The

Story of the Harp

 

PART ONE.

ANTIQUITY OF THE HARP.

Early Egyptian harps. Their origin to be traced in the three-stringed lyre. Harps in Assyria, Babylonia, Uganda, and Persia. Aethicus of Istria. Heccataeus. Harps in pagan Ireland. Affinity between the Egyptian and Irish harp. The Ullard harp. The timpan and ocht-tedach. Greek and Roman harps. The name “harp” of English origin. How the harp was evolved from the hunter’s bow. High artistic quality of early Egyptian music.

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PART TWO

FROM JUBALS TO BORUS' HARP .

Jubal’s harp. Egyptian influence. The kinnor and nebel. The harp associated with prophesying. Harps in Solomon’s Temple. Jewish instruments. The New Jerusalem. Early Christian worship. Music school at Rome under St. Leo.

THE IRISH HARP.

Singing to the harp in ancient Ireland. The last Feis of Tara. St. Columcille. The ceis. Clarisech and fidil in the seventh century. Irish monasteries in England. “Glastonbury of the Irish”. Sculptured Irish harps of the ninth century. A band of harps. The Irish monks of St. Gall. Alfred the Great. St. Dunstan’s Aeolian harp. Ilbrechtach the Harper.

THE WELSH HARP.

Ancient “British”music. “Morva Rhuddlan”. The Telyn, or Welsh harp. Derivation of name. Eisteddfodau in the twelfth century. Giraldus Cambrensis. The name Telyn used in Brittany and Cornwall. Compass of early Welsh harps. The crwth trithant. Tunings of the crwth.

 “BRIAN BORU’S” HARP.

Outline of the ‘Brian Boru’ legend. Examination of claims in the light of history. Description of the O'Brien harp. Clue to the real story. Probable date. Its wanderings. Restrung in the eighteenth century. Presented to Trinity College, Dublin. Cast of it in South Kensington Museum.

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PART THREE

MEDIAEVAL HARPS AND HARPERS.

Norman harps. The Cruit. Two noted Irish harpers. John of Salisbury and Brompton. Giraldus Cambrensis on the school of Irish harpers. English harpers. Grosteste, Bishop of Lincoln. Prince Edward's harper. Arms and coinage of Ireland. Higden and De Fordun. Italian harps derived from Ireland. Entries from the State Papers as to English and Irish harpers. O'CarroIl, chief harper of Ireland. French and German minstrels. The Citole.

ENGLISH, SCOTCH, AND IRISH HARPERS.

Tutbury Court of Minstrels. Thomas of Elmham. Henry V as a harpist. London-made harps. The King's minstrel. Incorporation of the Musicians' Company of the City of London. The Lamont harp. “Eibhlin a Ruin”. Carrol O'Daly. The Statute of Kilkenny. Irish harpers. Visits to the Scottish Court. Richard III and Henry VII. London minstrels. Thierry and John Major on Irish minstrels. Music printing.

THE HARP IN THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY.

An Irish harp dated 1509. Sebastian Virdung. English minstrels. Henry VIII's Band of Music. Irish harpers. Polydore Vergil. Enactments against Irish harpers. English minstrels. Primavera “dell Arpe”. Elizabethan enactments. The “Queen Mary” harp. William Good, S.J. Distinguished Irish harpers. Vincenzo Galilei. The harpsichord. A harp of a new device. Shakespeare and Bacon. “Ballet Comique de la Royne”. “Orfeo”.'

THE IRISH HARP UNDER KING JAMES I.

Captain Barnaby Rich. Rory dall O'Cahan. “Rory dalts Port”. “The Lame Yellow Beggar”. The Fitzwilliam Virginal Book. “Callino Custurame”. The “Dalway” harp. Famous harpers. Improvements in the Irish harp. The Great Seal of James I. The Irish harp in the royal arms.

THE WELSH TRIPLE HARP.

Père Mersenne’s description. Evolution of the Irish double harp. Carew, the Welsh harper. Sad end of Evans, told by Pepys. Welsh triple harp described.

CROMWELL AND THE IRISH HARP.

Archdeacon Lynch's testimony. Deliberate system of harp-breaking. Pierce Ferriter. Harp ornamentation. Evelyn on the Irish harp. “I'll never love thee more”

THE HARP UNDER CHARLES II.

Sir Edward Sutton. The Queen's "Portugal music". Rev. James Clifford. Moreland's new harp. The Great Seal of Charles II. The “Kildare” harp. The “Fogarty” harp. Three Irish harpers. Dr. Narcissus Marsh. The chromatic harp. Defects of the “hook” system.

TURLOGH O'CAROLAN.

Early years. Becomes a wandering minstrel. “Once I had a Sweet­heart”. “The Arethusa”. Praised by Geminiani. Beethoven’s tribute. “Cardan’s Concerto'”. His death. Adaptation of his tunes by Tom Moore. Some noted contemporary harpers. Irish harps.

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PART FOUR

CHAPTER XIV. INVENTION OF THE PEDAL HARP.

Hochbrucker's device—Defect of the pedal—Improvements by the Cousineaus père et fils—The double-action harp—Meyer's improvements—Prince Oginski—His tribute to Irish harpers.

CHAPTER XV. THE HARP AS AN ORCHESTRAL INSTRUMENT.

Handel scores for the harp. Florian Gassman. J. E. Krumpholz. Louis Adam. Mozart. Dussek. P. Meyer. Daniel Steibelt.

CHAPTER XVI. IRISH HARPERS OF THE MID-EIGHTEENTH CENTURY.

Maguire the harper. Hugh Kelly. Jerome Duigenan. Dominick Mongan. Denis O'Hampsey. The Jacobite period.

CHAPTER XVII. SOME OLD-TIME VIRTUOSI.

Madame Krumpholz. Louis Cardon. De Marin. Madame Dussek. Moralt. Guillaume Gatayes. Naderman fih. Thomas Billington. Jean Elouis. Minor artists.

CHAPTER XVIII. WELSH HARPERS OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY.

David Owen (Davydd y Gareg-wen). John Parry of Ruabon. Evans the harper. Edward Jones of Llanderfel. Thomas Jones. John Randies. Revival of the Eisteddfod. Richard Roberts. John Parry of Denbigh.

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PART FIVE

CHAPTER XIX. REVIVAL OF THE IRISH HARP.

The Granard Festivals. The Belfast Harp Meeting. Edward Bunting. Arthur O'Neill. The Belfast Harp Society. The Dublin Harp Society. Revival of the Belfast Harp Society. The Irish Harp as a fashion. The Drogheda Harp Society. The modern Irish Harp. Method of tuning.

CHAPTER XX. THE DOUBLE-ACTION HARP.

Marie Antoinette harp. Sebastian Erard. Improved single-action harp of 1792. Double-action harp of 1810. Advantages of the double-action harp. Appreciation by John Thomas. The ''Grecian" harp of 1815. The Gothic harp.

CHAPTER XXI. VIRTUOSI OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY.

Madame Spohr. Dizi. Henry Horn. C. A. Baur. Neville Butler Challoner. Thomas Paul Chipp. Bochsa. Parish Alvars. J. B. Chatterton—Eulenstein. A. Prumier. Charles Oberthür. John Thomas. Aptommas. John Cheshire.

CHAPTER XXII. THE HARP IN THE ORCHESTRA.

Louis Spohr. Giacomo Meyerbeer. Hector Berlioz. The ideal orchestra. L'Enfance du Christ. Franz Liszt. Michael William Balfe. Richard Wagner. The Rheingold. Die Walkure. Charles Gounod. Franz Lachner. Charles Oberthür. A strange combination. Dom Perosi. The future of the harp.

Epilogue 

Preface.

 

Although the Harp, mainly by reason of the introduction of the pianoforte, has not maintained its prestige in the salons of the great, yet it still holds an honoured place in the orchestra, and claims many amateur votaries. Of course there is a professorship of the harp in the principal musical conservatoires; and all the big European and American festivals requisition the instrument either for solo or concerted work.

Apart from the graceful outline of the harp, there is something indefinable in its strains, something ethereal and sui generis. The very mention of the instrument recalls to mind the number of allusions to it in the Bible. Who has not read of the myriad harpers harping upon their golden harps in the New Jerusalem? Has not the theme of David playing on his harp been ever popular with mediaeval painters? The story of Jubal’s lyre has recently been corroborated by a sculptured tablet in Chaldea, due to the researches of the great American explorer, Mr. St. Chad Boscawen. Year by year archaeologists are bringing to light hidden tablets on which harps are depicted. Certain it is that from the earliest period of the world's history a form of harp has existed.

The present little volume does not pretend to be scientific, in the strict acceptance of the term; nor yet is much account taken of conflicting theories as to the most ancient forms of harps, or exact data relative thereto. As is sufficiently indicated by the title, it is only purposed to tell the story of the harp from the earliest records to the close of the last century. General accuracy, however, is aimed at, and an endeavour is made to render the narrative alike of interest to the professional as well as the amateur.

In a certain sense, this venture may be regarded as a pioneer work on the harp, as, save for the book by Bruce Armstrong, and the articles in Grove's Dictionary and the Encyclopaedia Britannica, there has not previously been published any special history dealing adequately with this venerable instrument.

No apology is needed for the prominence given to the Irish harp in the following pages. Ireland has been for centuries associated with “The harp that once thro' Tara's halls”, and the instrument figures in the arms and coinage of the kingdom. Dante, as quoted by Vincenzo Galilei, attests that the Italians received the harp from Ireland, and German historians tell of the Irish monks who founded scores of religious houses all over the Continent, bringing with them their harps and bells.

At the same time I have endeavoured to do no injustice to other harp-loving countries, and I have summarised the most recent discoveries in the East in regard to sculptured harps, especially at Crete, Egypt, and Babylonia.

No one is more painfully aware of the shortcomings of the present volume than the writer himself, but the chief object has been to present in a popular form the various evolutions of the harp until its final development by Erard, at the commencement of the nineteenth century, and to furnish a readable account of the leading harpists from mediaeval days to our own times; as also to point out the bearing of the harp in the orchestra, and its introduction into the scores of such giants as Wagner, Berlioz, Meyer­beer, and Gounod.

My best acknowledgments are hereby tendered to Francis Joseph Bigger, Esq., M.R.I.A., Belfast, for several of the blocks used for illustrating the subject of the Irish harp; and also to the proprietors of the Irish Rosary, Dublin, for the use of blocks of the Ullard Harp, Brian Boru Harp, Dalway Harp, Hempson Harp, and M'Fall “Tara” Harp.

 

WM. H. GRATTAN FLOOD.

Enniscorthy,

July, 1905.

 

Epochs in the History of Harp-making.

A.D.

1218.—First recorded improvement in the construction of the harp by Aedh O'Sochlann, Vicar of Cong (Ireland).

1220.—The “Brian Boru” harp.

1418.—John Bore, of London, harp-maker to King Henry V.

1585.—William Bathe constructs a harp “of a new device” which he presents to Queen Elizabeth.

1621.—The “Dalway” harp, made by Donnchadh MacTadhg O'Dermody.

1623.—Invention of a new double-string harp by F. Robert Nugent, S.J.

1661.—A new form of harp invented by Sir Samuel Moreland.

1685.—Invention of the Chromatic harp.

1710.—Improvements in the Welsh harp.

1720.—Invention of the pedal harp by Hochbrucker.

1752.—Improvements in the pedal harp by the Cousineaus, père et fils.

1780.—Cousineau doubles the pedals, thus originating the idea of the modern double-action harp.

1785.—Krumpholz improves the single-action harp.

1792.—Sebastian Erard takes out a patent in London or an improved pedal harp—single-action.

1809.—Partial double-action harp patented by Erard.

1819.—Erard’s double-action harp patented.

1836.—Pierre Erard, nephew of Sebastian Erard, patented the Gothic harp, which superseded the Grecian harp.