Book Read Free

Gerontius

Page 35

by James Hamilton-Paterson


  ‘Welcome home, Sir Edward! Welcome home!’

  Epilogue

  Edward Elgar lived on another ten years without composing anything of much significance. He did however make recordings of his own music whose value as historic and artistic documents justified his friends’ encouragement in the face of his own gloomy predictions.

  From time to time in that final decade he would look out his notes and sketches for various projects – principally a piano concerto, an opera and a third symphony. Late in 1932 the BBC, largely at Bernard Shaw’s urging, commissioned the symphony for £1000. Throughout the following year there were brief flickers of the creative flame interspersed with such distractions as the heady pleasure of at last becoming an aeronaut. At the end of May he flew to France to conduct the Paris première of his Violin Concerto with Yehudi Menuhin, combining this trip with a visit to the dying Delius at Grez-sur-Loing. Back in England he tried again with the symphony, which was progressing but feebly. The first signs of his own cancer appeared although at the time he was more anguished by a disease increasingly evident in Europe. He had already written to Frank Schuster’s sister Adela:

  I am in a maze regarding events in Germany – what are they doing? In this morning’s paper it is said that the greatest conductor Bruno Walter &, stranger still, Einstein are ostracised: are we all mad? The Jews have always been my best and kindest friends – the pain of these news is unbearable & I do not know what it really means.

  He died in February 1934, working on his symphony until the last. On that very day the Hildebrand, which had been sold to a man in Monmouthshire for £11,000, was being broken up. The ship had been built in 1911, the year of Elgar’s Second Symphony and arguably the high summer of his output. Thus by a strange coincidence its lifespan happened precisely to encompass the declining years of the Amazon cruises as well as of the creative and calendrical life of Sir Edward Elgar.

  About the Author

  James Hamilton-Paterson is the author of the bestselling Empire of the Clouds, which was hailed as a classic account of the golden age of British aviation. He won a Whitbread Prize for his first novel, Gerontius, and among his many other celebrated books are Seven-Tenths, one of the finest books written in recent times about the oceans, the satirical trilogy that began with Cooking with Fernet Branca, and the autobiographical Playing with Water. Born and educated in England, he has lived in the Philippines and Italy and now makes his home in Austria.

  By the same author

  FICTION

  Loving Monsters

  The View from Mount Dog

  Gerontius

  The Bell-Boy

  Griefwork

  Ghosts of Manila

  The Music

  Cooking with Fernet Branca

  Amazing Disgrace

  Rancid Pansies

  CHILDREN’S FICTION

  Flight Underground

  The House in the Waves

  Hostage!

  NON-FICTION

  A Very Personal War: The Story of Cornelius Hawkridge

  (also published as The Greedy War)

  Mummies: Death and Life in Ancient Egypt

  Playing with Water

  Seven-Tenths

  America’s Boy

  Three Miles Down

  Empire of the Clouds: How Britain’s Aircraft Ruled the World

  POETRY

  Option Three

  Dutch Alps

  Copyright

  First published in 1989

  By Macmillan London Ltd

  This paperback edition first published in 2017

  by Faber & Faber Ltd

  Bloomsbury House

  74–77 Great Russell Street

  London WC1B 3DA

  This ebook edition first published in 2017

  All rights reserved

  © James Hamilton-Paterson, 1989

  Foreword © Colin Matthews, 2017

  Cover image © Stapleton Collection/Corbis

  The right of James Hamilton-Paterson to be identified as author of this work has been asserted in accordance with Section 77 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988

  This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights, and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly

  ISBN 978–0–571–31402–7

 

 

 


‹ Prev