VII - Grainger on Grainger
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 March 2023
Summary
PERCY ALDRIDGE GRAINGER
(1882–1961)
From the time of his mother's death, in 1922, Grainger's view of life became increasingly retrospective. Over his remaining nearly forty years he reviewed his life firstly romantically, then wistfully, and finally with a contrary bitterness often in blatant defiance of the facts. His unpublished autobiographical writings are vast, totalling over 250,000 words. During the 1920s and 1930s he was obsessed with a most detailed review of every facet of life with his mother, and also wrote of the early courtship with his wife, Ella, in ‘The Love-life of Helen and Paris’ (1927–28). The first two recollections below are drawn from these earlier writings. The long essays ‘Ere-Iforget’ and ‘Anecdotes’ from the 1940s and 1950s are more wideranging recollections. In 1951 Grainger determined to draw his memories into a definitive autobiography, ‘My Wretched Tone-life’, but only appears to have sketched its tortured three-page introduction, also given below. Many of Grainger's recollections were written in his personal ‘Nordic’ or ‘Blue-eyed’ English. Fortunately for the uninitiated, he usually added Graeco-Latin synonyms in parentheses.
Money spent on ideals, friends, etc., 1920–end 1923. As a youth I was greatly struck with Cecil Rhodes’ saying: ‘A man should be able to afford his ideals.’ I believe in artists paying out of their own purse for the things they hold needful to artistic welfare. Also I have always believed that the command of the Jewish religion, ‘10% to charity’, is too low a rate of help-for-others. Better is the South-Sea-Island custom cited by R. L. Stevenson in ‘A footnote to history’—‘the obligations of a Samoan towards his kin & friends cease only when he can turn to them & say: “I have nothing more to give”.’ No, I do not go as far as that. Believing that an idealist should see to it that he will be able to afford his ideals in the future, as well as in the present, I feel that he should always save part of his earnings (say 25%!). But beyond that I feel he should spend all the rest on art or science, on needy friends, on the ideals of gifted friends or fellow-artists, & on charity. I have felt this many many years.
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- Portrait of Percy Grainger , pp. 201 - 208Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2002