This story is given as written by Mrs. Lydia Maria Child, who
heard Ole Bull tell it when he first came to the United States. Mrs.
Child always preserved better than any one else his peculiar manner
of narration.
This is the sole foundation for the absurd story that has appeared
in certain encyclopædias, to the effect that Ole Bull had
killed a fellow–student in a duel.
Ole Bull used to mention a personal grievance which Janin
had against Paganini: the latter was asked to play for the poor of
Janin’s native town and refused.
Mori had influenced Madame Grisi, but Rubini and Lablache
had stood by him. “What are you reading? I know the hand–writing,”
said Lablache, looking over Grisi’s note the very hour of
the concert. “Infamous! but never mind; play as you did at the
rehearsal, and be sure the audience will forget the rest of us.”
His love for his mother’s mother was one of the strongest and
tenderest of his heart–ties. He loved, respected, and admired her.
She had from his earliest childhood sympathized with him. At
her knee he learned the folk–songs and folk–lore of Norway. Her
teachings influenced his thoughts and life, and to dream of her or
his father gave him great happiness. Her dear face, he used to
say, seemed to be near him when he played his “Mother’s Prayer.”
The recipient of this honor is lifted on the shoulders of two
men, two more supporting the legs in front, and two the arms behind,
and he is carried in triumphal procession, the flaming punch
bowl held aloft, while the students, each with a glass in one hand
and a lighted taper in the other, follow in order.
Among the correspondence of this period is a long letter from
the well–known Norse poet, Aasmund O. Winje, dated at Christiania,
December 3, 1849, and beginning thus:—
“Norse Ole! My naïve address will almost shock you; I could
find no characteristic epithet for you, and, so far as I know, the
peasants call you only Ole Bull—as if titles did not become this
name. Therefore, Norse Ole!... May all go well! May the
annoyances which necessarily attend your undertaking be as few as
possible!”
Ole Bull was made an honorary member of the Students’
Union in 1848, and composed for a fête given him at the time his
“Saeterbesög,” which he dedicated to the Norse Students.
Ole Bull was almost convinced that Duiffoprugcar and Da
Salo were names of one man, and thought the Brescian labels
bearing the late date of 1610 spurious. This doubtful point, which
he could not wholly clear up, is given because he accepted although
he could not prove it.