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===Sins of old age: 1855–1868=== {{Quote box |bgcolor=#FFFFF0 | salign=right| quote = I offer these modest songs to my dear wife Olympe as a simple testimony of gratitude for the affectionate, intelligent care which she lavished on me during my overlong and terrible illness.| source = Dedication of ''Musique anodine'', 1857{{sfn|Stokes|2008}}| align=left| width=25%}} Gossett observes that although an account of Rossini's life between 1830 and 1855 makes depressing reading, it is "no exaggeration to say that, in Paris, Rossini returned to life". He recovered his health and ''[[joie de vivre]]''. Once settled in Paris he maintained two homes: a flat in the [[rue de la Chaussée-d'Antin]], a smart central area, and a neo-classical villa built for him in [[Passy]], a [[Communes of France|commune]] now absorbed into the city, but then semi-rural.{{sfn|Osborne|2007|pp=146 and 153}} He and his wife established a [[Salon (gathering)|salon]] that became internationally famous.{{sfn|Gossett|2001|loc=§ 6. Retirement}}{{sfn|Osborne|2007|p=153}} The first of their Saturday evening gatherings – the ''samedi soirs'' – was held in December 1858, and the last, two months before he died in 1868.{{sfn|Osborne|2007|pp=153 and 354}} [[File:Composer Rossini G 1865 by Carjat - Restoration.jpg|thumb|upright|alt=Photo of fat old man looking genial and happy|Rossini in 1865, by [[Étienne Carjat]]]] [[File:The grave of Rossini, Pere Lachaise Cemetery, Paris.jpg|thumb|upright|Rossini's original grave monument, [[Père Lachaise Cemetery]], Paris|alt=funerary monument]] Rossini began composing again. His music from his final decade was not generally intended for public performance, and he did not usually put dates of composition on the manuscripts. Consequently, musicologists have found it difficult to give definite dates for his late works, but the first, or among the first, was the song cycle ''Musique anodine'', dedicated to his wife and presented to her in April 1857.{{sfn|Marvin|1999|p=1006}} For their weekly salons he produced more than 150 pieces, including songs, solo piano pieces, and chamber works for many different combinations of instruments. He referred to them as his ''[[Péchés de vieillesse]]'' – "sins of old age".{{sfn|Gossett|2001|loc=§ 6. Retirement}} The salons were held both at Beau Séjour – the Passy villa – and, in the winter, at the Paris flat. Such gatherings were a regular feature of Parisian life – the writer James Penrose has observed that the well-connected could easily attend different salons almost every night of the week – but the Rossinis' ''samedi soirs'' quickly became the most sought after: "an invitation was the city's highest social prize."{{sfn|Penrose|2017}} The music, carefully chosen by Rossini, was not only his own but included works by [[Giovanni Battista Pergolesi|Pergolesi]], Haydn and Mozart and modern pieces by some of his guests. Among the composers who attended the salons, and sometimes performed, were [[Daniel Auber|Auber]], [[Charles Gounod|Gounod]], [[Franz Liszt|Liszt]], [[Anton Rubinstein|Rubinstein]], Meyerbeer, and [[Giuseppe Verdi|Verdi]]. Rossini liked to call himself a fourth-class pianist, but the many famous pianists who attended the ''samedi soirs'' were dazzled by his playing.{{sfn|Osborne|2004|p=339}} Violinists such as [[Pablo Sarasate]] and [[Joseph Joachim]] and the leading singers of the day were regular guests.{{sfn|Osborne|2004|p=153}} In 1860, Wagner visited Rossini via an introduction from Rossini's friend [[Edmond Michotte collection#Biography|Edmond Michotte]] who some forty-five years later wrote his account of the genial conversation between the two composers.{{sfn|Michotte|1968|pp=27–85}}{{refn|Michotte was later to bequeath an [[Edmond Michotte collection|extensive collection of scores, documents and other Rossiniana]] to the Library of the [[Royal Conservatory of Brussels]].{{sfn|RCB}}|group=n}} One of Rossini's few late works intended to be given in public was his ''[[Petite messe solennelle]]'', first performed in 1864.{{sfn|Osborne|2004|p=159}} In the same year Rossini was made a grand officer of the [[Legion of Honour]] by Napoleon III.{{sfn|Gallo|2012|p=xxiv}} After a short illness, and an unsuccessful operation to treat [[colorectal cancer]], Rossini died at Passy on 13 November 1868 at the age of seventy-six.{{sfn|Servadio|2003|p=214}} He left Olympe a life interest in his estate, which after her death, ten years later, passed to the Commune of Pesaro for the establishment of a Liceo Musicale, and funded a home for retired opera singers in Paris.{{sfn|Osborne|1993|pp=282–283 }} After a funeral service attended by more than four thousand people at the church of [[Sainte-Trinité, Paris|Sainte-Trinité]], Paris, Rossini's body was interred at the [[Père Lachaise Cemetery]].{{sfn|Servadio|2003|p=217}} In 1887 his remains were moved to the basilica of [[Santa Croce, Florence|Santa Croce]], Florence.{{sfn|Servadio|2003|p=222}}
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