Caroline Alice Elgar

Edward and Alice Elgar, circa 1891

Caroline Alice, Lady Elgar (9 October 1848  7 April 1920) was an English author of verse and prose fiction, who married the composer Edward Elgar.

Family

Caroline Alice Roberts, known as Alice, was born in Bhuj, Gujarat, India, in 1848. She was the youngest child and only daughter of Major-General Sir Henry Gee Roberts KCB (1800–1860), and Julia Maria Raikes (1815–1887). Her three elder brothers were Albert Henry Roberts (born in 1839 and died young), Frederick Boyd Roberts (born 1841) and Stanley Napier Roberts (born 1844). Their father was serving in India at the time of the Indian Mutiny, and he died when Alice was aged only 12.

She was from a distinguished family: on her mother's side her grandfather was the Rev. Robert Napier Raikes, her great-grandfather Robert Raikes (1736–1811) was the founder of the Sunday school movement, and her uncle[1] was British Indian Army General Robert Napier Raikes (1813–1909).

As a girl she studied with the amateur geologist Rev W. S. Symonds and they and a group of her friends went fossil-hunting on the banks of the river Severn.[2] She wrote the index to a book by him. She studied the piano with Ferdinand Kufferath[3] in Brussels and harmony with Charles Harford Lloyd.[4] She spoke fluent German, and also Italian, French and Spanish.

Before she was married her writing was published under the name C. Alice Roberts. A two-volume novel, Marchcroft Manor, was published in 1882, four years before she met Elgar. The Elgar scholar Diana McVeagh describes it as "quite an accomplished, entertaining, indeed touching tale, with a control of pace and situation, and a humour that might well surprise anyone knowing Alice only from her later verses, letters and diary". McVeagh also notes that earlier critics have drawn attention to the "tincture of radicalism" in the book.[5]

Marriage

In 1886 Alice Roberts' brothers had left to join the army and she was living with her elderly widowed mother at Hazeldine House at Redmarley in Worcestershire (now in Gloucestershire). That autumn she took up piano accompaniment lessons from a Mr. Edward Elgar, who was violin teacher at Worcester High School. When her mother died the next year she went abroad for a while before returning to settle down at a house in Malvern Link called Ripple Lodge, and continued with her accompaniment lessons.[2] She became engaged to her young teacher, much to the disapproval of her strongly Anglican family, who not only considered her fiancé a poor tradesman of a lower social class, but noted that he was eight years her junior and a devout Roman Catholic.

Alice Roberts and Edward Elgar were married on 8 May 1889 in a shortened Catholic ceremony at Brompton Oratory.[6] They gave each other engagement presents: he presented her with a short piece for violin and piano called Salut d'Amour, and she gave him one of her poems The Wind at Dawn. Of Alice's family only her cousin William Raikes and his wife Veronica attended, while on her husband's side there were only his parents and his musical friend Dr. Charles Buck. The wedding breakfast was at the nearby house of a friend of Alice's, Mrs. Marshall – Elgar later dedicated A Song of Autumn to her daughter "Miss Marshall".[7]

The Elgars spent a three-week honeymoon at Ventnor on the Isle of Wight, then returned to London to be closer to the centre of British musical life. But they had no settled home for over a year: they went first to 3 Marloes Road, Kensington; then on 29 July they went back to her spacious house 'Saetermo' in Malvern when the lease ran out; then in October to the Raikes cousins' home (lent to them for the winter 1890–91) 'Oaklands', Fountain Road, Upper Norwood with the advantage of being near the Crystal Palace concerts which Edward attended whenever he could. They then moved to a terraced house at 51 Avonmore Road, Kensington[8] where their only child, Carice[9] Irene was born on 14 August 1890. However the lack of work for Edward forced them to leave, and they returned to Malvern Link, renting a house 'Forli' in Alexandra Road, where it was hoped he could earn a living teaching and conducting local musical ensembles.[10]

Influence

Alice's faith in her husband and her courage in marrying 'beneath her class' were strongly supportive to his career. She dealt with his mood swings and was a generous musical critic. She was also his business manager, social secretary, and not least set out and ruled score paper for his orchestral works.

She did her best to gain him the attention of influential society, though with limited success. The honours accepted reluctantly by her husband mattered more to her and her social class. She also gave up some of her personal aspirations to further his career. In her diary she later admitted, "The care of a genius is enough of a life work for any woman."[11]

When her husband received his knighthood in 1904, she became Lady Elgar.

At the beginning of the war, for a short while, Lady Elgar taught French to a group of private soldiers at Chelsea Barracks.[12]

By January 1920, friends had noticed that she had lost her normal vitality and had not been out of the house since November.[13] She attended a performance of Elgar's Second Symphony on 16 March, and the next day went to a Harley Street doctor, but stayed at home when Elgar travelled to a concert in Leeds. The last concert she attended was a performance of some of Elgar's chamber music in London.

The Elgars' grave at St.Wulstan's Church, Little Malvern

She died of lung cancer on 7 April, in their home Severn House at 42 Netherhall Gardens in Hampstead.[14] Her funeral was held at St Wulstan's Roman Catholic Church in Little Malvern three days later. Edward was supported by their daughter Carice. Among the mourners was Alice's brother Napier Roberts. There were Elgar's friends Frank Schuster, Billy Reed and Dr. Charles Buck. Sir Charles Stanford arrived but could only speak to Reed before walking away in tears.[15] In the gallery of the church the slow movement from Elgar's String Quartet was played by Reed, Albert Sammons, Lionel Tertis and Felix Salmond.[16]

Legacy

Alice's letters and the diary she kept during the years of her marriage between 1889 and 1920 are a full and valuable record of the lives of her and her family.

Her daughter

At the beginning of World War I, Carice Elgar trained in First Aid, then from 1915 did translation work for the Government Censorship Department.[12]

The month before Alice died, Carice returned home from a holiday in Mürren, having met there a Surrey farmer older than she was named Samuel Blake. Her mother sensed a secret, but Carice did not tell her.[17] A year later, with her father's consent, they became engaged.[18] They were married in January 1922 and she took the name Carice Elgar Blake.[19] They had no children.

After her mother died Carice devoted herself to supporting her father. After the death of her father in 1934 she played a part in the formation of the Elgar Birthplace Trust. Samuel Blake died in 1939, and Carice died in Bristol on 16 July 1970. Her funeral was at St. Wulstan's Church in Little Malvern, where her parents were buried, and there was a memorial service for her at Farm Street Church in Mount Street, London W1 on 30 July.[20]

Works

Wikisource has original works written by or about:
Caroline Alice Elgar

Lyrics

Poems by Alice set to music by Elgar:

Fiction

Other

Dedications

Dedicated by Edward Elgar to Alice

Notes

  1. Alice's uncle General Robert Napier Raikes had the same name as his father (Alice's grandfather) Rev. Robert Napier Raikes (1783–1851)
  2. 1 2 Powell, p.1
  3. The soprano Antonia Kufferath (Mrs Edward Speyer) was the daughter of Ferdinand Kufferath, and Elgar dedicated one of his songs Speak, Music! to her
  4. Moore, p.115
  5. McVeagh, Diana, "Mrs Edward Elgar", The Musical Times, February 1984, pp. 76–78
  6. Kennedy, p. 24
  7. Young, Alice Elgar, p. 100
  8. Kennedy, p. 26
  9. 'Carice' was compounded from her mother's names 'Caroline' and 'Alice'
  10. Kennedy, p. 31
  11. Kennedy, p.115
  12. 1 2 Young, p. 175
  13. Reed, pp.66–7
  14. Moore, pp.750–1
  15. Reed, p.67
  16. Moore, p.754
  17. Moore, p.751
  18. Moore, p.758
  19. Kennedy, p.247
  20. The Times obituary and deaths, 17 July 1970
  21. 1 2 Moore, p.125
  22. Young, Alice Elgar, p.102
  23. Porte, p.206
  24. Kennedy, p.281
  25. Moore, p.168
  26. Moore, p. 181
  27. Moore, p. 182
  28. Mc Veagh, Mrs. Edward Elgar
  29. Young, Elgar O.M., p.59
  30. Home Chimes was published 1884–1894 by Richard Willoughby, London, price 1/-. It was a (first weekly, then monthly) miscellany, mostly fiction by little-known authors. It serialised Jerome K. Jerome's "Three Men in a Boat," 1888–1889, and published "Man Size in Marble" by E. Nesbit. See Magazine Data File
  31. Moore Elgar: A Life in Photographs, p.51
  32. Young, Elgar O.M., p.58
  33. Young, Elgar O.M., p.72
  34. Moore, p.119

References

External links

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