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174
GEORGE FREDERICK HANDEL
The Largo is resumed. There is in this little poem a melancholy which seems to revive Handel's personal remembrances.—The allegro ma non troppo with which it finishes is, on the contrary, of a jovial feeling, entirely Beethovenish; it sings joyfully as it bounds along in well-marked three-four time, with a pizzicato-like rhythm.
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/5f/Page_Romain_Rolland_Handel_djvu_184a.png/300px-Page_Romain_Rolland_Handel_djvu_184a.png)
In the middle of this march a phrase occurs on the two violins of the Concertino which is like a hymn of reverent and tender gratitude.
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/41/Page_Romain_Rolland_Handel_djvu_184b.png/300px-Page_Romain_Rolland_Handel_djvu_184b.png)