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قراءة كتاب Stories of the Wagner Opera
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STORIES OF THE WAGNER OPERA.
BY
H.A. GUERBER,
Author of
“MYTHS OF GREECE AND ROME,” “MYTHS OF NORTHERN LANDS,” “CONTES ET LÉGENDS,” etc.
NEW YORK:
DODD, MEAD, AND COMPANY.
1905.
Copyright 1895,
By Dodd, Mead and Company.
University Press:
John Wilson and Son, Cambridge, U.S.A.
Dedicated to my Friend,
M.A. McC.
PREFACE.
These short sketches, which can be read in a few moments' time, are intended to give the reader as clear as possible an outline of the great dramatist-composer's work.
The author is deeply indebted to Professor G.T. Dippold, to Messrs. Forman, Jackman, and Corder, and to the Oliver Ditson Company, for the poetical quotations scattered throughout the text.
CONTENTS.
Page | |
---|---|
Rienzi, the Last of the Tribunes | 7 |
The Flying Dutchman | 23 |
Tannhäuser | 38 |
Lohengrin | 56 |
Tristan and Ysolde | 72 |
The Master-Singers of Nuremberg | 88 |
The Nibelung's Ring.—Rheingold | 105 |
The Walkyrie | 120 |
Siegfried | 138 |
Dusk of the Gods | 154 |
Parsifal | 172 |
ILLUSTRATIONS.
Page | |
---|---|
Richard Wagner | Frontispiece |
Banishment of Rienzi | 7 |
Senta | 23 |
Tannhäuser and Venus | 38 |
Ortrud kneeling before Elsa | 56 |
Tristan's Death | 72 |
Walther crowned by Eva | 88 |
The Rhine Maidens | 105 |
Brunhilde discovering Siegmund and Sieglinde | 120 |
Siegfried and Mime | 138 |
Siegfried and the Rhine Maidens | 154 |
Parsifal in the Enchanted Garden | 172 |
RIENZI,
THE LAST OF THE TRIBUNES.
Wagner was greatly troubled in the beginning of his career about the choice of subjects for his operas. His first famous work, ‘Rienzi,’ is founded upon the same historical basis as Bulwer's novel bearing the same name, and is a tragic opera in five acts. The composer wrote the poem and the first two acts of the score in 1838, during his residence at Riga, and from there carried it with him to Boulogne. There he had an interview with Meyerbeer, after his memorable sea journey. Wagner submitted his libretto and the score for the first acts to that famous composer, who is reported to have said, ‘Rienzi is the best opera-book extant,’ and who gave him introductions to musical directors and publishers in Paris. In spite of this encouraging verdict on Meyerbeer's part, Wagner soon discovered that there was no chance of success for ‘Rienzi’ in France, and, after completing the score while dwelling at Meudon, he forwarded it in 1841 to