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قراءة كتاب Music-Study in Germany, from the Home Correspondence of Amy Fay

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Music-Study in Germany, from the Home Correspondence of Amy Fay

Music-Study in Germany, from the Home Correspondence of Amy Fay

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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href="@public@vhost@g@gutenberg@html@files@37322@[email protected]#CHAPTER_XXI" class="pginternal" tag="{http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml}a">CHAPTER XXI.

Liszt's Playing. Tausig. Excursion to Sondershausen. 248 CHAPTER XXII. Farewell to Liszt! German Conservatories and their Methods.
Berlin again. Liszt and Joachim.
263 CHAPTER XXIII. Kullak as a Teacher. The Four Great Virtuosi, Clara Schumann,
Rubinstein, Von Bülow and Tausig.
272   WITH DEPPE.   CHAPTER XXIV. Gives up Kullak for Deppe. Deppe's Method in Touch and in
Scale-playing. Fräulein Steiniger. Pedal Study.
283 CHAPTER XXV. Chord-playing. Deppe no mere "Pedagogue." Sherwood.
Mozart's Concertos. Practicing Slowly. The Opera Ball.
299 CHAPTER XXVI. A Set of Beethoven Variations. Fannie Warburg. Deppe's
Inventions. His Room. His Afternoon Coffee. Pyrmont.
311 CHAPTER XXVII. The Brussels Conservatoire. Steiniger. Excursion to Kleinberg.
Giving a Concert. Fräulein Timm.
328 CHAPTER XXVIII. Music in Hamburg. Studying Chamber Music. Absence of Religion
in Germany. South Americans. Deppe Once More.
A Concert Debut. Postscript.
331

IN TAUSIG'S CONSERVATORY.

MUSIC-STUDY IN GERMANY.

CHAPTER I.

A German Interior in Berlin. A German Party. Joachim.
Tausig's Conservatory.

BERLIN, November 3, 1869.

Behold me at last at No. 26 Bernburger Strasse! where I arrived exactly two weeks from the day I left New York. Frau W. and her daughter, Fräulein A. W., greeted me with the greatest warmth and cordiality, and made me feel at home immediately. The German idea of a "large" room I find is rather peculiar, for this one is not more than ten or eleven feet square, and has one corner of it snipped off, so that the room is an irregular shape. When I first entered it I thought I could not stay in it, it seemed so small, but when I came to examine it, so ingeniously is every inch of space made the most of, that I have come to the conclusion that it will be very comfortable. It is not, however, the apartment where "the last new novel will lie upon the table, and where my daintily slippered feet will rest upon the velvet cushion." No! rather is it the stern abode of the Muses.

To begin then: the room is spotlessly clean and neat. The walls are papered with a nice new paper, grey ground with blue figures—a cheap paper, but soft and pretty. In one corner stands my little bureau with three deep drawers. Over it is a large looking-glass nicely framed. In the other corner on the same side is a big sofa which at night becomes a little bed. Next to the foot of the sofa, against the wall, stands a tiny square table, with a marble top, and a shelf underneath, on which are a basin and a minute soap-dish and tumbler. In the opposite corner towers a huge grey porcelain stove, which comes up to within a few feet of the ceiling. Next is one stiff cane-bottomed chair on four stiff legs. Then comes the lop-sided corner of the room, where an upright piano is to stand. Next there is a little space where hangs the three-shelved book-case, which will contain my vast library. Then comes a broad French window with a deep window-seat. By this window is my sea-chair—by far the most luxurious one in the house! Then comes my bureau again, and so on Da Capo. In the middle is a pretty round table, with an inlaid centre-piece, and on it is a waiter with a large glass bottle full of water, and a glass; and this, with one more stiff chair, completes the furniture of the room. My curtains are white, with a blue border, and two transparencies hang in the window. My towel-rack is fastened to the wall, and has an embroidered centre-piece. On my bureau is a beautiful inkstand, the cover being a carved eagle with spread wings, perched over a nest with three eggs in it. It is quite large, and looks extremely pretty under the looking-glass.

After I had taken off my things, Frau W. and her daughter ushered me into their parlour, which had the same look of neatness and simplicity and of extreme economy. There are no carpets on any of the floors, but they have large, though cheap, rugs. You never saw such a primitive little household as it is—that of this German

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