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قراءة كتاب The Standard Light Operas Their Plots and Their Music
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The Standard Light Operas Their Plots and Their Music
personate the Queen for one day and, closely veiled, ride to the palace in the royal carriage. Her scheme succeeds admirably. The Duchess is seized and conveyed to a convent. In the next scene Don Pedro and Don Florio are mourning over the loss of their peasant girl, when she appears. Their mourning turns to desperate perplexity when the Queen reveals herself and announces her intention of marrying the muleteer.
In the last act Carmen and Don Florio agree to marry. Then the Queen and her ladies enter, and a message is delivered her from Don Sebastian announcing his marriage. Enraged at the discovery that the muleteer is not Don Sebastian, the Queen upbraids him and yet declares she will be true to him. This pleases Don Pedro, as he believes he can force her to abdicate if she marries a muleteer; but in the last scene Manuel mounts the throne, and announces he is King of Castile, Elvira expresses her delight, and all ends happily.
The story of the opera is exceedingly involved, but the music is well sustained and ranks with the best that Balfe has written. The principal numbers of the first act are the lively chorus, “List to the Gay Castanet”; the vocal scherzo by Elvira, “Yes, I’ll obey you”; Manuel’s rollicking song, “I am a Simple Muleteer”; the buffo trio, which ends in a spirited bacchanal, “Wine, Wine, the Magician thou art”; and Elvira’s pleasing rondo, “Oh! were I the Queen of Spain.” The second act contains the expressive conspirators’ chorus, “The Queen in the Palace”; the beautiful ballad, “Though Fortune darkly o’er me frowns,” sung by Don Pedro; the ballad, “The Convent Cell,” sung by Elvira, which is one of Balfe’s happiest inspirations; the buffo trio, “I’m not the Queen, ha, ha”; and Elvira’s characteristic scena, “I’m but a Simple Peasant Maid.” The leading numbers of the last act are the bravura air, “Oh! Joyous, Happy Day,” which was intended by the composer to show the vocal ability of Eliza Pyne, who first appeared in the role of Elvira; Manuel’s fine ballad, “’Twas Rank and Fame that tempted thee”; Don Pedro’s martial song, “Hark, hark, methinks I hear”; the stirring song by Manuel, when he mounts the throne, which recalls “The Fair Land of Poland” in “The Bohemian Girl”; and Elvira’s second bravura air, “Oh! no, by Fortune blessed.”
BELLINI, VINCENZO.
La Sonnambula.
[Grand opera, in two acts; text by Romani. Produced for the first time in Milan, March 6, 1831; in London, at the King’s Theatre, July 28, 1831; in Paris, October 28, 1831; in New York, May 14, 1842.]
PERSONAGES.
- Amina, ward of the miller’s wife.
- Elvino, a landholder.
- Rodolfo, lord of the village.
- Lisa, innkeeper.
- Alessio, a peasant, lover of Lisa.
- Teresa, mistress of the mill.
The scene is laid in Switzerland; time, last century.
The first act of the opera opens with the preparations for the marriage of Amina and Elvino. Lisa, the mistress of the inn, is also in love with Elvino and jealous of Amina. On the day before the wedding, Rodolfo, the young lord of the village, arrives to look after his estates, and puts up at the inn, where he meets Amina. He pays her many pretty compliments, much to the dissatisfaction of Elvino, who is inclined to quarrel with him. After Rodolfo retires to his chamber, Amina, who is addicted to sleep-walking, enters the room and throws herself upon the bed as if it were her own. She is seen not only by Rodolfo, but also by Lisa, who has been vainly seeking to captivate him. To escape the embarrassment of the situation, Rodolfo quietly goes out; but the malicious Lisa hastens to inform Elvino of what Amina has done, at the same time thoughtlessly leaving her handkerchief in Rodolfo’s room. Elvino rushes to the spot with other villagers, finds Amina as Lisa had described, denounces her, and offers himself to the latter.
In the last act Amina is seen stepping from the window of the mill in her sleep. She crosses a frail bridge above the mill wheel, descends in safety, and walks into Elvino’s arms amid the jubilant songs of the villagers. Elvino at last is convinced of her innocence, while the discovery of Lisa’s handkerchief in Rodolfo’s room proclaims her the faithless one.
The little pastoral story is of the simplest kind, but it is set to music as melodious as ever has come from an Italian composer, and the rôle of the heroine has engaged the services of nearly all the great artists of the nineteenth century from Malibran to Patti. Its most striking melodies are the aria “Sovra il sen” (“On my Heart your Hand do place”), in the third scene of the first act, where Amina declares her happiness; the aria for baritone in the sixth scene, “Vi ravviso” (“I recognize you, Pleasant Spot”), sung by Rodolfo; the playful duet, “Mai piu dubbi” (“Away with Doubts”), in which Amina chides her lover for his jealousy; the humorous and characteristic chorus of the villagers in the tenth scene, “Osservate, l’uscio è aperto” (“Observe, the Door is open”), as they tiptoe into the chamber; the duet in the next scene, “O mio dolor” (“Oh, my Sorrow”), in which Amina asserts her innocence; the aria for tenor in the third scene of the second act, “Tutto e sciolto” (“Every Tie is broken”), in which Elvino bemoans his hard lot; and that joyous outburst of birdlike melody, “Ah! non giunge” (“Human Thought cannot conceive”), which closes the opera.
BENEDICT, SIR JULIUS.
The Lily of Killarney.
[Romantic opera, in three acts; text by Oxenford and Boucicault. First produced at Covent Garden Theatre, London, February 8, 1862.]
PERSONAGES.
- Anne Chute, the heiress.
- Mrs. Cregan, of the hall at Tore Cregan.
- Father Tom, the priest.
- Eily O’Connor, the Colleen Bawn.
- Hardress Cregan, son of Mrs. Cregan.
- Sheelah.
- Danny Mann, the boatman.
- Myles na Coppaleen.
- Corrigan, “the middle-man.”
The scene is laid at Killarney, Ireland; time, last century.
The opera “The Lily of Killarney” is the musical setting of the drama, “The Colleen Bawn.” The plot is essentially similar, and the characters are identical. The first act opens with the festivities of Hardress Cregan’s friends at the hall at Tore Cregan. During their temporary absence to witness a horse-race, Corrigan, “the middle-man,” calls upon Mrs. Cregan and suggests to her the marriage of her son to the heiress, Anne Chute, as the only chance of securing the payment of a mortgage he holds upon the place. Failing in this, he expresses his own willingness to accept Mrs. Cregan’s hand, but the hint meets with no favor. At this point Danny Mann, Hardress’ boatman, is heard singing, and Corrigan informs Mrs. Cregan he is about to take her son to see Eily, the Colleen Bawn, Anne Chute’s peasant rival. Danny and Hardress set off on their errand, leaving Mrs. Cregan disconsolate and Corrigan