Setting, for sots at country fairs,
Dull saucy songs to Purcell's airs."[54]
D'Urfey's verses were so uncouth and irregular in their construction, that a writer of the last century said, "The modern Pindaric Odes which are humorously resembled to a comb with the teeth broken by frequent use are nothing to them." D'Urfey wrote some especially rugged lines which he challenged Purcell to set to music; the challenge was accepted and the composer triumphed, but he confessed that it cost him more trouble than the composition of a Te Deum. The ballad in question was called "The Parson among the Peas," and was printed with Purcell's music in D'Urfey's Pills to Purge Melancholy, 1719.
At the present day music has become such an extensively developed science, particularly as regards orchestration, that it is difficult to apprehend the state of things which existed in Purcell's time; but to estimate his genius fairly we must recall the condition of the musical artistic world in which he lived. In so far as orchestration is concerned he had no models, nor had he any instrumental performers to suggest or incite his creative powers. Purcell was familiar with the family of stringed instruments called viols, and although Charles II. introduced violins from France, yet the instrument was not regarded with favour by musicians or by the people generally. Doubtless this arose from the fact that there were no remarkable players. Anthony Wood of Oxford, speaking of the year 1657, says:—
"Gentlemen in private meetings, which A. W. frequented, played three, four, and five parts with viols—as treble viol, tenor, counter-tenor and bass, with an organ, virginal or harpsicon joined to them; and they esteemed a violin to be an instrument only belonging to a common fiddler, and could not endure that it should come among them, for feare of making these meetings to be vain and fiddling."
The first musician to introduce violin playing proper was Thomas Baltzar, who played at Oxford in 1658, and A. W. "saw him run up his fingers to the end of the finger-board of the violin, and run them back insensibly, and all with great alacrity and very good tune, which he nor any one in England saw the like before."
He also was the first to exhibit in England the practice of shifting, or the whole shift on the violin, and the half shift was not introduced until about 1714. Baltzar died in 1663, so that it is not probable Purcell ever heard him play; indeed it has been justly remarked that the probability is he never heard a great violinist. Corelli's works were not introduced into England until after Purcell's death, and the only violin music Purcell knew was that composed by Bassani.
In 1773 Daines Barrington, a well-known writer, speaks of the "Amazing improvements in execution which both singers and players have arrived at within the last fifty years. When Corelli's music was first published, our ablest violinists conceived that it was too difficult to be performed. It is now, however, the first composition attempted by a scholar. Every year now produces greater and greater prodigies on other instruments in point of execution."
Wind instruments were equally wanting if we except the trumpet, hautboy and bassoon, and only the former could be said to have arrived at any excellence in performance: there were no flutes,[55] clarinets, horns, or trombones. It cannot therefore be expected that grand orchestral effects will be found in Purcell's music, but what we do discover is an amazing comprehension of the precise sentiment and feeling required by the words or by the situation; harmonies which surprise us by their beauty and boldness (many of them must have been absolutely new when they were created by Purcell), exquisite and refined melody, true rhythm, and just accent. And when we look at Purcell's purely instrumental music, his sonatas, we find that as music they are superior to Corelli—containing more learning, more ingenuity, and yet without any appearance of labour or restraint; but Corelli was a violinist, and in that respect he had the advantage of Purcell, and knew what passages were best adapted for the instruments for which he wrote.
Of Purcell's contrapuntal skill it would be impossible to speak too highly; he has left for our wonder and admiration numerous canons constructed in all the many and artful modes that species of composition is capable of; the ingenuity and contrivance exhibited give ample evidence of his diligence and laborious study, and the highest praise of all is that in spite of the deep learning of which they give evidence they move as melodiously, and as freely, as if they were unfettered by the stern and inflexible chains imposed by the rules of the schools.