–1899 (Oxford, 1900), 1–29Google Scholar

37 Newman, Ernest, ‘The Prose of Berlioz’, 49Google Scholar

38 It is known that Newman was also a devotee of Berlioz's music – evident in his essays in Heyworth's volume (Berlioz, Romantic and Classic) – which surely must have been a factor in deciding to write the composer's biography.

39 Ibid., 48.

40 Ibid., 49.

41 Newman, Ernest, ‘Berlioz, Romantic and Classic’, in Newman's Musical Studies (London and New York: Haskell, 1905), 29–30Google Scholar

42 Newman, Ernest, ‘The Prose of Berlioz’, 49Google Scholar

43 Ibid., 51.

44 Ibid., 53.

45 Ibid., 49.

46 Earle, English Prose: Its Elements, History, and Usage (London: Smith, Elder and Co., 1890)Google Scholar

47 Max Nordau, Degeneration, trans from the second edition from the German with an introduction by George L. Mosse (New York: Howard Fertig, 1968)Google Scholar

48 Nordau, Degeneration, 177Google Scholar

49 Ibid., 194 (‘absurdity of style’), 195 (‘incoherence in words’) and 197 (‘graphomanical muddle’).

50 Ibid., both quotes from page 180.

51 Ibid., 190.

52 Ibid., 194.

53 See note 36 above.

54 Symonds, J.A., Essays Speculative and Suggestive (London: Smith, Elder and Co., 1890)Google Scholar

Earle, John, English Prose: Its Elements, History, and Usage (London: Smith, Elder and Co., 1890)Google Scholar

55 Walter Raleigh, Style (London, 1897)Google Scholar

56 Pater, Appreciations, 10Google Scholar

57 Ibid., 11.

58 Ibid., 20, 24

59 Ibid., 31. Original emphasis.

60 Ibid., 29.

61 Ibid., 31.

62 Symonds, Essays Speculative and Suggestive, 168Google Scholar

63 Ibid., 167.

64 Ibid., 170.

65 Ibid.

66 Ibid., 171.

67 Ibid., 174.

68 Ibid., 182, 194, 194.

69 Ibid., 199.

70 Ibid., 199–200.

71 Ibid., 205–6.

72 Ibid., 217.

73 Ibid., 219.

74 Ibid., 220.

75 Ibid., 222.

76 Ibid., 223.

77 Earle, English Prose, 341Google Scholar

78 Ibid., 338.

79 Pater, quoted by Earle, 337.

80 Ibid., 338.

81 Ibid., 347.

82 Ibid., 348–9.

83 Ibid., 351

84 Ibid., 345–6.

85 Raleigh, Style, 2Google Scholar

86 Ibid., 10.

87 Ibid., 78.

88 Ibid., 87.

89 Ibid., 128.

90 Newman, Ernest, ‘Appreciation’, in John M. Robertson, A History of Freethought Ancient and Modern, xxiiGoogle Scholar

91 See, for example, Jason Camlot, Style and the Nineteenth-Century British Critic.

92 LeGouis, Positivism and Imagination, 76Google Scholar

93 Robertson, New Essays Towards a Critical Method (London, 1897), 28–29Google Scholar