Its movements and their respective temperament illustrated are: The composer's inspiration for the symphony came from a four-part comical picture of
the temperaments in a village pub in
Zealand during a visit with his wife and friends. In his account of the symphony (quoted in full in ), Nielsen gave a detailed outline of his vision for each temperament in each of the four movements. For example, in the phlegmatic temperament of the second movement, the composer visualized a young teenager who is loved by all: His real inclination was to lie where the birds sing, where the fish glide noiselessly through the water, where the sun warms and the wind strokes mildly round one's curls. He was fair; his expression was rather happy, but not self-complacent, rather with a hint of quiet melancholy, so that one felt impelled to be good to him... I have never seen him dance; he wasn't active enough for that, though he might easily have got the idea to swing himself in a gentle slow
waltz rhythm, so I have used that for the movement,
Allegro comodo e flemmatico, and tried to stick to one mood, as far away as possible from energy, emotionalism, and such things. Whereas the finale symbolizes a cheerful man: I have tried to sketch a man who storms thoughtlessly forward in the belief that the whole world belongs to him, that fried pigeons will fly into his mouth without work or bother. There is, though, a moment in which something scares him, and he gasps all at once for breath in rough syncopations: but this is soon forgotten, and even if the music turns to minor, his cheery, rather superficial nature still asserts itself.
Progressive tonality is demonstrated in the symphony, progressing from B minor to A major; the first three movements are in descending thirds:
B minor,
G major, and
E-flat minor, and the final movement springs out in the
D major chord. The second symphony, like the first, still belongs to the tradition of
Brahms and
Dvořák, but is more compact and concentrated, with a simple but powerful ending that takes the form of an
A major march. ==Reception==