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قراءة كتاب Dr. Arne and Rule, Britannia
تنويه: تعرض هنا نبذة من اول ١٠ صفحات فقط من الكتاب الالكتروني، لقراءة الكتاب كاملا اضغط على الزر “اشتر الآن"
DR. ARNE
AND
RULE, BRITANNIA
BY
WILLIAM HAYMAN CUMMINGS,
Mus. Doc., F.S.A., Hon. R.A.M.
Author of “The Origin and History of ‘God Save the King.’”
London: NOVELLO AND COMPANY, Limited.
New York: THE H. W. GRAY CO., Sole Agents for U.S.A.
1912
PREFACE.
The glorious National Song, “Rule, Britannia,” is familiar to the whole British race; nevertheless very few men and women are acquainted with the history of its birth and parentage.
In the following pages I have endeavoured to chronicle all the facts which are discoverable by diligent research, and to present them in an attractive and entertaining manner.
The life of Dr. Arne, the composer of “Rule, Britannia,” offers to the reader and to the music student an interesting and instructive story, showing that natural ability, even when combined with genius, is not sufficient to ensure a triumphant and successful career. Morality and conscientious rectitude in the affairs of life are essential, and had Arne exercised these, his exceptional gifts might have enabled him to surpass his great contemporary, Handel.
It only remains to be noted that many letters and documents are here printed for the first time, some of them copied from the original autographs in my possession. They illuminate much which has hitherto been obscure and uncertain in the career of a famous composer.
William H. Cummings.
ILLUSTRATIONS.
DR. ARNE.
Much confusion has arisen concerning the family of Arne; this is not surprising, seeing that three generations of the same family were named Thomas, and that all resided in the parish of St. Paul, Covent Garden. On the 14th of February, 1680, the Bishop of London granted a marriage licence to “Thomas Arne, of St. Paul’s, Covent Garden, Bachelor, 27 and upwards, and Mary Thursfield, of St. Martin’s-in-Fields, Spinster, 20, with her father’s consent at St. Peter’s, Cornhill, or elsewhere in Diocese.” A son born to this couple was baptized in St. Paul, Covent Garden, on the 3rd of December, 1682; the church register records “Thomas, son of Thomas Arne by Mary his wife.” In due time, when twenty-five years of age, this second Thomas married Anne Wheeler in the Mercers’ Chapel, Cheapside, April, 1707.[1] Three years later a son was born, who also was named Thomas, and duly baptized in St. Paul, Covent Garden. The ceremony is recorded in the church register on the 28th of May, 1710, “Thomas, son of Thomas Arne by Ann his wife.” This was the future musician and composer; the date of his birth cannot be verified by documentary evidence, but tradition has given the 12th of March, and this has generally been accepted as correct. It is noteworthy that Arne received only one Christian name in baptism, and that in after life he added another, Augustine. It has been suggested that at some period he was received into the Roman Catholic Church, and then took the additional name; but diligent inquiry at the Sardinian Chapel, Lincoln’s Inn Fields, a place of worship he frequented, has failed to discover any evidence of the alleged ceremony. A letter written by Dr. Burney[2] (Arne’s pupil) to Sir Joseph Banks in July, 1806, described “Old Mrs. Arne, the mother of Dr. Arne and Mrs. Cibber, as a bigotted Roman Catholic.” Surely natural affection would suffice to induce a mother to instruct her children in her own religious faith, and there was no reason why her son should not have been baptized with both names had the parents wished it. It seems quite clear that the adoption of the second name became a necessity to distinguish the composer from his father.
Thomas Arne, m. 1680, | Mary Thursfield. | ||||||||
d. 1713. | |||||||||