( /ir-Ut'l! II.V . .'I, !/!(■<' A-HISTORY OF DANCING FROM THE EARLIEST AGES TO OUR OWN TIMES FROM THE FRENCH OF GASTON VUILLIER r* WITH A SKETCH OF DANCING IN TWENTY FULL-PAGE PLATES ENGLAND, BY JOSEPH GREGO AND 409 ILLUSTRATIONS »tati« wt mamo TMoamrcnorr, «.a. ,1'ON'DON WILLIAM HEINEMANN M DcccxdvTTi ?> ^ . All rights reserved + CONTENTS CHAPTER I Sacred Dances— Cyiele and A flit— The Shield if Achilles— The Hyforchema—Tht Gymmpaedia and the Endy matin — The Hirmis and the Pyrrhic Dance — The Bac- chanalia — The Salii — Reman Mimes nnder the Empire — The Gaditanian Dancers »-4S CHAPTER II Re/igiius Dances— St rilling Ballet j— Dances if Chivalry— The " Ballet dis Ar- dents "—Berginxii di Bilta's Ballet 46-69 CHAPTER III The Grand Ballet — Trench Dances if the Clise if the Middle Ages, and if the I Renaissance — Bass* Dances — The V lite— The Gaillarde—The Tirdiin—Branlei — The Pavane 70-107 CHAPTER IV Dancing in th, --Great Century"— Grand Ballets nnder Ltnis XI T. —Masked Balls — The Pavane— The Ciurnnte—The Gavitte—The Chacme—The Sarahand—The Allemande—The Passepied—Tht Passacaille 1 08- 1 37 CHAPTER V Dancing nnder L*nii XT.— Painters if Fetes GaUntei—Mademiiselle Salle— La ^ Camargi — The Minuet— The Patiepied — Ntverre and the Ballet— Gaetan and Angnste lestrii .... I j8- 1 70 vi CONTENTS CHAPTER VI .' PAGE Madeleine Guimard — Dancing under Louis XV I. — The Gavotte — The Ballet — Dances and Fetes of the Revolution and the Republic— Balls and Ballets of the Directory, the t— — " Empire, and the Restoration — Marie Taglioni ....... 171-206 CHAPTER VII Rustic and Pastoral Dances — Rounds — Bourrees — Bretonne Dances — Catalan Bails — The Farandole — Open-air Dances in Foreign Countries ..... 207-236 CHAPTER VIII Spanish Dances — Danzas and Bayles — The Fandango — The Bolero — The Seguidillas Manchegas — The Jota Aragonesa — The Jaleo de Jerez — The Cachuca . . . 237-261 CHAPTER IX Modern Greek Dances — The Italian Tarantella — Some European Dances — Bayaderes and Alm'ees — Savage Dances ...... .... 262-288 CHAPTER X Contemporary Dances — The Waltz — The Galop — The Polka — Cellarius, Markowski, and Labor de — The Jardin Mabille — Prit chard, Chicard, and Brididi — £>ueen Pomar'e 289-314 CHAPTER XI Public Balls — Ranelagh — The Chaumierc — The Sceaux Ball — The Prado — The Delta — The Chateau-Rouge — The lie d' 'Amour — L'Ortie and Les Acacias — The Mars — The Victoire — The Bourdon — The Bal des Chiens — The Montesquieu — The Valentino — The Jardin d'Hiver — The Lac Saint- Fargeau — The Grand Saint- Martin and the Descent e de la Courtille — The Closerie des Lilas — Butlier . . 315-338 CHAPTER XII Modern Dancing— From the Second Empire to the present Time — Society Balls — The Revival of Old Dances in France and in Foreign Countries 339-3°o CHAPTER XIII A Brief Survey of the Ballets of this Century — Modern Theatrical Dancing — The Operatic Corps de Ballet — The Serpentine Dance — The Public Balls of To-day . 361-380 CONTENTS vii CHAPTER XIV PACK Early His fry of Dancing in Great Britain — Anglo- Saxon Dancing — Ntrman Dancts — Middle Ages — Dances of Knights-Templars and Templars — Dancing under Tudor Sovereigns — James I. and Court Masques — Charles I. and Court Masques — The Commonwealth — Dancing under Charles II. — Old May-day Dances— Dancing in the Days of Queen Anne — Bath — Beau Nash as Master of the Ceremonies — His Successors — Masquerades at Madame Cornell's, Carlisle House — The Pantheon — Ranelagh and I'auxhall Gardens — Almack's Cluh and Subscription Balls — Famous Dancing-masters and Coryphees of the Eighteenth Century — The t'estris Family — Stage-dancing — Opera Dancers at the King's Theatre — Her Majesty's, from Vestris le Grand to Kate Yaughan . . 381-415 CHAPTER XV The Jig — Irish Jigs — The Hornpipe — Dancing in Scotland — Under Mary, Queen of Scots — The Reformation — Scotch Reels — Highland Flings — The Ghillie Callum — The Strathspey — English Country Dances — The Cotillion of the Eighteenth Century — The Modern Cotillion — Quadrilles — The First Set, or Parisian Quadrille — The Lancers— The Caledonians— The Polka— The Waltz.— The Minuet— Court Balls- State Balls 416-440 •*">«* 44'~44 6 Note. — The Publishers are much indebted to the ^Artists and Owners of Copyright works, who have kindly allowed their reproduction in this volume, especially to Mr. "J. McNeil Whistler, Mr. Hamo Thornycrofl, Messrs. Boussod Valadon & Co., Mr. John Murray, and Messrs. Nimmo. Their thanks are also due to Messrs. Durand, of 'Paris, for leave to reprint the music of several old French Dances. \ CHILDREN DANCING A ROUND After A. Beve>ia LIST OF PLATES Dance, after Carpeaux ........... Frontispiece Salome, after Gustave Moreau . . . . . . . To face page 40 The Due de Joyeuse's Ball, after Clouet ...... ,,74 Dance throughout the Aces, after Aime Morot ..... „ 100 The Saraband, after Roybet . . . . . . . .' ,,128 The Pleasures of the Ball, after Watteau ...... „ 140 Mademoiselle Camargo, after Lancret ....... ,,152 The Ball, after Augustin de Saint-Aubin ...... „ 168 The Arch-Duchess Marie Antoinette in a Ballet danced at Vienna in 1765 ,,182 A Village Wedding, after Teniers . . . . . . . ,,212 A Village Dance in Brittany, after A. Leleux ..... „ 226 A Village Wedding, after Taunay . . . . . . . ,,232 Before the Bull Fight, after A. Zo . . . . . . . ,,238 La Carmencita, after John Sargent, R.A. ...... „ 256 Neapolitan Peasants returning from a Pilgrimage, after Leopold Robert „ 266 The Bride's Minuet, after Debucourt ....... „ 290 The Cotillion, after Stewart ........ ,,354 Rosita Mauri in "La Korrigane " ....... „ 364 Miss Connie Gilchrist, after J. McNeil Whistler . . . . ,,412 The Cyprians' Ball at the Argyle Rooms, after an Engraving by Robert Cruikshank ......... „ 430 THE MCNl.IT L. : INTRODUCTION the Origin tf Dinting — Dancing tkrtnghnt tit Jgti — General Snrvtj IROM the first formation of societies," says Jean Jacques Rousseau, "Song and Dance, true children of Love and Leisure, became the amusement, or rather the occupation, of idle assemblies of men and women." Like Poetry and Music, to which it is closely allied, Dancing, properly so-called — the choregraphic art, that is to say — was probably unknown to the earliest ages of humanity. Savage man, wandering in forests, devouring the quivering flesh of his spoils, can have known nothing of those rhythmic postures which reflect sweet and caressing sensations entirely alien to his moods. The nearest approach to such must have been the leaps and bounds, the incoherent gestures, by which he expressed the joys and furies of his brutal life. x INTRODUCTION But when men began to form themselves into groups, this artless impulse became more flexible ; it accepted rules and submitted to laws. Dancing, a flower of night, is said to have germinated under the skies of the Pharaohs ; tradition speaks of rounds, symbolic of sidereal motion, circling beneath the stars on the august soil of Egypt, mighty mother of the world. It manifested itself at first in sacred sciences, severe and hieratic ; yet even then it babbled brokenly of joy and grief in the processions of Apis. Later on, in the course of ages, it became interwoven with all the manifestations of popular life, reflecting the passions of man, and translating the most secret movements of the soul into physical action. From the solemnity of religious rites, from the fury of warfare, it passed to the gaiety of pastoral sports, the dignity and grace of polished society. It took on the splendour of social festivities, the caressing and voluptuous languors of love, and even dolefully followed the funeral train. As early as the year 2545 b.c. we find traces of the chjjregraphicjaj-t. Hieratic dances, bequeathed by the priests of ancient Egypt, were held in high honour among the Hebrews. But no antique race gave themselves up so eagerly to the art as the Greeks. The word " dancing " gives us but a feeble idea of their conception of the art. With them it was Nomas or Orchesis, the art of expressive gesture, governing not only the movement of the feet, but the discipline of the body generally, and its various attitudes. Gait, movement, even immobility, were alike subject to its laws. To them it was, in fact, a % language, governing all movements, and regulating them by rhythm. In Greece, cradle of the arts and of legend, the Muses manifested themselves to man as a radiant choir, led by Terpsichore. On the slopes of Olympus and Pelion, the chaste Graces mingled with forest Nymphs in Rounds danced under the silvery light of the moon. Hesiod saw the Muses treading the violets of Hippocrene under their alabaster feet at dawn in rhythmic measure. Fiction interlinked itself with reality : mad with joy, Bacchantes whirled about the staggering Silenus, and the daughters of Sparta eagerly imitated the martial exercises of their warriors. A whole world of dreams peopled the poetic Greece of long ago. In the INTRODUCTION xi hush of forests, before sacred altars, in sunshine, under star-light, bands of maidens crowned with oak-leaves, garlanded with flowers, passed dancing in honour of Pan, of Apollo, of Diana, of the Age of Innocence, and of chaste wedlock. The Romans imitated the Greeks in all the arts, borrowing their dances just as they adored their gods. But primitive Rome was still barbaric when the arts were shining in incomparable splendour in Greece. Romulus had given a sort of savage choregraphy to Rome. Numa instituted a solemn religious dance, practised only by the Salian priests. The arts of Greece soon degenerated after their migration to Rome. The virginal dances of early Greece, the feasts of sacred mysteries, the Keast of Flora, so lovely in its first simplicity of joy in the opening flowers and caressing sunshine of returning spring, became unrecognisable, serving as pretexts for every kind of licence. Theatrical dancing, however, attained extraordinary perfection among the Romans, and pantomime, an art unknown to the Greeks, had its birth among their rivals. After centuries of folly, which brought about the downfall of the great race, the art of dancing disappeared. It is to be traced again during the persecutions of the early Church, moving among the solitary retreats of the first Christians, who, no doubt, bore in mind the sacred dances of the Hebrews. In the Church of St. Pancras at Rome there still exists a sort of stage, separated from the altar, on which, we are told, priests and worshippers joined in measures led by their Bishop. These traditional rites, derived from the Scriptures, and perpetuated by an artless faith, degenerated in their turn, and served at last as pretexts for impure spectacles. A papal decree of 744 abolished dancing round churches and in cemeteries. A reflection from these sacerdotal dances gleams out again long afterwards in the Castle of St. Angelo itself, where a nephew of Sixtus IV. composed ballets, and at the Council of Trent, which concluded with a ball of Cardinals and Bishops. Meanwhile the darkness of night had fallen on the history of secular dancing, a darkness that endured for centuries. We know that Childe- xii INTRODUCTION bert proscribed it in his dominions. We know, too, that the Gauls and the Franks, more especially the former, were much addicted to courtly and pastoral dancing. At the Court of France, the origin of dancing is dimly associated with the rise of chivalry. The documents referring to it are rare and dubious. Still, we divine that the Middle Ages formed one of the most curious epochs in French dancing. Tales of chivalry speak constantly of warriors who, without laying aside their harness, danced to measures chanted by ladies and maidens. Apres la f arise vient la danse (after good cheer comes dancing), says an old Gallic proverb, which seems to show that it was customary to dance after a feast. We know that each province had its characteristic dances, which the lower orders practised with great vigour. Among these were Rounds and Branles, the Bourrees of the peasants of Auvergne, Minuets, the Farandoles of Languedoc, the Catalan Bails, &c. Two of these early dances have survived to our own times under the names of the Carillon de Dunkerque and the Boulangere. During the interval when dancing found a refuge in the rural districts of France, enlivening popular festivals and delighting domestic gatherings, masquerades were the favourite amusement of the Court. They denatur- alised the original dances of chivalry, but, on the other hand, they constituted the first expression of the ballet. In spite of the sinister catastrophe known as the 'Ballet des Ardents, masquerades remained in favour for two centuries, and the character of dancing was but very gradually modified. Meanwhile Italy, under the impulse given by the Medici, awoke to a knowledge of the literature and arts of ancient Greece and Rome. Thanks to these, choregraphy revived once more, after a slumber of several centuries. The sixteenth and seventeenth centuries saw it flourishing at every Court. Under the patronage of Louis XIII., of Richelieu, and of Henry IV., it took on a peculiarly French character. The dances in vogue at the French Court were the Pavane, a grave, solemn, almost haughty measure, and the Courante. Dancing had followed Catherine de' Medici to France, and formed a feature of all the festivities she organised with so much splendour. But INTRODUCTION xiii the stateliness that had marked it among the cloaks and heavy swords of knights, and the long gem-laden robes of ladies, gave way to a liveliness, an animation, a certain voluptuous character under Italian influences. This influence of Catherine's not only added splendour to Court functions, but spread a taste for dancing throughout France. The Queen, moreover, organised allegorical ballets, thus laying the foundations of opera, which the Romans in some sort foreshadowed in their declamation of poems to the rhythmic sound of instruments. Raising the character of masquerades by associating them more closely with the arts of music and dancing, Catherine de' Medici further brought about the evolution of the masked ball. This same period, too, gave birth to those Dances of Death imagined by Albert Diirer, Orcagna, and Holbein, sinister allegories masking the bitterest satires, terrible utterances of the oppressed, claiming ecpuality at least in death. . We come now to that great century when all the arts burst forth into dazzling blossom, when everything seemed to flash and quiver under a novel impulse. Hitherto, the theatre had ministered only to the amusement of the Court ; it now opened its doors to the populace, and the populace entered with delight. Women made their first appearance on the stage. Louis XIV. founded the Academy of Dancing, and, anxious to give a new prestige to the art, he himself took part in the Court ballets. But the fairy pageants of his youthful reign disappeared during his dreary and devout old age. Spectacles and dances, less solemn in character, but infinitely more refined and exquisite, came into vogue again under the Regency, and during the reigns of Louis XV. and Louis XVI. This was the epoch of the coquettish Gavotte and the graceful Minuet, the apogee of elegance. The dances of the eighteenth century had a charm all their own ; with their supple and rhythmic grace they combined a dignity which surrounded man, and, in a still greater degree, woman, with an atmosphere of beauty. A constellation of dancers, male and female, gave a dainty grace hitherto unknown to the dances of the eighteenth century. But there was a fearful morrow to those days of supreme elegance and xiv INTRODUCTION careless gaiety which, as we look back upon them now through the trans- parent gauze of a century, seem to shimmer with a thousand tantalising and delicate tints — days like some sweet vision, in which coquettish marquises, powdered and jasmine-scented, smiled unceasingly as in the rosy pastels bequeathed to us by the masters of their times. The roar of Revolution broke in upon the dream ; kings, women, and poets were dragged on tumbrils to the scaffold, while cannon thundered along the frontiers. And yet dancing went on, but now it was the sinister dancing of the red-capped Carmagnole to the refrain of Ca ira. Men and women danced round the scaffold, their feet stained with blood. A strange frenzy seemed to have taken possession of the nation. Did they seek oblivion in move- ment, a diversion from misery, horror, and alarms ? Twenty-three theatres and eighteen hundred public balls /were open every evening immediately after the Terror. Women attended them clad in the garments of ancient Greece, with sandalled feet and bare breasts and arms. The Empire was hardly favourable to the development of dancing. But soldiers danced on the eve of battle, eager to forget the dangers of the morrow, and a certain number of official balls took place during the Consulate of Bonaparte and the reign of Napoleon. After a feverish interval, while Napoleon's star faded on the horizon of the world, two planets rose in the firmament of Opera — Taglioni and Fanny Elssler. Other stars succeeded them, but never eclipsed their radiance. The Tuileries were far from gay under Louis XVIII. and Charles X. ; but after some preliminary dancing on M. de Salvandy's famous volcano, choregraphy made its appearance again in the King's household in 1830. And while the False a deux temps and the Galop (introduced from Hungary) whirled and eddied in Parisian ball-rooms, the elite of society often assembled at the magnificent balls given at the Tuileries and the English and Austrian Embassies. A veritable revolution took place in dancing at this period. The middle classes developed a passion for balls, which had hitherto been confined almost exclusively to the aristocracy, save for the rustic festivals of country districts. Unable, however, to enjoy the amusement in their own small rooms, dancers soon flocked -to public saloons, and waltzed at Ranelagh, at Beaujon, at Sceaux and at Tivoli. INTRODUCTION xv These balls, which became famous for their splendour, and the distinc- tion of the society frequenting them, were imitated on a humbler scale by the students and grisetles who danced the Cancan and the Chahut at the Chaumiere, the Prado, Mabille, and the Closerie des Lilas. Waltzing and Galoping were practised with furious energy. Pritchard, tall, lean, dark and taciturn ; Chicard of the ruddy countenance ; Brididi the graceful ; Mogador, Clara Fontaine, Rigolboche, and above all, Pomare, became the kings and queens of Paris. Another overwhelming revolution took place in 1844 with the intro-. duction of the Polka, which invaded saloons, drawing-rooms, shops, and even the streets. The Waltz and the Galop were forsaken, and Polka- mania set in. Cellarius and Laborde fostered the public enthusiasm. And all Paris laughed gleefully when Levassor and Grassot danced the Polka at the Palais-Royal Presently Markowski arrived on the scene, glorified by a halo of traditions. He brought the Mazurka. He created the Schottische, the Sicilienne, the Quadrille of the Hundred Guards, in which Mogador excelled, and the Folly of Dance shook her bells unceasingly from dark to dawn. Opera-balls took on a new splendour under the sway of Musard. People braved suffocation in the crowded auditorium to see the King of the Quadrille, as he was called, conducting a huge orchestra, among the effects of which the noise of breaking chairs, and the detonation of fire- arms, were introduced at regular intervals ! Musard is said to have produced extraordinarily sonorous sounds by these means. Dancing still flourished under the Second Empire. The Court balls were magnificent functions, but the public balls were deserted one by one, and gradually disappeared. The old Closerie des Lilas is transformed into Bullier, Mabille no longer exists. We have the Moulin Rouge still, but it has little of the frank gaiety of the original public ball. The Waltz and the Cotillion still reign in our ball-rooms, but modern Greece, more faithful than ourselves to its choregraphic traditions, retains the Candiota graven on the shield of Achilles, and traces of those Pyrrhic dances which led the Spartans to victory. In this brief summary of the History of 'Dancing, we have concerned xvi INTRODUCTION ourselves primarily with classic and with French dancing. In the course of the work we propose to deal more fully with the dances of the East, of Spain, of Italy, and of the various other European countries in which we have been able -to trace the records of the art. We shall also have something to say about savage dances. We shall pass in review dances impregnated with the voluptuous traditions of the Moors, such as the Fandango and the Bolero, the lively and impassioned Tarantella, the frenzied measures of the Bayaderes, the amorous languors of the Almees, and the curious rites of various tribes. In the brief sketch we have now made, the reader will have observed that Dancing, born with the earliest human societies, identified with every form of worship, has followed in the wake of progress, and developed with it. More enduring than the stone of monuments, in spite of its airy and diaphanous nature, Dancing has left its traces among all peoples, all customs, all religions, and still survives among us to some extent. Dancing, like all human institutions, has obeyed the law of eternal reaction. It disappeared, and burst forth into life again. It seems now to have entered on another phase of decline. But the sun will shine out once more, and Dancing will revive. KKAGMENT OP AN EGYPTIAN PHESCO Fh the Ilriiish Museum CHAPTER I DANCING AMONG THE EGYPTIANS, THE HEBREWS, AND THE GREEKS Sacred Dances — Cjbelt and Aftlli — fit Shield of Achilla — fit Hyptrchema — fit Gymntpaedia and the Endymatia — The Hormos and the Pyrrhic Dtnce — The Bacchanalia — The Salii — Reman Mimes under the Empire — The Gaditanian Dancers IS we have already pointed out in our introduction, the art of dancing had its dawn under an Egyptian sky. In sacred pageants dating back to the very beginnings of history, dancing makes a vague appearance as an expression of the immutable order and harmony of the stars. Its earliest movements, as in the cadenced swingings of the censer, rocked the shrines of the gods. Its first steps were guided by priests before the great granite sphinxes, the colossal hypogea, the monstrous columns, and high pediments of their temples.* The mysterious grandeur of these sacred dances, symbolising the * In assigning the origin of dancing to Egypt, I speak only of such dances as have left any trace behind. But it is certain that dancing was born with man, and that from the beginning it has been allied to gesture. Lucian wrote long ago : " We arc not to believe that saltation is of modern invention, born recently, or even that our ancestors saw its beginning. Those who have spoken with truth of the origin of this art affirm that it takes its birth from the time of the creation of all things, and that it is as old as Love, the most ancient of the gods." A modern writer, Be nurd m dc St. l'icrrc, says : " Pantomime is A 2 A HISTORY OF DANCING harmony of the stars, charmed the spirit of Plato. Castil-BIaze, our contemporary, tells us that when one of these astronomical dances took place, the altar in the centre of the Egyptian temple stood for the orb of day, while dancers representing the signs of the zodiac, the seven EGYPTIAN FIGURE DAN'CES planets, the constellations, performed the revolution of the celestial bodies around the sun. Apis, the black bull, strange and divine, with the snow-white forehead, and the scarabasus on his tongue, fed by naked priestesses from vessels of ivory, was honoured by special dances. Even the grief caused by his death was expressed in funeral ballets. Ritual dances, a legacy of the priests of ancient Egypt, were highly esteemed by the Hebrews. Moses caused a solemn ballet to be danced after the passage of the Red Sea. David danced before the ark of the covenant : the first language of man ; it is known to all nations ; it is so natural and so expressive that the children of white parents learn it rapidly when they see it used by negroes." ATHENIAN DANCES s CLASSIC UANCt: was even included among gymnastics, and was accounted a military exercise.* In the time of Aristophanes it was prescribed by physicians. It gave charm to banquets and animation to every festivity. The Athenian festivals, in which dancing was a feature, were innumer- able. In addition to the Pythian games, we hear of the Nemasan, and the Isthmian ; the Agraulia, held in honour of the daughter of Ce- crops, the feasts of Adonis and of Ajax, the Aloa, rustic rejoicings in honour of Ceres, the Amarynthia, in honour of Diana. We note further the Anakeia of Castor and Pollux, the Androgeonia, or funeral feasts, the festivals of Bacchus or Anthesteria, the Apaturia of Jupiter and Minerva, and others sacred to Pallas, jEsculapius, Diana and Apollo, the Boreasmi, the object of which was to appease Boreas, the Feast of Oxen, the Feast of the Earth, the Feast of Strange Gods, the * " The Greeks applied the term 'dancing ' to ill measured movements, even to military marching." — (Butteux.) The wonderful legislator, Lycurgus, attached the highest importance to dancing. He established many exercises for the physical training of warlike youth, and among these dancing had a foremost place. The education of the Spartans in particular consisted of an incessant bodily training ; and " they danced " in advancing upon the enemy. " Noverrc correctly says that what we call dancing, our French dancing, was wholly unknown to the ancients, except in so far as their buffoons and rope-dancers made use of our mtriihitt, firemtta, ind jtth forwards and backwards. I think with him, that when the word 'dancing' occurs in an, old author it should nearly always be translated by 'gesticulation,' 'declamation,' or 'pantomime'; just as the word 'music' should be in most cases rendered by ' philosophy,' * theology,' ' poetry.' When we read that an actress 'danced ' her part well in the tragedy of Medea, that a carver cut up food 'dancing,' that Heliogabalus and Caligula 'danced ' a discourse or an audience of state, we arc to under- stand that they — actress, carver, emperor — declaimed, gesticulated, made themselves understood in a language without words." — (A. Baron : Ltttrei lur la Dante.) A HISTORY OF DANCING Feast of Citizens killed in Battle, the Feast of the Muses, the Celebration of the victory at Marathon, the Feast of Naxos, the Triumph of Pallas over Neptune, the Feast of Craftsmen, the Feast of the Morn. All the Feasts of Bac- chus began with dances and rhythmic leaping. According to Strabo, no sacrifice was offered in Delos without dancing and music. The very poets danced as they sang or recited their verses : whence they came to be called "dancers." Lucian consecrated a dialogue to the art. Pindar gives Apollo the title of the Dancer. Simonides said, "Dancing is silent poetry." Homer thought so highly of the art that in the Iliad he gives it the epithet " irreproachable." It played an important part in the Pythian games, representations which may be looked upon as the first utterances of the dramatic Muse, for they were divided into five acts, and were composed of poetic narrative, of imitative music performed by choruses, and finally, of dances. Such, at least, is Scaliger's opinion. Lucian assures us that if dancing formed no part of the programme in the Olympian games, it was because the Greeks thought no prizes could be worthy of the art. At a later period, however, the Colchians admitted it into their public games, and this custom was generally adopted by the Greeks, the Romans, and nearly all other nations. A DANXE OF NYMPHS From an Engraving by Massard after Ch. Eisen GREEK LOVE OF DANCING 7 Plato In his odes Anacreon reiterates that he is always ready to dance, smiled to see Socrates stand up with Aspasia. Aristides danced at a banquet given by Dio- nysius of Syracuse. Homer says that Vulcan, to please the gods, who loved dancing, forged some golden figures that danced of themselves. In his picture of an ideal Republic, Plato insists on the importance of music, for the regulation of the voice, and of the importance of dancing, for the acquisition of noble, har- monious and graceful attitudes. The Greeks danced everywhere and on any pretext. They danced in the temples, the woods, the fields. Every event of interest to the family, every birth, every marriage, every death, was the occasion of a dance. The returning seasons were welcomed with dancing, and harvest, and the vintage. Was it not while dancing at a festival of Diana that the beautiful Helen was carried off" by Theseus and Pirithoiis? Dancers, treading an intricate measure, imitated the endless windings of that devious labyrinth whose liberating clue Ariadne gave to Theseus.* Cybele, the mother of the Immortals, taught dancing to the Corybantes in Greece upon Mount Ida, and to the Curetes in the island of Crete.f And it was in Greece that Apollo, by the mouth of his priestesses, dictated choregraphic laws, even as he revealed those of music and of poetry. " Vulcan, the lame god," says Homer in the Iliad, " engraved on the shield of Achilles such a dance as Daedalus had composed for Ariadne TBI «I»C DANCE After CWrflmc * Homer describes ■ dance like that which Dxdalus invented for Ariadne. Mcursius, who calli it ytparot, attributes in invention to Theseus, about 1300 years before the Augustan era. In the midst of the dancers (says Homer) were two saltators who sang the adventures of Dxdalus, supplementing their singing by gestures, and explaining in panto- mime the subject of the whole performance ; for which reason, doubtless, the saltators were set in the centre of the dancers. — (De Laulnaye : Dt U Salmtion ihiitrale.) t Certain authors give the name of 'trau\un, or " armed," to the dance of the Curetes. This dance was instituted by Rhea to prevent Saturn from hearing the cries of Jupiter in his cradle. The priests of Cybele were called Ballatorcs. 8 A HISTORY OF DANCING of the abundant tresses, and had revealed at Cnossus. Here were to be seen young men and maidens holding each other's hands as they danced with cunning and rhythmic steps. The girls wore nothing but a drapery of the lightest tex- ture ; the young men, all ashine with the oil rubbed in at the gymnasium, had tunics of a stouter material. From their silver baldricks hung swords enrich- ed with gold ; and their companions had wreathed their brows with garlands of flowers. First they danced in a ring, imitating the circular motion of the pot- ter's wheel, when, seated on his stool, he tries it, before making it turn rapidly. Then, breaking up the circle, they formed various figures. Round them was a great concourse of people, and in their midst were two saltators who, with skilful gestures, executed a special dance, interspersed with songs." Priapus, one of the Titans, educated the god of war ; before instructing him in swordsmanship, he taught him how to dance. The Heroes followed the example of the gods. Theseus celebrated his victory over the Minotaur with dances. Castor and Pollux created the Caryatis, a nude dance performed by Spartan maids on the banks of the Eurotas. The Thessalians gave their magistrates the title of " Proorchesteres " ; that is to say. "dance leaders." The nation raised a statue to Elation for having danced the war-dance DANCING NYMFHS, ON A VASE IN THE LOUVRE DANCERS HIGHLY HONOURED IN GREECE 9 well. Sophocles danced round the trophies taken at the battle of Salamis, accompanying himself on the lyre. Dancing lent its charm to the banquets of ancient Greece, as is shown by Homer in the eighth book of the Odyssey and by corroborative authors. Socrates and Plato eulogised the art. Athenasus tells us that Antiochus and Ptolema?us practised it with ardour, and sometimes publicly. /Eschylus and fnm a Kctur* by SchuUeoberjer in the Miuce du Luxembourg Aristophanes danced in public in their own plays. According to Cornelius Ncpos, Epaminondas was a proficient dancer. Philip of Macedon married a dancer, by whom he had a son who succeeded Alexander. Nicomedes, King of Bithynia, was the son of a dancing-girl. Aristodemus, a celebrated dancer, was sent as an ambassador to Philip of Macedon. This art was'so esteemed in Greece that chorus-masters or leaders were cruited among the first citizens of the commonwealth ; they always pre- sided over the festival? in which gods and heroes were honoured.* * Homer describe* a warrior taunted a* follow*: " Mcriones, good dancer ai you arc, this ipeir would have ilain you if. . . ." — (AW, xvi. 603.) "Choru*c* of dancer* were very common in Athcnt. They engaged in frequent com- petition*, at the clo»c of which the victor* were crowned with all imaginable pomp. The IO A HISTORY OF DANCING r The Greeks called skilful dancers the sages of the foot and of the hand, because their gestures expressed the mysteries of Nature. Athenasus declared that the Arcadians were always a wise people, because they practised the art of dancing up to the age of thirty. The best Greek dancers were, indeed, recruited among the Arca- dians. Among the Greeks, the limbs and the body spoke. "Strategy sprang from the Pyrrhic and other warlike dances," says Elie Reclus. Paintings upon vases, bas-reliefs jfr STATUETTE FOUND AT MYRINA In the Louvre of marble, of stone, of brass, STATUETTE FOUND AT MYRINA In the Louvre the Tanagra statuettes, in their grace and purity of form, have transmitted to us (as have also ancient poets and authors) the different formulas of the Greek dances,. These, very numerous indeed, were all derived from three fundamental' types : the sacred, the military, and the profane. The sacred dances must have been inspired by Orpheus on his return from Egypt; their grave and mysterious style long preserved the impress of their origin. According to Professor Desrat, they had much in common with the Branles and Rondes of the Middle Ages. Their nomenclature is chorus-master or leader, called 'choregus,' was a personage of the highest importance." — (De Laulnaye : De la Saltation thedtrale.) The art was even a safeguard for the honour of husbands. Agamemnon, departing for Troy, established a dancer with Clytemnestra to amuse her. Now ^Egisthus fell madly in love with the queen. But the dancer watched over her, turning the lover into ridicule, caricaturing his attitudes. Before succeeding in his courtship, yEgisthus had to kill the dancer. GREEK SACRED DANCES 1 1 extensive. We shall mention only the most important, those around which the secondary dances grouped themselves. They are : The Emmeleia. The Hyporchema (or Hyporcheme). The Gymnopaedia. The Endymatia. RUSTIC DAHCB After A. Kirch The Emmeleia was the class-name of a group of dances essentially sacred.* According to Plato, this group had that character of gentleness, gravity, and nobility suitable to the expression of the sentiments with which a mortal should be penetrated when he invoked the gods. But * Thctc dance* were of the highest antiquity. Common opinion attributed their origin to the Satyr*, minister* of Bacchu*. Some writer* hold the Cordax (d «^Aif) to have been 12 A HISTORY OF DANCING this dance, which was marked by extraordinary mobility, had also a heroic and tragic cast. It set forth grace, majesty, and strength. It produced a deep effect upon spectators, Orpheus, from his recollections of the priestly ceremonies of Sai's and of Colchis, transmitted the laws of choregraphy to Greece. But the strains A PASTORAL After Bouguereau By permission of Messrs. Boussod, Valadon and Co. of his enchanted lyre must have modified the primitive cadences, creating new rhythms, and movements more in accord with the genius of the race to whom he revealed them. Nor were the Greeks slow to surpass their masters. The Emmeleia embraced (according to Butteux, Desrat, and others) j several dances of a tragic cast, and was danced without the support of a chorus or of the voice. derived from the Hyporchema. It seems certain that it was jEschylus who first introduced saltation into the tragic chorus. This saltation was called o-x'/fiaXioyioc, from irxijp, the countenance, because it depicted the attitudes, characters, and affections of the persons of the chorus. Sleep, fatigue, repose, thought, admiration, fear, also all "pauses or suspen- sions," came within its province. ./Eschylus lived five hundred years before the Christian era. — (De Laulnaye : De la Saltation thedtrale.) THE GYMNOPAEDIA >* The Hyporchema, on the contrary, while retaining, as did all the Egyptian and Grecian dances, an eminently religious character, was accom- panied by the chorus.* The Gymnopaedia were dances specially favoured by the Lacedaemonians in their festivals of Apollo. The performers were naked youths, singing, dancing, and wearing chaplets of palm. Their performance often served as a preliminary to the Pyrrhic dance. According to Athenaeus, the Gymnopaedia had features in common with a dance called the Anapale, wherein the dancers simulated (as in the Pyrrhic) the move- ments of attack and defence. In the Endymatia the actors wore their most bril- liant tunics. Performed at public and private entertain- ments, these dances some- times lost their sacred cha- racter. All other dances were derived from the funda- mental types already mentioned, and were more or less connected with sacred rites. They were sometimes peculiar to one province or city. * The dances classed under (he term Hyporchema date from the remotest times, and arc looked upon as the first essays of Greek saltation. In them, as the name indicates, song and dance were intermingled, or rather the songs were explained by measured gesture*. It is to be observed here that the earliest use made of saltation was in con- nection with poetry. These art*, developing by their union, aided each other mutually Athcruens says expressly that the early poets had recourse to the figures of saltation, only, however, as symbols and representatives of the images and ideas depicted in their verse. All dances of the Hyporchema class were dignified and elevated ; men and women alike flk WAK-NAM.K Front u Engraving in the Biblio(ho|oc Nationalc •4 A HISTORY OF DANCING They celebrated a god, a victory, some memorable deed. The Dionysia were sacred to Bacchus. The Iambic Dance, according to Athenasus, was dedicated to Mars by the Syracusans. The Caryatis was specially appropriated to Diana. Lucian tells us that it was danced by Lacedasmonian girls in a Laconian wood consecrated to that goddess. Taught by Castor and Pollux, it was used at mar- riages. It came to be in time the dance of innocence ; the young men and maidens of Sparta danced it naked, in circles or in graceful lines, before the altar of the goddess. The Callinic, diver- sified by hymns, cele- brated one of Hercules' victories. The invention of the Cnossia, performed in honour of Theseus, was ascribed to Dasdalus. In this Dasdalian dance the girls wore chaplets and the young men golden swords and shields. It had a warlike character. The intention of the Ionic Dance is uncertain. We know that it was dedicated to Diana. The Charitesia, a dance in honour of the daughters of Jupiter, the Graces or Charites, was a favourite with the Boeotians. It was a slow and measured dance, performed at night by priestesses dedicated to the services of the Graces. The women who celebrated Diana in the Purple Dance wore tunics of that colour. performed in them. Some attribute their origin to the Delians, who sang them round the altars of Apollo. Others ascribe their invention to the Cretans, taught by Thales. Pindar describes those of the Lacedaemonians. He himself composed several Hyporchemates. — (De Laulnaye : De la Saltation theatrale.) DANCE OF NYMPHS AND SATYRS After an Engraving of the Eighteenth Century THE HORMOS K DANCE OF SVMPIIS From a Bas-relief in the British Museum found at Athens In the Hormos, another dance in honour of Diana, all the youth of Sparta met. Here, as in the Gymnopaedia, the two sexes danced unclothed, but without offence to modesty, their attitudes being chaste and beautiful. This national dance wound in a brisk and spirited fashion through the public streets, led by a young couple. Gesture and voice animated its movements. It had points of resemblance to our modern Branle. Its rhythmic steps were directed now in an easterly, now in a westerly, direction ; for which reason Butteux considers it to have been an astronomical dance. The astronomic dance of the Egyptians probably inspired the strophes and antistrophes of the early Greek tragedies, in which the choruses executed a circular measure to the sound of instruments from right to left, to express the celestial motions from east to west, and then reversed the movement at the antistrophe, to represent the motion of the planets. These rhythmic advances and retrogressions were interrupted by pauses, the Epodes, during which the chorus sang. The Epodes symbolised the immobility of the Earth, the revolutions of which were unknown to the early astronomers. For a long period the only form of worship among the Indians was dancing, accompanied by singing. In this fashion they adored their gods, the sun and moon, at their rising and setting. These songs and dances took the form of lamentations during eclipses. The Hormos, with its seemingly Egyptian character, was instituted by Lycurgus. Plutarch relates that the nudity of the women who took part in it having been made a reproach to the legislator, he answered : " I wish them to perform the same exercises as men, that they may equal men in strength, health, virtue, and generosity of soul, and that they may learn to despise the opinion of the vulgar." -^ 1 6 A HISTORY OF DANCING The Orphic Dances celebrated the courage of Castor and Pollux, and their distant expeditions. With these sacred dances we may conveniently class others, infinitely varied, which accompanied funerals and processions. In the former case, the entire community, keeping step and sing- J ing hymns, escorted the funeral victims to the . , ^^M altar. Before the cortege went the chief ASP **+S * jT~" priest, dancing. Sometimes the mourners -^H^ were clothed in white. At the head of the Bk party marched groups, who danced to the A sound of the instruments reserved for these H solemnities ; interrupting their dancing at intervals, they sang hymns in honour of the defunct. Then came the priests and the keeners, old women dressed in mourning, and hired to simulate grief and tears. According to Plato, relatives and friends of the deceased were allowed to take part in funeral dances, although as a rule in religious tanagka f.gurine of a dancer ceremonies dancing was confined to profes- sionals. Butteux relates that the young people of both sexes in a funeral procession were crowned with cypress, and that at one time it was customary for a person to precede the cortege, wearing the clothes of the defunct, imitating him, and characterising him in terms sometimes eulogistic, some- times satirical.* Military dances, not so numerous as the sacred, but prescribed by law, held a prominent place in the education of youth. " To those aware of the importance attached by the Greeks to physical education, their military dances need no explaining. To gain and to keep as long as possible," says Professor Desrat, "agility, suppleness, strength, * Funeral dances were especially brilliant when they celebrated a man famous by his birth, his preferments, or his fortune. Then all who took part in the ceremony were clothed in white and crowned with cypress. Fifteen girls danced before the funeral car, which was surrounded by a band of youths. Priests sang the accompaniment of the dances. Women keeners, draped in long black cloaks, closed the procession. GREEK WAR-DANCES •7 vigour — this, in a few words, was what the Greeks aimed at in their bodily exercises. "It was by dancing in their fighting gear," he goes on to say, " that the Greeks, a nation of heroes, trained themselves in the art of hand-to-hand combat. Does not the dancing step with which they advanced in war suggest our ■ balance ' step ? Is not the latter (with its successive hopping first upon one foot and then upon the other) itself a sort of dance ? We may add that many movements of our bayonet exercise recall those of Greek military dances." Plutarch testifies : " The military dance was an indefinable stimulus, which inflamed courage and gave strength to persevere in the paths of honour and valour." These martial dances fall into two principal groups : the Pyrrhic and the Memphitic. According to some authorities, the Pyrrhic Dance, a sort of military pantomime, was in- stituted by Pyrrhus at the funeral of his father Achilles. Others ascribe the honour of it to a certain Pyrrhicus, a Cretan or a Lacedaemonian. Others, again, derive the word from the Greek *vp, fire, because of the fiery and devouring energy exhibited by its dancers. Pindar derives it from *vpa, a funeral pile, and asserts that Achilles first danced it on the occasion of the cremation of Patroclus. And there are some who hold that Minerva was the first to dance it, in commemoration of the defeat of the Titans, and that she afterwards taught it to the Tyndarida:. It is certain that this dance was especially used in the Panathcnaea, a festival in honour of Minerva, and was performed there by young men and maidens. Xenophon even describes it as having been danced by one woman alone. Apuleius indicates its various steps and move- ments. The uncertain etymology of its name goes to prove the great antiquity c TASAi.KA riWIIKl OP A DANCI* V i8 A HISTORY OF DANCING of this dance. Highly esteemed by their forefathers, it lingers to this day among the Greeks. It was by no means entirely a man's dance. The Amazons excelled in it ; the women of Ar- gos, of Sparta, and of Arcadia engaged in it with ardour. According to Plato, the Pyrrhic Dance con- sisted of those move- ments of the body by which we avoid blows and missiles ; springing to one side, for ex- ample, leaping back, stooping. It also simu- lated offensive move- ments ; the posture of a warrior letting fly an arrow, the hurling of a spear, the manipulation of various kinds of weapons.* The Pyrrhic Dance retained its warlike character for a long time, but was merged at last in the rites of Bacchus, whose thyrsus and reeds displaced the shield and spear. * The Greeks had several kinds of Pyrrhic Dances, the names of which varied with the character of the performance. The Hyplomachia imitated a fight with shields. The Skiamachia was a battle with shadows. The Monomachia was an imitation of single combat, given, according to Athensus, at banquets. Xenophon describes a martial dance performed for the Paphlagonian delegates by two Thracians, their steps, attitudes, and blows keeping time to the music of flutes. After a NYMPH DANCING After Raphael Collin u MIMETIC DANCES '9 The Memphitic Dance was in many respects akin to the Pyrrhic. Minerva was supposed to have founded it as a memorial of the defeat of the Titans. Thus its origin was eminently sacred. As in the Pyr- rhic, the performers car- ried sword and shield and spear, but, less war- like, they danced to the sound of the flute. Lu- cretius assigned its origin to the Curetes and the Corybantes. Among dances de- rived from the Pyrrhic and the Memphitic we may mention the furious Telesias, little known outside of Macedonia ; also the Berekyntiake and the Epieredias of the Cretans. From time imme- morial, scenes from life have been represented by pantomimic dances.* In the Karpaia, for example, the dancer imitated a labourer sowing his A BACCHANTS After Waller Crane desperate struggle one of the (wo fell, and wis carried away by his friends. The victor sang a song of triumph, and confiscated the arras of his opponent. The lookers-on cried oat, thinking the Thracian really dead. But it was merely a game. * Cassiodorus attributes the institution of pantomime to Philistion ; Athcnxus assigns it to Rhadamanthus or to Palamedes. Pantomimists were distinguished by names that varied among the different peoples of Greece. The most respectable of them were called Etbologues : this word, derived from 'i^ot and Xayot, signifies painters of manners. One of law most celebrated of the Ethologues was Sophron, a native of Syracuse. The moral philosophy of these mimes was so pure that Plate on his death-bed kept a copy of the poem* of Sophron under his pillow. The Greek pantomimists depicted the EJ 20 A HISTORY OF DANCING field and attacked by enemies who, despite his courageous defence, seized and carried him ofF with his plough.* In the Komastike, two opposed lines of warriors met in a sham fight. The attitudes of the Poiphygma inspired terror. The Lion Dance figured the majesty and strength of the lion. The Podis- mos showed a re- treat and the pur- suit of the van- quished after a battle. The Po- lemic resounded with the clang of shields and spears, to which suc- ceeded a very sweet music of flutes. In the Cheiro- nomia, one of the oldest of Greek dances, the dancer engaged in combat with an imaginary enemy. According to Hippocrates, this dance was one of the most highly esteemed of the physical exercises used by the disciples of Pythagoras. In the Opoplaea, impassioned dancers, inspired by warlike music, flung and twisted themselves about, celebrating a victory. emotions and the conduct of man so faithfully, that their art served as a rigorous censorship and taught useful lessons. The pieces that they acted were called viro0eo-es, or moralities ; these differed essentially in character from the iratyvia, or farces, designed only to provoke laughter. To those mimes who played on the stage the Greeks gave the generic name of 0u/«XiKot. The Athenians in particular were distinguished for the excellence of their stage. — (De Laulnaye : De la Saltation theatrale.) * This dance, half rustic, half warlike, was peculiar to the Magnesians. Kapjraia, from Kapnos, fruit or seed. ARMED DANCE OF CORYBANTES From an Engraving by Grignion THEATRICAL DANCING 21 DANCE OF NYMPHS AND SATYRS From an Engraving by B. Picart, after Reroond La Fage The Thermagistris simulated the fury of battle ; it rang with the clash of axes and swords, brandished by bare-armed dancers with dishevelled hair, who worked themselves up to such a pitch of frenzy, that they bit their own flesh, and hacked it with swords, till it bled. In the Xiphismos, or sword dance, the performers contented themselves with brandishing this weapon. N >verre says, in his studies on dancing, that his readers will have to follow him into a labyrinth where reason continually loses its way. Indeed, the ancient authorities on this subject are so constantly at variance that it is hard to see any clear path. On the Greek stage, the female characters were acted by men ; and dancers wore masks adapted to their various parts. For a long time these dancers sang their own accompaniments ; but at last the chorus came into existence, forming what was known as the Hyporchematic Dance. Greek theatrical choregraphy did not develop much elegance until after the repression of the buffoons who parodied the verses of Homer, of Hesiod, and of other bards. This effected, poets themselves appeared upon the stage, declaiming their own works, which dancers at the same time illus- trated numerically. This association of poetry, music, dancing, and statuesque refinement of attitude endowed Greek choregraphy with a beauty and a character all its own. Mnasion (who sang the verses of Simonidcs) and Pyladcs, raised the art of theatrical dancing to a high pitch of perfection. Novcrrc, -del, and Daubcrval, our great modern masters of choregraphy, have often (say* Professor Dcsrat) turned for inspiration to the magnificent compositions 22 A HISTORY OF DANCING DANCE OF NYMI'HS AND SATYRS From an Engraving by B. Picart, after Remond La Fage of Pylades, whose most celebrated ballet is that in which Bacchus ascends to Olympus, accompanied by Bacchantes and Satyrs. Greek dances were directed by certain functionaries, who beat time, directing not only the musical cadence of the piece, but also the pace and manner in which the action evolved itself. Now ^. they hastened, now they delayed movements, to ^^_^^^ bring out finer gradations of meaning. They tM ) W wore sandals of wood or iron, differing in ^Jfc^ [if thickness of sole according to the effects to be f~\ Jf produced. Lively music they accompanied by a M clinking together of oyster or other shells, held in the hand, and used more or less as the Spaniards use their castanets — which last are probably a survival of the Greek contrivance mentioned. Among their gayer measures were the Diple, which was a vocal dance ; and the Ephilema, a sort of Ronde, chanted to an accompaniment, of musical instruments. The Niobe was a veritable grand ballet in five parts : prelude, challenge, combat, breathing-time, victory. The Krinon was a Branle d'ensemble danced and sung by choruses. The Parabenai Tettara was performed by four dancers only. The Xulon Caralepsis was danced staff in hand. Pylades excelled in the / ^^w? TANAGRA FIGURINE OF A DANCER In the Louvre MIMETIC DANCES 2* DANCE Or NYMPHS AND SATYRS From an Engraving by B. Picart, after Keroond La Fage JM1U1 Pyladeios, named after him, and doubtless one of his creations. The Schistas Elkheim was a majestic dance, accompanied by a grave chorus. The Greeks also indulged in comic dances, gay and lively, but often rred by buffoonery, sometimes even by indecency. To these dances, says Burette, people had recourse only when excited by wine. Theophrastus, in his Charac- ters, recounting the actions of a man lost to all shame, reproaches him with having danced the Cordax in cold blood, when sober. Cordax was a Satyr who gave his name to this kind of dance. All comic dances were founded more or less upon the Cordax. It lent itself readily to im- provisation. In the Chreon Apokopc, the dancers acted the carving of food. In the Hypogones, old men came upon the stage hent upon their staves. It is not permissible to describe the excesses indulged in by the actor in the Iodis. An extravagant gaiety marked the Sobas and the Stoichcia. In the Nibadismos the dancers capered like goats. The Morphasmos imitated the attitudes, the gait, the leaps and bounds of animals. 7ANAI.HA MI.VKINK Ot A DANCM In Ihc inati Collection 24 A HISTORY OF DANCING Among the mimetic dances, the majority of which were common to Greeks and Romans, we may mention the following : The Loves of Adonis and Venus, the Exploits of Ajax, the Adventures of Apollo, the Rape of Ganymede, the Loves of Jupiter and Danae, the Birth of Jupiter, Hector, the Rape of Europa, the Labours of Hercules, Hercules mad, the Graces, CLASSIC DANCE From an Engraving by Agostino Veneziano Saturn devouring his Children, the Cybele, in honour of Cybele, the Cyclops, the Sorrows of Niobe, the Tragic end of Semele, the Wars of the Titans, the Judgment of Paris, Daphne pursued by Apollo. We must include in this summary of the choregraphy of all nations, provinces, and cities, the Bucolic Dance, and the Dance of Flowers, in which the Athenians repeated at intervals : " Where are the roses ? Where are the violets ? " . . . One dance even took the name of a vessel used by gold-smelters. There was the Dance of Noble Bearing, the Round, the Combat, the Mortar, the Equal, the Exhortation, the Whirlwind of Dust, the Judgment, the Satyrs, the Splendour, &c. Some commemorated the victories of Hercules, others represented a naval engagement, some 26 A HISTORY OF DANCING were distinguished by the vases known as carnos, carried in their hands by the performers. In the Dance of Adonis the cadence was marked by gringrinae, Phoenician flutes used in the worship of the god. The Hippogynes was an equestrian dance performed by women, which shows the great antiquity of the musical ride. The Kolia took its name from the movement of the belly in jumping, and suggests the Danse du Ventre of the Almees, which perhaps owes its origin to the Greeks. Some of these saltations or dances were called after the flutes used by the priests of Apollo. Others imitated the move- ments of the neck, or were danced with sticks in the hand. Then there were the Dances of Nymphs, the furious rounds of the Sileni in Lacedaemonia, the Spear Dance, the World on Fire, or Fable of Phaeton, the Dances of the Tresses, of the Knees, of Flight, of the Glass Goblet ; the Stooping Dance, the Dance of the Elements, and of the Young Slave-girls. Some were more in the nature of gymnastics than of dances, such as the Skoliasmos, a rustic dance sacred to Bacchus, in which the performers hopped on inflated wine-skins, rubbed over with oil to make them slippery. To Theseus was ascribed the invention of the Crane, ostensibly an imitation of the wanderings of this bird. But it had a deeper meaning, for, according to Callimachus, it figured the endless windings and turnings that Theseus had to follow before he could free himself from the labyrinth. Dances in which animals were mimicked were, however, fairly numerous. Two kinds of owls, the vulture, the fox, and other creatures gave their CLASSIC DANCE After N. Poussin THE SIKINNIS 27 names to performances of this class. The Greeks had a third kind of choregraphic drama known as the Sikinnis, or Satyric Dance, in which they sought relief from the poignant emotions of tragedy. The Sikinnis was accompanied by light songs, daring witticisms, and licentiously allusive poems. Occasionally it parodied a tragical dance, or its THE BLINI> MAN After Boy< actors, wearing masks which counterfeited the victims of their satire, caricatured their fellow-citizens. Socrates was ridiculed on the stage in the Clouds of Aristophanes. The official and the private acts of the highest personages were burlesqued in the Sikinnis. It was a dance supposed to belong especially to the Attic races. But, despite the natural refinement of the Athenian intellect, the primitive good humour and vivacity of the Satyric Dance gradually disappeared ; drinking-songs, erotic verses, and indecent gestures accomplished its degradation. In connection with the Sikinnis, Herodotus tells a story of Clisthenes, king of Sicyon, who, desiring to marry his daughter suitably to her rank, decreed a sort of competition for her hand, inviting to it all the notabilities of Greece. A number of rich and powerful suitors presented themselves, among others two Athenians. Upon the last day of the festivities, Clisthenes, after a hecatomb to the gods and a banquet, proposed a contest in music and poetry. 28 A HISTORY OF DANCING Then Hippoclides, one of the two Athenians, whom the young princess seemed to regard with special favour, had a table brought in ; upon this he mounted, the better to perform an obscene dance. Supposing himself to be encouraged by the silence of the spectators, he began in an Athenian fashion. His head downwards, walking upon his hands, he traced the principal figures of the Sikinnis in the air with his outstretched legs. But Clisthenes, beside himself with indignation, cried out : " Son of Tisander, you have danced the breaking off of your alliance with me." The reply of the Athenian has become a by-word : " Faith, my lord, Hippoclides cares little for that ! " According to Ulpian, the Sikinnis was \- ■ I performed at banquets. Bacchus had brought it from India with him. The Satyrs made it particularly their own. Certain authors describe it as light, lascivious, and varied ; others as a martial dance. We know it was performed in Roman triumphs and in the Pompa Ludorum, when the dancers burlesqued FIGURINE FOUND AT MYRINA in the Louvre serious dances. Dionysius of Halicarnassus saw it performed at funerals. In the Satyros, a Laconian dance, derived from the Sikinnis, the actors, wearing goat-skins, appeared as Satyrs. In the Seilenos the dancers disguised themselves as Sileni or as Masnads. The Bacchike, familiar to the people of Pontus and of Ionia, was a Satyric Dance in honour of Bacchus. The Konisalos was a Satyric Dance of a degenerate and lascivious type. Dancing, while bound up with the religious ceremonies of Greece, and honoured on the stage and in public festivals, was not likely to be neglected in private life. As a matter of fact, every family feast, every happy event, the arrival of a friend, the return of a traveller, the birth of a child or its anniversary, the gathering in of crops, the harvest, the vintage, all were made occasions for the enjoyment of dancing. Longus has described the THE EPILENIOS 29 ■■■■■ DANCE Or NYMPHS From a Drawing by G. F. Romanelli (In the pouession of Mr. Wm. Heincmann) Epilenios, or dance of the winepress,* in his pastorals. This dance, practised originally by members of the family itself, with much vigorous leaping and dexterous exercises, with or without accesso- ries, was i n the long run given over to professional dancers and to the hangers-on of the household. In this new form, the Epilenios had a marked affinity with our modern acrobatic feats and circus perform- ances. The Alphiton Ekchuton was the Dance of the Spilt Meal. The Hymen or Hymenaios, used at weddings, celebrated a hero who rescued some Spartan girls from pirates. The Anthema formed part of the Hymen. Several other dances, reserved more especially for women, such as the Hygra, the Kallabis, and the Oklasma, consisted of graceful movements, measured by the sound of flutes. The exquisitely artistic * " Meanwhile Dryas danced a vintage dance, making believe to gather grapes, to carry them in baskets to tread them down in the vat, to pour the juice into tubs, and then to drink the new wine : all of which he did so naturally and so fcatly that they deemed they mw before their eyes the vines, the vat*, the tubs, and Dryas drinking in good sooth." —{Dafkmi *nd Chin.) ■ TutM A«U »ATVm "raai • Drawing by C. B. Cipriani (la dM nwililhl of Mr. Wm. Heincaunn) 3o A HISTORY OF DANCING DANCE OF APOLLO After Giulio Romano statuettes found at Tanagra, of which we reproduce several fine specimens, give some idea of the beauty of motion as practised by chosen bands of young women, when, in the mar- vellous setting of antique theatres, under the blue skies of Greece, they gave themselves up to those perform- ances so highly esteemed among a people with whom the love of beauty was a passion. The fidelity of these records is unfailing, from the highest to the lowest efforts of plastic art. The Greeks, as M. Emmanuel has well said, had not only their Apelles and their Phidias, they had also their Dantans and Daumiers, their Cherets, Caran d'Aches, and Forains, all artists in their own domain, and true interpreters of the artistic in- stinct. Herculaneum and Pompeii have made us familiar with the domestic life of antiquity ; the painted vases r - - 1 f'J f ' 1 KV\ V \fjv\k -■ "■ ii ■■-*—« ^V | :■- -'" ,v "'■'<.. I _ . ir *s**.r;.f : ~' : " A MUSE DANCING THE EROS OF MYRINA *i DANCE OF N VII IMS From a Relief in the Louvre The delicious flying of Greece offer us a history of caricature and impressionism, in which gaiety and fancy are fixed in swift, unerring touches. Sculptors vied with painters in this demonstration. Eros, found at Myrina by Messrs. Pottier and Reinach, his body leaning to the right, his arm bent back above his head, describes a curve of absolute anatomical correctness. It is entirely free from conventionality ; the dancer of our own day executes just such a movement. And in the same way, the fourth-century figurine of a Bacchante in thin and supple draperies, whirl ing round on one foot, reproduces the move- ment and the appearance of a contemporary ballet-dancer. The swiftness and correctness of vision necessary for realistic truth such as this soon passed away and gave place to convention. It is the glory of modern sculpture that it has been able, aided by science, to recover truth in the representation of movement. While Greece was renowned for the splen- dour of her feasts, celebrating by graceful dances and garlands of flowers CUHIC DANCKK After CM« *2 A HISTORY OF DANCING A BACCHANALIAN CHORUS In the Armand Collection, Bibliotheque Nationalc the Muses, love, glory "and beauty, Rome, stern and primitive, possessed but one dance, the wild and warlike Bellicrepa, invented by Romulus in memory of the Rape of the Sabines. Later on it appears that the nymph Egeria mysteriously revealed a new measure to Numa Pompilius, a pacific sovereign who never opened the temple of Janus, and who made an effort to polish the manners of the Romans. Certain authors attribute its invention to Salinus of Mantinea ; but, however that may be, Numa instituted the order of Salian priests, or Salii, to the number of twelve, who were chosen from among those of noble birth. Their mission was to celebrate the gods and heroes by dances. Clothed for these ceremonies in purple tunics, with brazen baldricks slung from their shoulders, their heads covered with glittering helmets, they struck the measure with their short swords upon the Ancile or sacred buckler of divine origin. With the exception of these military and sacred dances, monotonous processions rather than dances, which the Salii also performed during the sacrifices and through the streets, the only spectacles of the austere city were the games in the Circus.* Livy tells us that in the year 390, during the Consulate of Sulpicius * "Heroic and barbarous Rome religiously preserved the memory of the first Brutus, applauded the despair of Virginius, and devoted the head of the decemvir to the infernal gods. Entirely absorbed in these great events, the queenly city knew nothing as yet of other distractions, luxurious indeed, but necessary to people long civilised." — (Elise Voi'art.) THE LUDIONES B Peticus, scenic games were invented to appease the gods and to distract the people, terror-stricken by the plague that decimated the city. The Ludiones came from Etruria, accompanying their passionate dances with the music of their flutes. They were called "histrions," from the Tuscan word hister, signifying " leaper," says Livy again, and instead of making use of impro- vised verse, as they had hitherto done, for at first they had no writ- ten poems, they soon accustomed themselves to follow a set plan, and to measure their gestures by rhythm and cadence. The Roman youth began to take part in these exer- cises, and learned to recite poems to the ac- companiment of musical instruments. Later on, the arts of Greece penetrated to Rome, and dancing to the sound cf the lyre, the harp, the flute and the crotalum formed a splendid portion of the sacrificial rites. These dances were frequently solemn, but they also expressed joy and tenderness on secular oc- casions. Meanwhile the dance of Lycurgus, the Hormos, lost its graceful TUB HOKCHCV. VAI« Id the Loum 34 A HISTORY OF DANCING character and became more warlike ; * the Crane Dance had degenerated into an amusement for villagers, says Lucian. The Roman dances gradually lost their pure and modest character, and depicted nothing but pleasure and obscenity. RUSTIC DANCEKS From an Etching by R. Blyth, after J. Mortimer " In the middle of autumn," says Victor Duruy, " Messalina represented a vintage scene in her palace. The wine-presses crushed the grapes ; the wine flowed into the vats ; half-naked women, clothed like Bacchantes, in * " Minerva approaches. Beside her, with drawn swords, march Fear and Terror, constant companions of the Goddess of War. Behind her a flute-player sounds the war- like Hormos, and by mingling with the muffled tones of his instrument sharp sounds like those of a trumpet, he imparts to the melodies that he performs a more masculine and more animated character." — (Apuleius.) ROMAN CHILDREN TRAINED TO DANCE K doeskins, danced around, while Messalina, her hair unbound, the thyrsus in her hand, and Silius, crowned with ivy, accompanied the licentious chorus." ** The austerity of the ancient Romans arose much more from poverty than from conviction," continues Duruy. " Two or three generations had sufficed to change a city which had only known meagre festivities and rustic delights into the home of revelry and pleasure." A TUA-r AT THE HOUU Or LUCl'IXU* After Boutugcr i of Mcurv Bonaod-Valadon and Co. " When I entered one of the schools to which the nobles send their children," says Scipio /Emilius, " I found more than five hundred girls and boys receiving lessons in harp-playing, in singing, and in striking attitudes amid histrions and infamous people ; and I saw one child, a boy of twelve years of age, the son of a senator, performing a dance worthy of the most degraded slave." Thus it is clear that the Romans were acquainted not only with sacred dances, but with military, theatrical, and private dancing. 36 A HISTORY OF DANCING Retaining the sacred dance of the Salii, which, being of Roman origin, preserved a warlike character, the Romans borrowed from the Greeks the Bacchanalia, whose origin, in Hellas, was religious. These were at first reserved for the priests and priestesses of Bacchus, but later on they became the accompaniment to nuptial feasts, every citizen took part in them, and, from having lent a lustre to worship and a grace to love, they degenerated into lascivious performances. The Lupercalia were held on the 15th of the Kalends of March in honour of the god Pan. The priests of the god, the Luperci, danced naked through the streets of Rome, armed with whips, with which they struck at the crowds of spectators. Other dances accompanied funeral processions, with mourners and with the Archimime, who wore a mask faithfully representing the deceased, whose history he recited. Until the time of Augustus, dancing was entirely given up to the obscenities of celebrated mimes, who were principally Tuscan buffoons. The Greeks used to represent actions by pantomime before they began to recite their tragedies.* The Romans developed pantomime and made of it a new art, which the Greeks, who had limited themselves to a series of actions expressing only one sentiment, had never practised. The Ludiones had outlined scenes at Rome which might be called the first pantomimes, but the invention of the genuine mimetic drama appears to be due to Py lades and Bathyllus, two celebrated actors who divided public enthusiasm during the reign of Augustus. The former, born in Cilicia, created ballets of a noble, tender, and pathetic order ; the latter, who came from Alexandria, composed lively choruses and dances. Both were freed slaves. Mimes and Archimimes enjoyed such favour that many were Parasites of the gods. Some of them were admitted among the priests of Apollo, a dignity coveted by the most illustrious citizens. Juvenal tells us that Bathyllus depicted the transports of Jupiter in the company of Leda with such realism that the Roman women were pro- foundly moved, t * Castil-Blaze. t "The pantomimic actors aspired to the expression of intellectual ideas, such as times past or future, arguments, &c. Although this was carried out by conventional PANTOMIME AMONG THE ROMANS 17 We can form but a faint idea of the perfection to which the art of pantomime attained among the Romans. It ranged over the whole domain of fable, poetry and history. Roman actors translated the most subtle sensations by gestures of extraordinary precision and mobility, and their audience understood every turn of this language, which conveyed far more to them than declamation. This imitative principle, the strength, the infinite gradations of this mute expression, made the dancing of the ancients a great art. Indeed, dancing deprived of such elements is nothing but a succession of cadenced steps, interesting merely as a graceful exercise. It is the imitative prin- ciple, common to it with all the other arts, which refines and en- nobles it. We understand the Roman admiration for pantomime, just as we understand their con- tempt for dancing when, losing its exalted character, it became the mere medium of ribaldry. By the word saltan o the Romans meant not only the art of leaping or jumping, as might be supposed, but the art of gesture in general. IA4TORAL DANCK gestures only, it was nevertheless an infringement of the limits or the art at first. One single actor represented several characters ; two acton sometimes sufficed for a piece, perhaps not a complicated one, and more properly to be described as a scene than an entire play. Later the number of actors increased, and ended by equalling that of the characters." — (Butteux.) 38 A HISTORY OF DANCING According to Varro, the word was derived, not from the Latin salto, but from the name of the Arcadian, Salius, who taught the art to the Romans. Lucian relates that a Prince of Pontus, who had come to visit Nero, was present at a performance in the course of which a famous mime expressed the labours of Hercules as he danced. The dancer's gestures A CLASSIC DANCE From an Engraving by Gaucher, after Caspar Crayer were so precise and expressive that the stranger followed the whole of the action without the slightest hesitation. He was so much struck by the incident, that on taking leave of the Emperor he begged him to give him the actor. Noting the astonishment of Nero at his request, he explained that there was a barbarous tribe adjoining his dominions, whose language no one could learn, and that pantomime would explain his intentions to them so faithfully by gestures, that they would at once understand. / WOMEN ADMITTED TO THE STAGE j 9 The episode is credible enough. When travelling in Sicily, I noticed that the Sicilians are in the habit of holding long communications by means of gestures which escape the uninitiated visitor. This custom dates back to remote antiquity. It is said that the suspicious Hiero, King of Syracuse, fearing conspiracies among his people, forbade all verbal intercourse. The Sicilians therefore had recourse to signs. For centuries they have been reputed the best pantomimists in Italy, a superiority they owe perhaps to the traditional use among them of a silent language they learn in their earliest years. An historian of antiquity has wisely said that the " soul dances in the eyes." It is true, indeed, that every movement of the soul is translated with lightning swiftness in the glance. It was by her dancing that Salome obtained the head of John the Baptist from Herod. She danced before his golden throne, scattering flowers as before an idol. The great lamps suspended from the palace vault struck out a thousand magic gleams from the pearls and chalcedony of her necklaces, the gem-encrusted bracelets on her arms and wrists, the gold embroideries on her black veils, the iridescent draperies that floated above her feet, cased in little slippers made from the down of humming-birds. She danced " like the Indian priestesses, like the Nubians of the cataracts, like the Bacchantes of Lydia, like a flower swaying on the wind. The diamonds in her ears trembled ; sparks flew from her arms, her feet, her garments." And for her reward she claimed " the head of John the Baptist on a charger." The Romans, as a rule, did not care for dancing themselves, but they were passionately fond of it as a spectacle. l»r a l*ng time no women appeared upon the stage ; their parts were taken by young men, and that may have been one of the causes of the degeneracy of the choregraphic art in Rome. Later on, women, who among the Greeks were not even permitted to take part in tragedy or comedy, used to appear in Rome in pantomime ; the best known of these actresses are Arbuscula, Thymelc, Licilia, Dionysia, Cytheris, Valeria and Cloppia. Theatrical dancing at that time had attained unprecedented popularity 4o A HISTORY OF DANCING in Rome. The degenerate city gave itself up to a frenzy of admiration for the rival dancers Pylades and Bathyllus, and the gravest questions of State were neglected on their account. Not content with having turned the heads of the Roman ladies, they were a cause of disturbance to knights and senators. Rome was no longer Rome when Pylades and Bathyllus were absent. CLASSIC DANCE After Mantegna Their Intrigues set the Republic in a ferment. Their theatrical supporters, clad in different liveries, used to fight in the streets, and bloody brawls were frequent throughout the city. " The rivalries of Pylades and Bathyllus occupied the Romans as much as the gravest affairs of State," says De Laulnaye. " Every citizen was a Bathyllian or a Pyladian. Glancing over the history of the disturbances created by these two mummers, we seem to be reading that of the volatile nation whose quarrels about music were so prolonged, so obstinate, and above all, so senseless, that no one knew what were the real points of dispute, when the philosopher of Geneva wrote the famous letter to which . ///.t/t/t'f . Ii'ri;/// < ' 'itinnif PYLADES THE DANCER 4« no serious reply was ever made. Augustus reproved Pylades on one occasion for his perpetual quarrels with Bathyllus. " Caesar," replied the dancer, " it is well for you that the people are engrossed by our disputes ; their attention is thus diverted from your actions ! " A bold retort, but one which shows the importance attached by the Romans to the doings of the two famous mimes. We find that the banishment of Pylades almost brought about an insurrection, and that the master of the world was forced to appease his people by the recall of the histrion. Classic writers give various rea- sons for the dis- grace of Pylades. Dion Cassius at- tributes it to the intrigues of Bathyllus ; Mac- robius to the disputes between Hylas and Pylades ; Suetonius to the effrontery of the latter, who pointed at a spectator who had ventured to hiss him. The boldness of Pylades, if Suetonius be right, was hardly surprising, when we learn that one day, acting the madness of Hercules, he shot off arrows among the spectators. Repeating the scene in the presence of Octavius, he indulged in the same licence, and such was the Emperor's mastery of the art of dissimulation, that he showed no sign of displeasure. On another occasion, when Pylades was acting the part in public, some of the spectators, partisans, no doubt, of Bathyllus, objected to his gestures as extravagant. Annoyed by this injudicious criticism, he tore off his mask and shouted to them : " Fools, I am acting a madman ! " At another performance, Hylas was playing CEdipus. After he had put out his own eyes, his rival Pylades, who was present, called out : " You CLASSIC DANCE After BatUu Franco 42 A HISTORY OF DANCING can still see ! " Hylas had given an imperfect rendering of the hesitating and timorous gait proper to the newly blind. The said Hylas was beaten with rods, says Suetonius, at the complaint of the Praetor. This rude chastisement of a public favourite is surprising enough, and no writer has explained such a derogation from established precedents. Among other privileges Augustus accorded to the mimes, were exemption from magisterial control and immunity from scourging.* *^v 4& j\ w®' 1 • • CLASSIC DANCE After Batista Franco Are we to attribute to this degeneracy the contempt of the Romans for dancing ? Cicero says : " No sober man dances unless he is mad " ; and he reproaches the Consul Gabinus for having danced. Horace also rebukes the Romans for dancing as for an infamy. Sallust, bitterly apostrophising * "Yet Octavius," says De Laulnaye, " inflicted this punishment on Stephanio, the author or actor of those pieces the Romans called ' Togataria:,' because the actors in them wore the toga. There is one very curious circumstance in the life of Stephanio. He twice took part in the celebration of the Secular games. These games, as their name indicates, only took place every hundred years, and the public crier, in announcing them, described them as solemnities no living man had ever witnessed, or would ever witness again. The Emperor, however, who ridiculed all the traditional laws and customs, determined to celebrate the Secular games long before the expiration of a centuiy since those presided over by Augustus, and Stephanio, who had figured in the latter, appeared again in those inaugurated by Claudius." ROMAN DANCERS 43 a lady, tells her that she dances with too much skill for a virtuous woman. Dancing, therefore, was completely perverted ; Rome outdid our Bullier and Moulin Rouge ; according to Valerius Maximus, the actors were so corrupted that the Massaliots refused to grant them a theatre, lest their own manners should become perverted by their indecency. This was too much. Domitian expelled from the Senate some Conscript fathers who had dishonoured themselves by danc- ing. Tiberius, Nero, and Caligula pro- scribed dancers, though they after- wards recalled them. Trajan displayed more energy, and tranquillity was re- stored for a few years. But the mimes found ardent supporters among his successors. Constantine, who had driven the philosophers from Rome, allowed three thousand dancers to remain. Gesar had forced the poet Laberius to dance on the stage, and he gave him a gold ring and five hundred thousand sesterces in compensation of this indignity. But he could not restore to him his place among the knights in the circus, as they refused to allow a dancer to sit with them.* This was at the period of the decadence. Roman manners were undermined, and the end of the Empire was at hand. In addition to the licentious dances of theatres and festivals, the Romans, still in imitation of the Greeks, used to call in bands of musicians C a ucouim Alio I A DANCBK Alter Vcflel • Fcniiult. 44 A HISTORY OF DANCING and dancers to divert their guests. Some appeared disguised as Nymphs, some as Nereids, some naked. Discoveries at Herculaneum and Pompeii have brought to light mural decorations of atria, representing women who waited at table, and whose rhythmical movements were regulated by the sound of the flute. The Gaditanians, famous female dancers from Cadiz, were long the delight of Ancient Rome. The dance of the Gaditanians was so brilliant and impassioned, that poets declared it impos- sible to describe the strange charm it exercised over the spectators. Many ancient writers allude to these dancers. Martial, him- self a Spaniard, immortalised them in his epigrams. Pliny the younger mentions them in a letter to Sepficius Clarus ; Petronius, Silias Italicus, Ap- pianus, Strabo, and a number of others all testify to the exciting and seductive character of the Spanish dances of their times. A German author, speaking of the dances of ancient Gades, says they were " all poetry and voluptuous charm." An English writer asserts that the famous Venus Cailipyge was modelled from a Gaditanian dancer in high favour at Rome, probably the Telethusa of whom Martial sang. In his Grandezas de Cadix, the Canon Salazar, who lived in the seventeenth century, says that the Andalusian dances of his time were identical with those so famous in antiquity. " Father Marti, Canon of Alicante," says Baron Davillier, " was well acquainted with all the dances in favour at Cadiz in his time, which he called Gaditanian delights, delicias gaditanas. According to him, they were identical with the ancient dances, though they had been brought to greater perfection, to such perfection, indeed, that the former, and even the AN IDYL After a Picture by Mme. Demont-Breton CROTALIA AND CASTANETS 4 s ? famous Phrygian Cordax, must have been mere puerilities in comparison with them." The use of castanets, which has persisted for more than a thousand years, shows the strong affinity between the antique Spanish dances and those of the present day. At Rome, as in modern Spain, popular dances were cadenced by the clink of castanets. The Spanish castanuelas differ but slightly from the crotalia of the ancients. Both are composed of two hollow portions, which, striking one against the other, give out a sharp, resonant sound. The shape and size are much the same now as formerly. The only essential difference is in their composition, for the crotalia of the ancients were sometimes made of bronze. A DAXCIK Froa ■ MS. in the BiblxxUqM Natfeaak DANCE OF THE REDEEMED From Fra Angelico's "Last Judgment," Florence CHAPTER II DANCING IN THE MIDDLE AGES 7 Religious Dances — Strolling Ballets — Dances of Chivalry — The " Ballet des Ar dents" — Bergonzio di Botta's Ballet IFTER the sack of Rome by Totila, dancing disappeared almost completely. Most of the authors who have written on the choregraphic art bear witness to an interval of some centuries between ancient and modern dancing. Neverthe- less, people still danced in Roman Gaul, although the wandering troupes of dancers who travelled through Gaul as through the other provinces of the Empire had brought dancing into marked disfavour. Dancing was practised among the Franks and the Goths. Christianity had at first encouraged primitive dances, and had even appropriated them to itself. Christians celebrated Mysteries in churches by hymns and dances, as the EARLY CHRISTIAN DANCES 47 DANCE OF DEATH After an Engraving in the Bibtiotheque Nationals Jews had done before them ; they danced in the cemeteries in honour of the dead, and it may well be that these dances were a sacred remembrance of the worship of olden days. " Divine service," says the Jesuit priest Menestrier, who, about 1682, wrote a most interesting book upon Dancing, " was composed of psalms, hymns, and canticles, because men sang and danced the praises of God, as they read His oracles in those extracts from the Old and New Testaments which we still know under the name of Lessons. The place in which these acts of worship were offered to God was called the choir, just as those portions of comedies and tragedies in which dancing and singing combined to make up the interludes were called choruses. Prelates were called in the Latin tongue, Trtsules a Prr w«im .48 A HISTORY OF DANCING St. Gregory of Nazianzum only reproached the Emperor Julian with the bad use he made of it. " If you are fond of dancing," he said, " if your inclination leads you to these festivals which you appear to love so passionately, dance as much as you will ; I consent. But why revive before our eyes the dissolute dances of the barbarous Herodias and of the pagans ? Rather perform the dances of King David before the Ark ; dance to the honour of God. Such exercises of peace and piety are worthy of an Emperor and of a Christian." Father Menestrier reminds us that Plato considered dancing a very efficacious remedy in cases such as those to which it is still applied in the famous Tarantula. " For," says he, " to such persons are sung certain songs calculated to heat their blood, and to open the pores, so as to admit of the expulsion of the poison. Danc- ing," he continues, " serves to moderate four dangerous passions, fear, melancholy, anger and joy ; fear and melancholy are relieved by rendering the body active, supple, light and tractable, while the frenzy of the two other passions is calmed by regular movements. But if dancing be a remedy as regards these passions, it is natural to joy, which is, in itself, a dance, and a gentle and agreeable agitation caused by the effusion of the spirits which, rising in the heart, spread themselves abundantly through the whole body. Such is the argument of Plato." Vestris also tells us that Christianity in its religious ceremonies had followed ancient tradition, both biblical and pagan, and that in its early days, according to all the evidence, religious dances were favourably viewed by the Church. Such dances must have become confounded with profane measures, for they were performed by layman as well as by clerics. DANCE OF DEATH In the Church of St. John at Basle DANCING IN CHURCHES 49 They were performed on certain days and at certain moments in the service ; for example, hands were joined and dances performed during the singing of the hymn, O Filii. M. Emmanuel, in his learned work upon Greek dancing, remarks that "if Guido and Pomerancio have depicted ballets of angels, it is because St. Basil, in his Epistle to Gregory, says that dancing is their only occupation in heaven, and calls those happy who can imitate them upon earth." • "It is with this idea," he adds, "that commentators speak of the apostles and mar- tyrs as victorious soldiers, 'dancing' after the battle." Certain religious dances have disappeared, others have persisted to our own days. One of the Acts of the latest Council of Narbonne proves that the custom of dancing in churches and cemeteries on certain feast- days obtained in Languedoc till the end of the sixteenth century. In the seventeenth century, the people and clergy of Limoges danced in the church of St. Leonard on the Feast of St. Martial, singing : San Martiaou, pregas per nous et nous epingarcr per boui. Mahomet, imitating the Christian practice, instituted a sect of dancers, the Dervishes, who twirl round and round with astonishing swiftness, some- * St. Basil exhorts us to perform sacred dance* upon earth in imitation of the angels. "Quid itaquc bcatius case potcrit quam in terra tripudium Angclorum imitari?" — {Efiit. i. 4J Grti*r.) m Philosophers have also existed who believed that these spirits had no other means of communication among themselves but signs and movements arranged after the manner of dance*. After this we need not be surprised that Virgil, in the Sixth Book of the i£oeid, make* the spirits dance in the Elysian fields."— (Father Mcncstricr.) DAKCING AKCILS Pram a Relief by Donaiello, at Hottr.ce £o A HISTORY OF DANCING times even till they fall down in a swoon, in honour of their founder Menelaus. The latter, it appears, danced unceasingly for forty days to the sound of the flute, and was rewarded by a divine ecstasy. The institution of this sect of dancers is not, indeed, unique. At the beginning of the present century, in 1806, just such another was founded in New England, under the name of the Jumpers. They looked upon dancing as an act of worship ; they alternated it with psalmody, and practised it with the utmost fervour in honour of the Deity. Like the Dervishes, they DANCING ANGELS From a Relief by Donatello, at Florence twirled round for hours at a time, sinking to the earth at last breathless and panting. Some among them, like Menelaus, claimed to have achieved a divine ecstasy by these means. It is in Catholic Spain that religious dances have most notably persisted. In the time of St. Thomas of Villanueva, Bishop of Valencia, it was cus- tomary to dance before the Sacred Elements in the churches of Seville, Toledo, Jeres, and Valencia, and, in spite of the abolition of religious dances by Pope Zacharias, the holy prelate approved and upheld them. Nor did they confine themselves merely to these dances in Spain. In the Middle Ages, pieces known as farsas santas y piadosas, holy and pious farces, were performed in churches and monasteries. These were religious compositions, relieved by ribald interludes and licentious dances. It was the custom in Galicia to dance the Pela, a sort of sacred measure, THE SEISES OF SEVILLE ^i on the Feast of Corpus Christi. A very tall man, carrying a magnificently dressed boy on his shoulders, danced at the head of the procession. In Catalonia, Roussillon, and several other Spanish provinces, mysteries, interspersed with religious dances, were played even in the seventeenth century. A traveller, who visited Spain at the beginning of the present century, says Davillier, tells us how he saw Regnard's Legataire Universe/ performed at Seville on the Feast of the Assumption, and transcribes the playbill, which ran as follows : " To the Empress of Heaven, the Mother of the Eternal Word, &c. . . . For her advantage, and for the increase of her worship, the actors of this city will this night perform a very amusing comedy, entitled Le Legataire Universe/ . . . The famous Romano will dance the Fandango, and the theatre will be brilliantly lighted with chandeliers." Baron Davillier further tells us that the poems known as villancicos are popular verses, originally intended to accompany religious dances, and that they are very ancient in Spain. A poet of the later part of the fifteenth century, Lucas Fernandez, published a collection of villancicos para se salir cantando y vailando (to go singing and dancing), in which Christ, the Virgin, and the angels play the principal parts. Certain villancicos are still sung to the tunes of Seguillidas. Some of them, the Villancicos de Natividad, are sung throughout Spain on Christmas night. They are chanted to an accompaniment of somewhat unorthodox dancing, and the Redeemer, the Holy Mother, and the angels figure in the refrains, together with turron and Manzanilla wine. The seises, the choir-boys of Seville Cathedral, have preserved the tradition of the ancient representac tones and danzas which formed part of all Corpus Christi processions in mediaeval Spain, and the Dance of the Seises was authorised in 1 439 by a Bull of Pope Eugenius IV. Don Jaymc de Palafox, Archbishop of Seville, attempted to suppress them in his diocese. But the Chapter chartered a vessel, and the seises, led by their maestro di capilla, embarked for Rome, where they convinced the Pope that their costumes and dances could but add to the splendour of religious ceremony. "The seises" says Baron Davillier, "arc generally the children of ? 2 A HISTORY OF DANCING artisans or workmen. They must be under ten years of age on admission. They are easily to be recognised in the streets of Seville by their red caps and their red cloaks adorned with red neck-bands, their black stockings, and shoes with rosettes and metal buttons. The full dress of the seises is exactly the same as that worn by their predecessors of the sixteenth century. The hat, slightly conical in shape, is turned up on one side, and fastened with a bow of white vel- vet, from which rises a tuft of blue and white feathers. The silk doublet is held together at the waist by a sash, and surmounted by a scarf knotted on one side ; a little cloak, fastened to the shoulders, falls gracefully about half- PROCESSION OF El.S COSIERS way down the leg. But the most cha- racteristic feature of the costume is the golilla, a sort of lace ruff, starched and pleated, which encircles the neck. Lace cuffs, slashed trunk-hose or calzoncillo, blue silk stockings and white shoes with rosettes, complete the costume, of which Dore made a sketch when we saw it in Seville Cathedral, on the octave of the Conception. The Dance of the Seises attracts as many spectators to Seville as the ceremonies of Holy Week, and the immense Cathedral is full to overflowing on the days when they are to figure in a function." At Alaro, a little town in the Balearic Islands, two religious festivals still survive which are celebrated by dancing. The following notes on the subject have been communicated to me by H.H. the Archduke Salvator : " One of these festivals is celebrated on the 1 5th of August, the day of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary, the other on the following day, the feast PROCESSION OF ELS COSIERS SJ of the patron of the village of Alaro. On these occasions a body of dancers called Els Cosiers play the principal part. They consist of six boys dressed in white, with ribbons of many colours, and wearing on their heads caps trimmed with flowers. One of them, la Jama, disguised as a woman, carries a fan in one hand and a handkerchief in the other. Two others are dressed as demons with horns and cloven feet. The party is followed by some musicians playing on the cheremias, the tam- borino, and the fabiol. After vespers the Cosiers join the procession as it leaves the church. Three of them take up positions on either side of the Virgin, who is preceded by a demon ; every few yards they perform steps. Each demon is armed with a flexible rod with which he keeps off" the crowd. The procession stops in all the squares and principal places, and there the Cosiers perform one of their dances to the sound of the tamborino and the fabiol. When the procession returns to the church they dance together round the statue of the Virgin. The following day, on the occasion of the second fete, the Cosiers perform dances to the accompani- ment of their band, in front of the high altar after Benediction. They then betake themselves to the public square of the village, where a ball ensues." These processions, veritable strolling ballets, were a survival of paganism. Appianus has described them, and attributes their invention to the Tyrrhcni. He relates that the young men who formed the DAXCIXC »OY» Froa a Relief by Uu > fiil-iuuwt v- vokci- 4Au tcl\ni.u\l\im lont l',tHU(,l||illl(iVU* These masts also served to show the points at which the procession should halt, for the dancers to perform the principal scenes of their ballet. Such performances were also common in the South of France. In 1462, on the eve of Corpus Christi, the good king, Rene of Provence, organ- ised a procession called the Lou Gue, a genuine strolling ballet, accompanied by allegorical scenes,\ combats, and dances. These allegorical scenes were at that time called entremets, and were invented to occupy the guests at banquets between the VIXTACE DAKCI Fro* a MS. in the HMotWqM care and zeal on the part of mott of our prelates to banith these dangerous abuses from their dioceses. "Our religious acts no longer consist of dances, like those of the Jew and the heathen. We are content to make this etcrcisc an honest diversion, which prepares the body for noble and dignified actions, and serves for public rejoicings." — (Father Mcncstricr.) 60 A HISTORY OF DANCING ; . in spite of the repugnance shown to it by the' Roman aristocracy, in spite of the anathemas and interdictions of councils and synods, has always been the favourite pastime of the Gauls* and French." In 1373, during the reign of Charles V., an unknown illness came upon France and Flanders to punish the people, say the old historians, for the sins and abuses that marked their religious dances. Numbers of people were seized with a dancing mania, threw off their clothes, crowned them- selves with flowers, and, hand-in-hand, went singing and dancing through the streets and churches. Many, from turning round and round, fell breathless and exhausted. " They were so inflated by this exercise," says Mezeray, " that they would have burst then and there, but for the precaution of fastening bandages very tightly round their bodies." Strange to say, people who beheld this turmoil of dancers were seized with the same frenzy, and joined themselves to the bands of madmen. This disease was known as the " Dance of St. John." Certain sufferers were cured by exorcisms. Mezeray adds : " This punishment put an end to the dances that were held in France before the churches on Sundays and feast-days." An analogy to this may be found in antiquity. Lucian relates that the inhabitants of a Greek city were seized with a sort of frenzy after witnessing a representation of the Andromeda of Euripides. They might be seen, feverish, pale and exhausted, running through the streets half naked, declaiming parts of the play, with hideous contortions. The disease disappeared with the advent of colder weather, and after violent bleeding at the nose had relieved the sufferers. During the Middle Ages, pantomimes and theatrical ballets disappeared, but dancing remained a popular diversion ; and we know, from the frequent interdictions pronounced by councils and synods, that dances were performed at the feasts of patron saints, and on the eve of great church festivals. Dancing, at first despised by the men of this period as an amusement unworthy of them, was practised exclusively by women for a time, which explains the fact that most of the early mediasval dancing songs were composed by women, and introduce female characters chiefly. Men appeared only as spectators of such performances, which they watched with an interest to which innumerable poems and romances bear witness, THE CAROLE 61 " Under the walls of a castle named Beauclair," says a song of the twelfth century, " a grand ball was soon arranged ; the damosels came thither to carol, the knights to look* on." * Soon, however, the upper classes borrowed this diversion from the populace. But it was not until the beginning of the thirteenth century, when the harshness of primitive manners was modified to some extent, that the sexes joined in the amusement. Knights and ladies, taking hands, danced rounds. In the absence of instrumental music, the dance was regulated by clapping hands, or by songs, the verses of which were sung by a soloist, while the refrain was taken up by the whole band. This was the famous Carole, so often described in mediaeval poems and romances ; it was long the favourite amusement at social gatherings and entertainments. The author of Flamenco, a Provencal poem, relates that " Youth and Joy opened the ball with their cousin, Prowess. Cowardice, ashamed, went and hid herself." Paul Lacroix mentions a passage in the romance of Perce-Foret, in which it is described how, after a banquet, while the tables were being removed, all was prepared for a ball ; the knights laid aside none of their accoutrements, but the ladies retired to don fresh toilettes. " Then," says the old romancer, " the young knights and maidens began to play their instruments to lead the dance, whence comes," he adds, " the old Gallic proverb : Apris la pause, vital la danse " (after good cheer comes dancing). In time a musical accompaniment, though of a somewhat meagre kind, took the place of singing. Evidently, these singing dances were the origin of the more modern ballets and masquerades. As the songs introduced various personages (the May Queen, the jealous lover, &c), it was natural that these characters, at first merely mentioned in the text, should come to be represented by the dancers. There is, in fact, no solution of continuity between the modest Caroles of the * The preaching friar, Jacques dc Vitry, clearly explains these proceedings by means of an original but homely metaphor. Speaking of the women who led these dances, or regulated them by their singing, he says that they wore round their necks the bell of the Devil, who kept his eye on them : " It is thus the cow who wears a bell round her neck informs the shepherd where the herd is to be found." In another passage he compares the persons who sing for dancing to the chaplain who chants the versicle*, and the clerks who respond. 62 A HISTORY OF DANCING thirteenth century, and the sumptuous masquerades of the fifteenth and sixteenth. " The Middle Ages were the palmy days of dancing, especially in France. The feasting and dancing seem to have been incessant, and one would think, from reading the old poems and romances, that the French had nothing to do but to dance at all hours of the day and night. Tabourot THE BALL OF THE MAGDALEN After a Picture by Lucas van Leyden in the Brussels Museum assigns this very prosaic reason : ' Dancing is practised in order that it may be discovered whether lovers are sound and healthy ; to this end, they are permitted to embrace their mistresses, so that respectively they may smell and savour one another, and see whether each has sweet breath ; therefore from this point of view, as well as from many other conveniences that arise therefrom, dancing is necessary for the proper organisation of society.' " — (P. Lacroix.) MASQUES 6? In the thirteenth century there was a marked development in literature and art ; the taste for assemblies and festivities was propagated in Italy and in France, resuscitating dancing and theatrical performances. "Maskers," says M. Desrats in his Dictionnaire de la Danse, "were allowed such liberty of behaviour that we can neither explain nor comprehend it. This unlimited liberty gave them admission to every private ball, BALL IN Tlir. >"'. KlfcENTM CfcKTl'ftV From a M.S. in the Biblioihfc|tM Natioulc without invitation, and they might dance with whomsoever they pleased, without incurring the smallest observation from the master of the house. Neither married ladies nor girls ever refused their invitations. Various balls might be mentioned in which Charles VI. had tragic fits of madness, and the practical jokes of Henry IV. arc not yet forgotten." Yet another diversion was a regular composition. A subject from 6 4 A HISTORY OF DANCING fable or history was chosen, and two or three quadrilles were formed in which the dancers wore appropriate costumes. An explanatory recitation was sometimes added to the dance. A third diversion came nearer to our ballet, and is to be found in full vigour in 1675. All have read of the joyous masquerades of Charles IX., Henry III., Henry IV. and Louis XIII. Louis XIV. figured in person, on January 2, 1655, in a masquerade given by Cardinal Mazarin, and in many other such spectacles. Somewhat later, the town of Lille gave a fete to Philip the Good, in which twelve ladies, each representing a virtue, and twelve knights brilliantly dressed,' performed a dance. The town of Amiens offered a ball, or per- THE BALLET DES ARDENTS From the Froissart MS. in the Bihliotheque de l'Arsenal, Paris haps rather 3. ballet, tO Charles VI. Another, which was given in Paris, at the house of the Duchesse de Berri, was, as is well known, the occasion of the king's madness. This ball has remained celebrated under the name of the Ballet des Ardents. The Duchess invited the whole Court. At that time people were already passionately fond of masquerades. The king, followed by some companions, came to the ball disguised as a savage. The Duke of Orleans took a torch in order to examine the new- comers closely, and set fire to the tow held together by pitch that formed their attire. The king nearly perished. Less fortunate than Charles (who, however, went out of his mind), the Comte de Jouy and the Bastard of Foix were burned to death. Young de Nantouillet only escaped by BERGONZIO DI BOTTA'S BALLET 6$ jumping into a tub of water. The Duke of Orleans built a chapel at the Celestins in expiation of his folly. In spite of this tragic adventure, which might have been expected to put an end to masquerades, they were long continued. Towards the close of the Middle Ages, both in France and elsewhere, they took the form, at great entertainments, of gorgeous and fantastic allegories, accom- panied by a species of ballet. One of the most celebrated of festivities was the fete given in 1489 by Bergonzio di Botta of Tortona, in honour of Galeazzo, Duke of Milan, who had just married Isabella of Aragon. " The Amphitryon," says Castil-Blaze, " chose for his theatre a magnificent hall surrounded by a gallery, in which several bands of music had been stationed ; an empty table occupied the middle. At the moment when the Duke and Duchess appeared, Jason and the Argonauts advanced proudly to the sound of martial music. They bore the Golden Fleece ; this was the tablecloth, with which they covered the table, after having executed a stately dance, expressive of their admiration of so beautiful a princess, and of a Sovereign so worthy to possess her. Next came Mercury, who related how he had been clever enough to trick Apollo, shepherd of Admetus, and rob him of a fat calf, which he ventured to present to the newly married pair, after having had it nobly trussed and prepared by the best cook of Olympus. While he was placing it upon the table, three quadrilles that followed him danced round the fatted calf, as the Hebrews had formerly capered round that of gold. " Diana and her nymphs followed Mercury. The goddess' followers bore a stag upon a gilded stand. It is unnecessary to say that a fanfare of hunting-horns heralded the entrance of Diana, and accompanied the dance of her nymphs. " The music changed its character ; lutes and flutes announced the approach of Orpheus. I would recall to the memory of those who might have forgotten it, that at that period they changed their instruments according to the varying expression of the music played. Each singer, each dancer, had his especial orchestra, which was arranged for him according to the sentiments intended to be expressed by his song or his dance. It was an excellent plan, and served to vary the symphonies ; it announced the 1 66 A HISTORY OF DANCING MORRIS DANCERS Beverley Minster return of a character who had already appeared, and produced a varied succession of trumpets, of violins with their sharp notes, of the arpeggios of lutes, and of the soft melodies of flutes and reed pipes. The orchestra- tions of Monteverde prove that composers at that time varied their instrumentation thus, and this particular artifice was not one of the least causes of the prodigious success of opera in the first years of its creation. " But to return to the singer of Thrace, whom I left standing somewhat too long at the door. He appeared chanting the praises of the duchess, and accompanying himself on a lyre. " ' I wept,' he went on, ' long did I weep on the Apennine mount the death of the gentle Eurydice. I have heard of the union of two lovers worthy to live one for the other, and for the first time since my misfortune I have experienced a feeling of pleasure. My songs changed with the feelings of my heart. A crowd of birds fluttered down to listen to me ; I seized these imprudent listeners, and I spitted them all to roast them for the most beautiful princess on earth, since Eurydice is no more.' " A sound of brass instruments interrupted the bird-snaring virtuoso : Atalanta and Theseus, escorted by a brilliant and agile troop, repre- sented a boar hunt by means of lively dances. It ended in the death of the boar of Calydon, which they offered to the young duke, executing a BERGONZIO DI BOTTA'S BALLET 67 triumphal ballet. Iris, in a chariot drawn by peacocks, followed by nymphs clad in light transparent gauze, appeared on one side, and laid on the table dishes of her own superb and delicate birds. Hebe, bearing nectar, appeared on the other side, accompanied by shepherds from Arcady, and by Vertumnus and Pomona, who presented iced creams and cheeses, peaches, apples, oranges and grapes. At the same moment the shade of the gastronomer Apicius rose from the earth. The illustrious professor came to inspect this splendid banquet, and to communicate his discoveries to the guests. "This spectacle disappeared to give place to a great ballet of Tritons and of Rivers laden with the most delicious fish. Crowned with parsley and watercress, these aquatic deities despoiled themselves of their headdresses to make a bed for the turbot, the trout, and the perch that they placed upon the table. " I know not whether the epicures invited by the host were much amused by these ingenious ceremonies, and whether their tantalised stomachs did not cry out against all the pleasures offered to their eyes and ears ; history does not enter into these details. Moreover, Bergonzio_di_Botta understood too well how to organise a feast not to have put some ballast into his guests in the shape of a copious luncheon, which might serve as a preface, an argument, an introduction if you will, to the dinner prepared by the gods, demigods, Nymphs, Tritons, Fauns, and Dryads. " This memorable repast was followed by a singular spectacle. It was inaugurated by Orpheus, who conducted Hymen and Cupids. The Graces presented Conjugal Fidelity, who offered herself to wait upon the princess. Semiramis, Helen, Phardra, Medea and Cleopatra interrupted the solo of Conjugal Fidelity by singing of their own lapses, and the delights of infidelity. Fidelity, indignant at such audacity, ordered these criminal queens to retire. The Cupids attacked them, pursuing them with their torches, and setting fire to the long veils that covered their heads. Some- thing, clearly, was necessary to counterbalance this scene. Lucrctia, Penelope, Thomyris, Judith, Portia, and Sulpicia advanced, and laid at the feet of the duchess the palms of virtue that they had won during their lives. As the graceful and modest dance of the matrons might have seemed a BERGONZIO DI BOTTA'S BALLET 69 somewhat cold termination to so brilliant a fete, the author had recourse to Bacchus, to Silenus and to the Satyrs, and their follies animated the end of the ballet." This dramatico-gastronomic entertainment made a great sensation. All Italy was delighted with it, and descriptions of it travelled throughout Europe ; but it was one of the last fetes of its kind. Modern dancing gave rise to choregraphic tourneys, and ballets with mechanical contrivances, more splendid, perhaps, but certainly less original. > J* H ♦T **.* *w «** h-::> ***♦ TOOtS DANCE From a MS. in the Bodleian Library THE FARANDOLE After Jules Gamier CHAPTER III The grand Ballet — French T)ances of the Close of the Middle dges, and of the Renaissance — 'Basse Dances — The Volte — The Gaillarde — The Tordion — Branles — The Tavane T is a singular fact that modern theatrical dancing makes its first appearance under Sixtus IV., in the Castle of St. Angelo, where, towards the end of the fifteenth century, Cardinal Riario, nephew of the Holy Pontiff, composed ballets and had them performed. At about the same time, though sacred dances had been long forbidden by the Church, Cardinal Ximenes reinstated the Mass of the Mozarabes, the author of which was a bishop of Seville in the Cathedral of Toledo. It was celebrated with dances in the nave itself. Nevertheless, Cardinal Riario failed to inspire the Pope with a taste for dancing and the ballet, so preoccupied was his Holiness with Venice and the Medici. It was under Leo X. that ballets came specially into favour. Cardinals not infrequently had them produced. Even Protestants shared the common passion for an amusement little in accordance with their austere DANCING AT THE COURT OF FRANCIS I. ideal. Brantome tells how Queen Elizabeth received the Grand Prior of France and the Connetable de Montmorency at a supper, followed by a ballet danced by the ladies of her Court. Its subject was the Gospel story of the wise and the foolish Virgins. The former carried their lamps burning, while the lights of the others had gone out ; the lamps of all alike were of mas- sive silver, marvellously chased. The ho- nour of the THE BALLET PES RlDICl'LES After a Drawing in the Bibliothc«|uc Nationale restoration of dancing properly belongs, however, to Bergonzio di Botta, whose fete we have described. In fact the success of this pageant, organised for Galeazzo, Duke of Milan, was such as to make like diversions the fashion, and to stimulate the production of grand pantomimic ballets, allegorical and historical. These first appeared at royal courts, and celebrated illustrious births and marriages, and important public events. They were all of five acts and two entrees, which latter were performed- by quadrilles of dancers, usually dressed alike, whose gestures, attitudes, and movements helped to explain the meaning of the ballet. The Court of Francis I. was much given to dancing, in which art the graceful Marguerite de Valois achieved unheard-of success. We read how Don John of Austria rode post from Brussels, and came secretly to Paris expressly to sec her dance. He went away dazzled. Afterwards he used perpetually to say, " How much there is in a minuet ! " This phrase has also been attributed to Professor Marcel. Catherine dc' Medici entertained the French Court with ballets, the 72 A HISTORY OF DANCING poetical refinement of which contrasted curiously with the more than doubtful morality of the gaieties accompanying them. Her maids of honour, scantily draped and with loosened hair, offered food upon dishes of silver, after the antique festal manner. Music and dancing formed part of these festivities, at which Henry III. often appeared in female dress, while the women donned masculine attire ! Henry III. was not the only king who had a taste for masquerading. According to Menestrier, " princes take pleasure in donning some ridiculous disguise at times, as is the custom at the German Wirthschafts. This cus- tom is derived, no doubt, from the ancient Saturnalia, in which the slaves figured as their masters and the masters as slaves. Greatness becomes a burden to the great in their diversions, and to make these freer and more amusing, they are glad to lay aside their rank for a few hours, and to mix on terms of equality with those they are accustomed to see at their feet in all the circumstances of life. "With good reason," he continues, "has Antiochus, king of Syria, surnamed Epiphanes, and in derision Epimanes, been branded a fool and a madman ; he mingled with the lowest of the people in all their amusements, sullying the splendour and profusion of his festivals by base conduct and actions unworthy of his birth and rank, dancing with buffoons and actors, arranging his banquets himself, removing the dishes, and introducing the various courses. Once, in the midst of one of the most magnificent entertainments ever given, he had himself carried into the assembly rolled in sheets, emerging from which, he danced an entree, figuring a sleepy man with such extravagance, that all sensible persons present withdrew, unwilling to witness such degradation. (Athenasus.) Plancus cut a figure no less THE BALLET DES RIDICULES After a Drawing in the Bibliotheque Nationale THE BALLET OF CIRCE 7 $ undignified, when, representing the sea-god, Glaucus, he donned a fish's tail, and danced upon his knees." These warnings of antiquity notwithstanding, Catherine diverted the attention of her sons from affairs of state by a whirl of midnight gaieties, cunningly designed to mask her own dark schemes. In the midst of these festivities, the crime of St. Bartholomew was hatching, murder was plotted to the sounds of music, the victims were marked out among the dancers, the executioners were chosen and prepared. Nevertheless, she did much for the improvement of theatrical music, introducing Italian musicians, and supporting her ballets by the most effective orchestras. Among certain violinists sent to the Court by the Marechal de Brissac, Governor of Piedmont, was an Italian called Baltasarini, who lost no time, however, in adopting the more brilliant name of Beaujoyeux. This artist introduced a regularity and method hitherto unknown into the management of the Court ballets. He was made valet de chambre to the queen-mother, and chief organiser of fetes and entertainments. A poet of the day celebrated his talents as master of the royal revels in the following couplets : "Beaujoyeux, qui premier des cendres de la Grecc Fait rccourncr au jour lc dessein ct l'adrcssc, Du ballet compose, en son tour mesure Qui d'un esprit divin toi-meme tc devance, Gcomctrc inventif, unique en ta science Si ricn d'honncur s'acquicrt, lc ticn'est assure." In 1 58 1, on the occasion of the marriage of the Due de Joyeuse, Beaujoyeux composed the celebrated Ballet Comique de la Reine, or Ballet of Circe, said to have been a masterpiece of choregraphic composition. The king's almoner, Lachesnaye, supplied the libretto ; his music-masters, Beaulieu and Salomon, the music. In L'Estoile's Journal we read that the queen and princesses figured as Nereids and Naiads. 44 Lortquc Circe" parut en ce ballet pompcux Aux jreux dc Medici offcrt par Beaujoyeux On choiiit let danscurs parmi ccttc noblesse Qui joignait au courage ct la grace ct l'adrcssc."* * Deiprciux. L Art ii U Dame. 74 A HISTORY OF DANCING The princes and princesses donned costumes so costly on this occasion that even the courtiers blamed their extravagance. " Never," it was said, "can the king afford another/?/?/" -Some of the costumes cost eighty thousand francs. The dresses -of the king and queen in especial shone with precious stones and gold embroideries.. This wedding cost the king the enormous sum of a hundred and twenty thousand crowns. "On Monday, September 18, 1581," says L'Estoile, "the Due de Joyeuse and Marguerite de Lorraine, daughter of Nicholas de Vaudemont, the Queen's sister, were betrothed in the Queen's chamber, and on the following Sunday, at three o'clock, they were married in the parish church of Saint-Germain-l'Auxerrois. The King conducted the bride to the abbey, followed by the Queen, the princesses, and the Court ladies, all so richly attired, that nothing so sumptuous was ever seen in France. The King and the bridegroom were dressed alike, in costumes covered with embroideries, pearls, and precious -stones, of inestimable value. Some of the accoutre- ments had cost ten .thousand crowns to fashion ; and yet at every one of the seventeen festivals given at the King's command after the marriage by- the lords and princes related to the bride, and other great nobles of the Court, all the lords and ladies wore fresh costumes, most of them fashioned of cloth of gold or silver, enriched with embroideries and precious stones, in great numbers and of great price. " The expenditure had been so great, taking into account the tourna- ments, masquerades, presents and devices, music and liveries, that it was commonly reported the King was over twelve hundred thousand crowns out of pocket. "On Tuesday, October 10, the Cardinal de Bourbon gave his entertain- ment at his residence at the Abbey of Saint-Germain-des-Pres, at vast expense. He caused a magnificent structure to be made on the Seine, a huge boat, in the form of a triumphal car, in which the King, the princes, the princesses, and the newly wedded pair were to pass from the Louvre to the Pre-aux-Clercs in solemn state. This splendid car was to be drawn along by other boats in the shape of sea-horses, Tritons, dolphins, whales, and other marine monsters, to the number of twenty-four. Those in front were to bear, concealed in their bellies, trumpets, clarions, cornets, violins, hautbois, and various excellent musicians, together with certain persons to 1 < ->» ; EQUESTRIAN BALLETS 77 cavalry, who Were flung to the ground and discomfited by the dancing of their horses when the flutes began. Things still more extraordinary are told of the Sybarites in this connection. They were, it is said, in the habit of following up their banquets with performances by horses so well trained, that they rose m-stic ruiAnnw* After * Picture by Toudouie on their hind legs at the sound of the flute, and executed a sort of dance in this attitude, following the rhythm of the music with great precision. Arrianus tells us that the art of dancing was taught to elephants in India. We know how extremely intelligent the animal is. It is said that in the reign of Domitian, an elephant, who had been corrected by his dancing-master for his unskilfulness, was found practising his steps by moonlight. * Reference it made in Pliny to ballets danced by elephants, and Martial writes : " Et mollcs dare jtma quod choreas Nigro bcllua nil negat magistro, Quis spectacula non putct dcorurn ? " 78 A HISTORY OF DANCING However this may be, equestrian ballets were seen in Florence in 1608 and in 1615, and at the magnificent tournaments of Louis XIII. and of Louis XIV. And in Baucher's Dictionnaire raisonne d 'Equitation ; published in 1833, I find : " Contredanse : Horsemanship, carried to a certain perfection, permits of the performance of all imaginable movements by horses, the formation of quadrilles, the complete execution of the figures of the contredanse. Thanks to this exercise, as useful as it is charming, our amazons can practice in the riding-house in the morning what they dance at night. Here, as in the ball-room, they may gain an easy and supple carriage, and display the grace and tact which they bring to everything they undertake. Nor will there henceforward be anything to hinder our young gallants from talking horsemanship to ladies. The latter will, on the contrary, be perfectly at home in such conversation ; they will, further, after a few lessons in the mounted contredanse, be able to manage a horse with every kind of skill and elegance. " In teaching it, I ask my pupils to wear a tiny spur. This, with the ordinary riding-whip, suffices to accurately direct the movements of the horse. Thus equipped, ladies execute without serious difficulty most of the manoeuvres hitherto believed to be within the powers of the best horsemen only. Therefore I invite my fellow riding-masters to enliven their lessons by this powerful means of emulation and attraction. " The combined use of spur and whip once mastered, pupils may at once turn from the paces of the haute ecole to those of the contredanse. The fear of leaving quadrilles incomplete will conduce to regularity of attendance ; so that within a limited time debutantes will fit themselves for the brilliant and public display of their skill." * A month after the De Joyeuse fete another great ballet was produced under the patronage of the Cardinal de Bourbon at his residence in the Abbaye de St.-Germain-des-Pres. It represented the triumph of Jupiter and Minerva. The queen figured in it as premiere danseuse. The Princess of Lorraine, the Duchesses de Mercosur, de Guise, de Nevers, and d'Aumale, were secondes danseuses, and appeared as Naiads. * Baucher goes on to describe his figures and their execution in elaborate technical detail, THE CARDINAL DE BOURBON'S BALLET 79 A novel feature in this ballet was a vast fountain, the twelve sides of which supported twelve Nereids and the musicians. Above this fountain, so transparent as to show a number of fish swimming in the water, rose another, surrounded by balustrades, between which were niches for twelve Nymphs. On the principal facade, dolphins, bearing up a crown, formed a throne for the Queen. Surmounting this prodigious edifice was a ball of AN OKX-AM UU Froc» * prist bjr Abraham Bom in tbc Bibliolhcquc Nationalc gold, five feet in diameter, beneath which other dolphins spouted water in glittering jets. The whole structure seemed to be drawn along by sea- horses, accompanied by Tritons and Sirens. The Queen and her suite of the corps dt ballet wore robes of crape embroidered with silver, and carried gold aigrettes in their hands. This display of dancing began at ten o'clock in the evening and went on till four next morning. It was on this occasion that small presents were first distributed among the dancers. The King began by giving the Queen a medal bearing on one side a dolphin, and on the other the punning inscription : 8o A HISTORY OF DANCING " r Delphinum ut delphinum rependas " : "I give a dolphin {dauphin), expecting a dauphin in return." The Duke of Guise received from the Duchesse de Nevers a medal, on which was engraved a sea-horse with these words : " Adversus semper in hostem " : " Always ready for the enemy." A BALL IN THE TIME OF LOUIS XIII. After Abraham Bosse M. de Senevois presented to the Duchesse de Guise a medal, bearing this legend : " Populi superat, prudentia fluctum " : " Discretion appeases the disquiet of the populace." The Marquis de Pons received from the Duchesse de Nevers a sort of whale, bearing her motto : " Sic famam jungere fame" which a poet freely translated : " Si vous voulez pour vous fixer la Renommc, • Occupez toujours ses cent voix." The Due d'Aumale received from the queen a Triton armed with a trident, riding on stormy waves, with the inscription : " Commovet et sedat" : "He troubles and he soothes them." BALLETS OF THE PAPACY 81 The branch of coral offered by Madame de Larchant to the Due de Joyeuse had for device an epigram : " Eadem natura remansit" : " In vain he changes, he remains the same." Professor Desrat thinks that this distribution of tokens may have been the origin of our modern custom of giving presents in the cotillion.* Pope Alexander VI. and the Borgias patronised ballets which recalled those of Messalina. In 1500, the sove- reign pontiffs already possessed a theatre with scenery and mechanical appliances ; and when Cardinal Bernardo Bib- biena had the comedy of La Calandra played before Leo X., certain decorations painted by Pcruzzi (the Sanquirico of the day) were much admired, t The Council of Trent was distinguished by a ballet given in honour of the son of Charles V. Cardinals and bishops took part in it, and it was opened by Cardinal Ercole of Mantua. * We know little of the chorcgraphic details of the Circe. One author tells us, anlcwljr enough, that the performers "danced face to face, back to back, in circle, in square, across, in line, fleeing, stopping, and falling into poses, interlacing themselves together." Which suggests to Professor Desrat the comment: "These steps must have been mainly glided through, since the Basse Danse still reigned supreme. And, as the caprcssion of the plot was always imperative in these ballets, the steps must have been a good deal eked out by gestures." t Caitil-Blazc. UMRKALDA DANCING WITH HKK GOAT From a Print in the DibliotW-que N&Uonalc 82 A HISTORY OF DANCING One of the greatest itinerant ballets ever seen was that organised by the Church itself in Portugal, in 1609, on the occasion of the beatification of Saint Ignatius Loyola. This ballet represented the capture of Troy ! It was also danced in Paris, where its first act, performed before the Church of Notre Dame de Lorette, introduced the famous horse, an enormous mass of wood, set in motion by a secret mechanism. Around this animal, dancers acted various epi- sodes of the siege. Then the troupe, followed by the gigantic horse, moved on to the ancient Place St. Roch, where was the church of the Jesuits. Scenery, set up round the Place, represented the city of Troy with its towers and high walls ; all of which fell down upon the approach of the horse. Then the Trojans advanced among the ruins, performing a martial dance like the Pyrrhic of Greece, surrounded by fireworks ; while the flanks of the horse poured forth rockets upon the smoking city. " A most beautiful spectacle," says Father Menestrier, " was the simultaneous discharge from eighteen trees, all loaded with similar fireworks." Next day, the ballet was continued in the second act by a nautical fete, wherein appeared four brigantines decorated richly with gold and with flags, on which were stationed choirs of singers. It was terminated by a grand procession, in which three hundred horsemen, dressed in the antique fashion, escorted ambassadors from the four quarters of the world to the College of the Jesuits. And the four quarters of the world themselves were represented in a final scene. " Having arrived," says Father Menestrier, " at the Place de la Marine BALLET OF THE FOUR QUARTERS OF THE GLOBE. ENTREE OF THE GRAND KHAN After a Drawing in the Bibliotheque Nationale 3* a M < ■ i ,s si B § h tJ s ■ " 5 84 A HISTORY OF DANCING (at Lisbon, I suppose), the ambassadors descended from the brigantines and mounted certain superbly ornamented cars. Upon these they advanced to the college, preceded by several trumpeters, and accompanied by the three hundred cavaliers. After which, various persons, clothed in the manner of different countries, performed a very agreeable ballet, forming four troupes or quadrilles to represent the four quarters of the world. The kingdoms and provinces, represented by as many genii, marched with these various nations and peoples be- fore the cars of the ambassadors of Europe, of Asia, of Africa, and of America, each of whom was escorted by seventy cavaliers. The troupe of America was the foremost, displaying, among other dances, a very whimsical one of young children disguised as apes, monkeys, and parrots. Before this car rode twelve dwarfs upon ambling nags. The car of Africa was drawn by a dragon. Variety and richness of apparel was not the least among the attractions of this fete ; some persons wearing precious stones to the value of over two hundred thousand crowns." Under the Good King Henry, dancing inclined chiefly to jollity. The Bearnese have always been famous dancers. Henry IV. excelled in the Tricotet, to which he even added a variation that was called after him. The Tricotet was a very ancient and merry dance ; it demanded a motion of the feet quick as that of needles in knitting — whence the name, says La Monnoye, in his glossary of Christmas songs. Henry danced it, we are told, to a favourite tune of his, the words of which were : "J'aimons lcs filles, Et j'aimons lc bon vin. De nos bons drilles BALLET AT THE CHATEAU DE BIcfcTRE. ENTREE OF DRUNKEN PEASANTS After a Drawing in the Bibliotheque Nationale TRICOTETS Voila tout le refrain : J'aimons Ics filles, Et j'aimons le bon vin. 8* These Tricotets were performed in many ballets to airs divided into ySJUAXTS DASCK After a sixteenth-century Print in the Bibliothcque N four couplets and entrees. The last of them was danced to the tune Vive Henri £>uatre, which has remained so popular in France. Gardel intro- duced it in 1780, in his ballet of Alinette a la Cour, where it had an immense success. So well did the step suit the words, that at its performance the whole audience burst out all but simultaneously into the chorus : " Vive Henri £>uatre, vive ce roi vail/ant ! " * The grave Sully himself supervised the royal fetes. Touching this we find the following passage in his CMemoires: * Profcijor Dcsrat. 86 A HISTORY OF DANCING " While we had Henry of Beam with us, little thought was given to anything save to merrymaking and gallantry ; inexhaustible opportunities for which were afforded him by the relish Madame, the king's sister, had for these things. It was this princess who taught me my trade of courtier, to which I was then very new. She was good enough to have me invited to all entertainments ; and I remember that she was pleased to teach THE EGG-DANCE After a Picture by Aertzen in the Amsterdam Museum me herself the steps of a ballet afterwards performed with much magnificence. . . . These sports and shows, which needed a certain amount of preparation, always took place in the Arsenal. ... I had a spacious hall erected for the purpose." In the twenty years of Henry IV.'s reign (1589 to 16 10), over eighty ballets were performed at Court, besides balls and masquerades. One, the so-called Sorcerers' Masquerade, was given on February 23, 1597, the first Sunday in Lent ; the king had a passion for masquerades, and frequented all the assemblies and balls in Paris. " He patronised," says L'Estoile, " the salons of Madame de Saint-Andre, of Zamet, and of many another. Wherever he went he always had with him the Marquise de Verneuil, who used frequently to take off his mask and kiss him, wherever he might be." * * Castil-Blaze, THE MOUNTAIN BALLET 8? A . /P&&: ■tJ^^L %v "^^J k\ ' IB franca Iritya. Iritcllitio It was while at one of these fetes that news reached him of the taking of Amiens by the Spaniards. " This is God's chastisement ! " he exclaimed. " Long enough have I followed the fashion of the kings of France ; 'tis time I play the King of Navarre ! " Then, turning to his beautiful Gabrielle, he added : " Fair mistress, I must betake me to other arms, and mount and ride upon another warfare." The Court of Louis XIII. was somewhat gloomy. The Due de Nemours composed ballets to enliven it, one of these being the Ballet of the Gouty. To assist at this fantastic performance, given in 1630, the duke had him- self carried in on a litter, from which he beat time with his baton. The Mountain Ballet, performed in August, 1631, was also characteristically whimsical. The scenery consisted of five great mountains — the Windy, the Resounding, the Luminous, the Shadowy, and the Alps. In the midst was a certain Field of Glory, of which the inhabitants of these five mountains wished to take possession. Fame opened the ballet and explained its subject. Disguised as an old woman, she rode an ass and carried a wooden trumpet. Then the mountains opened their sides, and quadrilles of dancers came out, in flesh-coloured attire, having bellows in their hands, and windmills on their heads. These represented the Winds. Others rushed out, headed by the nymph Echo, wearing bells for head-dresses, and on their bodies lesser bells, and carrying drums. Falsehood hobbled forward on a wooden leg, with masks hung over his coat, and a dark lantern in his hand. After these came the inhabitants of the Luminous Mountain — Sleep, and Dreams, and True Fame (as opposed to the farcical Fame of the wooden GBOTESQUI DAXCEU After an Engraving by Callot in the l>ibliothi'.|ue Nalioiialc 88 A HISTORY OF DANCING trumpet) — and certain horsemen in brilliant costumes, who put to flight the Winds, the Echoes, &c. The king himself danced in certain ballets of the period, which were somewhat coarse in their buffoonery. Such were the " Ballet of Sir Balderdash " and the " Grand Ball of the Dowager of Confusion and her Darling of Sillytown " (Ballet de Maitre Galimathias et le Grand Bal de la douairiere de Billebahaut et de son fanfan de Sotteville). Cardinal Richelieu, anxious to introduce spectacles of a somewhat higher order, had the Grand Ballet of the Prosperity of the Arms of France put on the stage. In the first act, which passed in hell, there were to be seen Pride, Guile, Mur- der, Tyranny, Disorder, Ambition, and Pluto, sur- rounded by Fates and Furies. The second act returned to earth, where Italian, Spanish, and French Rivers engaged in mortal combat. Then came the capture of Arras. In the third act appeared Sirens, Nereids, Tritons, America, and a procession of the gods of Olympus. This was all, as we see, very tedious and incoherent. We have already alluded to those personalities which abounded in the plays of Aristophanes and contemporary Greek poets. Ballets, somewhat akin in this respect to the Greek comedies, were not unknown in France, and rapidly degenerated into mere vulgar buffooneries. A ballet, given in 1616 at Court, recalled the first thymelic ballets by its pointed allusions to the arrest of the Prince of Conde. The passage is in a dialogue between Damon and Sylvia : 'Damon. Who could see the lilies of your face without longing to serve you ? Sylvia. Yet you would dare to steal them from me ! Damon. Oh, sweet it is to see the myrtle that crowns you ! Sylvia. It is a crown to be admired, not clutched at ! Am \f iKfBflL •^^^ J^ 'V* Va't 1iii14tB *il IW Slpp^s y J^^^l Sracuchirfsrf Qian Wrtt* irtn' GROTESQUE DANCERS After an Engraving by Callot in the Bibliotheque Nationale rcaro»*» at thb covkt or tn* <.«axd uiici or tvkanv dikinc tii« carnival or 1616 Afur la EagrariM by Calk* in lb. BiblioiMqa* NatKwak M 90 A HISTORY OF DANCING But the Court had seen ballets of a higher order than this. " Rarely," says Menestrier, " has there been seen a ballet more superb than that performed in the Salle de Bourbon, March 19, 16 15, for the marriage of Madame with the King of Spain. Thirty genii (being the chamber and chapel musicians of the King), suspended in the air, heralded the coming of Minerva, the Queen of Spain. This goddess, surrounded by fourteen nymphs, her companions, appeared in a mighty gilded car drawn by two Cupids. A band of Amazons accompanied the car and made a concord of lutes. Then Minerva danced to five separate tunes, several figures to each tune. And in a sixth tune, all voices and lutes and violins joined. Then Minerva and her nymphs danced together. Forty persons were on the stage at once, thirty high in the sky, and six suspended in mid-air ; all of these dancing and singing at the same time." The Duke of Savoy brought the carnival of 1697 to a close by the ballet of Circe driven from her Dominions. He gave it as an entertain- ment to the ladies of the Court. Circe and her attendants danced while " they wrought their enchantments with wands, turnings, and intertwinings." There came twelve rocks dancing various figures, and in the end heaping themselves upon each other, so as to make but one mountain, from the sides of which issued dogs, cats, tigers, lions, boars, deer, wolves, which mingled their cries, their mewings, their roarings, and their howlings with the sounds of the orchestra ; the whole forming " the most grotesque concert ever heard," says Father Menestrier. This hurly-burly over, a cloud descended from heaven and covered all the mountain ; and the twelve blocks of rock, heaped upon each other, transformed themselves miraculously into twelve brilliant cavaliers, who executed a dance. It became customary to organise splendid entertain- ments in honour of all important events. This same year a ballet was danced at the Court of Savoy, on the Duke's birthday, the subject of which was Prometheus stealing Fire from Heaven. In 1628, the students of the College of Rheims gave a ballet to celebrate the taking of La Rochelle, which event brought about the political unity of France. The subject was the capture of the Car of Glory by the great COURT BALLETS 9i Theander. A certain Black Tower was infested by giants, who challenged all knights-errant to fight for the famous car. This tower was environed by sorceries, so that its gates could not be forced, save by the blast of an enchanted horn. Subject and allusions were alike puerile : the Black Tower THE INFERNAL DEITIE4. A KENE After aa THE BAU.Kt FEEFORMEI* AT the court of Tuscany IN |6i6 by Calkx in the Bil.liothc.]ue Nationals was La Rochelle, and the sorceries that guarded it were Heresy and Rebellion. At Savoy again, in 1634, they danced a "moral ballet," for the birthday of Cardinal Richelieu, the theme of which was Truth, the enemy of Seeming, upheld by Time. • It opened with " a chorus of those False Rumours and Suspicions which usher in Seeming and Falsehood," writes Father Menestrier, who shall speak for himself, that we may lose nothing of the raciness of his description : " These were represented by actors dressed as cocks and hens, who sang 92 A HISTORY OF DANCING a dialogue, partly Italian, partly French, with a refrain of clucking and crowing. The hens sang : " Su gli albori matutini, Cot, cot, cot, cot, cot cantando, Col cucurros s'inchini, E bisbigli mormorando Fra i sospetti, e fra i rumori, Cu, cu, cu, cu, cu, cu, cu, Salutiam del novo sol gli almi splendori." The cocks replied : "Faisant la guerre au silence Cot, cot, cot, avec nos chants, Cette douce violence Ravit les cieux et les champs ; Et notre inconstant hospice, Cot, cot, cot, cot, cot, cot, cot, Couvre d'apparence. un subtil artifice." " After this song of cocks and hens the background opened, and Seeming appeared, seated upon a huge cloud and accompanied by the Winds. She had the wings and the great tail of a peacock, and was covered with mirrors. She hatched eggs from which issued Pernicious Lies, Deceptions, Frauds, Agreeable Lies, Flatteries, Intrigues, Ridiculous Lies, Jocosities, Little Fibs. " The Deceptions were inconspicuously clad in dark colours, with serpents hidden among flowers. The Frauds, clothed in fowlers' nets, had bladders which they burst while dancing. The Flatteries were disguised as apes ; the Intrigues, as crayfishers, carrying lanterns on their heads' and in their hands ; the Ridiculous Lies, as crippled beggars on wooden legs. " Then Time, having put to flight Seeming with her train of Lies, had the nest opened from which these had issued ; and there was disclosed a great hour-glass. And out of this hour-glass Time raised up Truth, who summoned the Hours, and danced the grand ballet with them." But let us now return to the dances, properly so called, from which theatrical choregraphy has caused us to wander. Tabourot, in his Orchesographie, describes two dominant types of THE BASSE DANSE 93 dancing as existing towards the close of the Middle Ages. These were the Basse Danse, or Low Dance, and the Danse Baladine, or High Dance. The Basse Danse was grave and slow, ori- ginally a monopoly of the aristocracy ; it had, however, descended among the common people in his time, and he notes its abandon- ment by the upper classes with regret. " It has been out of fashion this forty or fifty years, but I foresee that wise and modest matrons will THE TORCH DANCE After u Enjrarimf by Crispia dc Pu ia the BibUothi^ua Nalioiulc yet return to it." The Branle, the Pavane, the Gaillarde, the Courante, and, above all, the Volte, were extremely popular. The measure of the Basse Danse was triple. It was accompanied by the hautboy, or long flute, and the tabour.* The Basse Danse was divided as follows : i. The Reverence. 2. The Branle. 3. The Passes. 4. The Tordion. * "The labour, accompanied by the long flute, was, in the days of our fathers, employed because one player could manage both instruments together, and produce entire symphony and accord, without need of further expense, or the hiring of other musicians, such at violinists and the like." — (Thoinot Arbeau : Tabourot.) 94 A HISTORY OF DANCING GENTLEFOLKS DANCING After an Engraving by Theodore de Bry in the Bibliothcque Nationale The Tordion was independent of the others. Rapid jumping move- ments were naturally excluded from all of them. Tabourot lays down the following precepts concerning the Basse Danse : " When you have entered the place where is the company awaiting the dance, you will choose an honest damosel according to your inclination. Then, doffing your hat or cap with your left hand, you will offer her your right hand to lead her out to dance. She, discreet and well-instructed, will give her left hand, and rise to follow you. You will conduct her to the end yj of the hall in view of everybody, and warn the musicians to play a Basse Danse ;( otherwise they may inadvertently strike up another kind of dance., When they begin to play you begin to dance. And see, in demanding of them a Basse Danse, that they understand it to be a regular and usual one. But if the air of one Basse Danse suit you better than another, you may give them the beginning of the song." Thfexworthy Tabourot gives some humorous counsel touching deportment " Having mastered your steps and movements and a good cadence, do not in company keep your eyes on your feet, bending your head to see if you dance well. Carry yourself uprightly, and with an assured look. Spit and blow your nose sparingly ; but if necessity constrain you thereto, turn your face another way, and use a clean handkerchief. " Let your speech be gracious, gentle, and well-bred. Let your hands hang easily, neither as if dead, nor yet as if in travail to gesticulate. Be neatly dressed, with your hose pulled tightly up, and clean shoes. " You may, if you will, lead out two damosels ; but one is sufficient ; for, as the proverb says, ' He who leads two leads one too manyf^Likewise when you stand at the end of the hall with a damosel, another may set THE TORDION 9* PEASANT* DANCING After an Engraving by Theodore de Bry in the Bibliothcque Xalionalc himself at the other end with his mistress, and when you approach each other in dancing, you must either retreat or turn aside." The Gaillarde, otherwise called the Romanesque, had its origin in the Roman Campagna, where it is still popular, according to Kastner. It was a Basse Danse, unknown to the common people, patronised by the gentry, and danced like others of its class to the music of the tabour and hautboy. Hear the good Tabourot again : "Those in the towns who now (in 1588) dance the Gaillarde, dance it tumultuously, nor do they attempt more than five steps. In the beginning it was danced more discreetly ; the dancer and his damosel, after making their bows, performed a turn or two simply. Then the dancer, loosing his damosel, danced apart to the end of the room. . . . Young people arc apter to dance it than old fellows like me." The Gaillarde was long a favourite dance. The Gaillardes most in use were : // traditore mi fa morire, L ' Antoinette, La Milanaise, and Baisont- nous, ma belle. This last should have been the most popular ; " for," says Tabourot, "we may conjecture that it gave graceful occasion for a delectable variation." The Tordion. or Tourdion, generally danced after the Basse Danse, to which its livelier rhythm made a diversion, differed little from the Gaillarde. Its steps were smoother and more gliding ; the performers walked and sidled more than they danced. Tabourot gives some hints as to the manner of dancing it : " So long as the musicians continue to play, you must change from foot to foot, and keep time reciprocally. In dancing the Tordion you always hold the hand of your partner, and he who dances it too vigorously will THE VOLTE 99 much distress and jolt his damosel. When the music ceases, you will bow to your partner, restore her to her place with gentleness, and, taking leave of her, thank her for the honour she has conferred on you." The Haute Danse, or Danse Baladine, had none of the stateliness and gravity of the Basse Danse ; it was the free and easy dancing of the ■ L'RAL It LI". ii I After Adncn Morcau populace, and included Rondes, Bourrees, Farandoles, and all sorts of fantastic pantomime. As for the Volte, which gradually superseded the Basse Danse, it dates from the time of Henry III., who, says Professor Desrat, was the first to dance the waltz " a trots temps" under the name of the Volte. A description of its earliest appearance, given in Tabourot's Orcbeso- graphic (1589), clearly defines the character of this dance. The Volte, known later as the Valse or Waltz, is of French origin : it came from Provence to delight the Court of the Valois. ioo A HISTORY OF DANCING In writing of the Volte, the good-humoured Tabourot shows a spice of malice : " The damosel, her skirts fluttering in the air, has displayed her chemise, and even her bare leg. And you shall return her to her seat, where, put what face on it she may, she will find her shaken-up brain full of swimmings and whirlings ; and you will not, perhaps, be much better. I leave you to consider if it be decorous for a young girl thus to straddle and stride, and whether, in this Volte, honour and health be not hazarded. . . . you may pursue the Volte thus through many turnings, whirling now to the right, now to the left." The Branle, according to Jean Jacques Rousseau, was extremely popular down to the seventeenth century. It was probably the oldest of our figure dances. A ball would commonly begin with a Branle d'Entree and terminate with a Branle de Sortie, like the modern Boulangere — a dance accompanied by singing, as were all Branles. The refrain was repeated at the end of each couplet, both in the Boulangere and in the Branle, and in both the dancer embraced his partner. " This is perhaps the dance which has left the most appreciable traces on our popular amusements and our children's games," says M. Celler in his Origines de TOfera. He instances in support of this opinion the Boulangere, the Carillon de Dunkerque, the Chevalier du Guet, Vive Henri Quatre, and so on. Rameau, in his Maitre a Danser, describes the gravity of the Branle at the Court of Louis XIV., while Tabourot shows it as full of gaiety and animation under Henry III. Tabourot's counsels and instructions are always amusing : " The Branle," he says, " is performed to four bars of the song, accompanied by the flute. In the first bar, the dancer turns to the left, keeping the feet together and moving the body gently ; during the second, he faces the spectators on the right ; during the third, he again looks to the left ; and during the fourth, to the right once more, while stealing a sweet and discreet glance at his damosel. " And first of all in the Double Branle, you will walk a double to the left side, and then a double to the right side. You know well that a double consists of three steps and then feet together. To perform it you will, after making your bow for the first bar, keep the right foot firm and steady, './/in' throuohcml //if ' ,lr Si//,- '/« //•/.< THE BRANLE 10! throwing to one side the left foot, which will for the time be held in the air. For the second bar, the left foot is the firm one, and the right is the one extended, the leg being nearly straight. The third bar is a repetition of the first. For the fourth bar, bring the feet together. These four steps, performed in four bars or beats of the tabour, we call the double to the TMl: Ml After Adrica Moceiu of Moan. BooMod Valadon and Co. left ; and the same you will perform to the right side, reversing the preceding double. "The players upon instruments are all accustomed to begin a ball by the Double or Common Branle ; after that cometh the Simple Branle ; then the Gay Branle ; and last of these are the Branles called Branles of Burgundy, and Branles of Champagne. This sequence of four sorts of Branles is appropriate to the different persons who take part in them. The old step gravely through Double and Simple Branles ; young married 102 A HISTORY OF DANCING people dance Gay Branles ; and the youngest lightly trip the Branles of Burgundy : all, however, doing their best." Branles were at one time so widely popular that almost every province had its own. Among the best known were those of Burgundy and of Gascony (mentioned by Queen Margot in her twenty-eighth Nouvelle), and the Branles of the Haut Barrois, of Poitou, of Scotland, of Brittany, of Malta, and others. There were also the Pea Branle, the Mustard Branle, the Rubbish Branle, and so on. In the Laundresses' Branle, every one clapped hands at intervals to imitate the noise of the beetles. In the Hermits' Branle, the couples saluted their neighbours to right and left, crossing their hands on their breasts, after the manner of monks. A figure in the children's Round, the Bridge of Avignon, recalls this Branle. In the Wooden Shoe or Horses' Branle, the performers stamped noisily on the ground, a peculiarity we meet with again in the Bourrees of Auvergne and Limousin. In the Branle of the Official, we already find an admixture of the Volte ; it was slower than others, but in its last bars, the dancer took his partner by the waist and jumped her into the air. I have seen the same thing in the popular dances of Roussillon. Queen Margaret of Valois excelled in the Torch Branle. This dance had a most aristocratic vogue. " A dancer, holding a flambeau in one hand, chose and danced with a partner. Then he handed her the flambeau. She in turn selected a gentleman, with whom she danced. The latter took the torch ; and so on with the rest."* A survival of this is to be found, thinks Professor Desrat, in the Cotillion figure called the Knight of the Sorrowful Countenance. But here the lady returns the candle to a cavalier whom she rejects. We must not forget the Gavotte Branle, " in which the damosel is not to be lifted, nevertheless she is to be kissed," says Tabourot; adding, in token of its novelty : " Had this Branle existed in my young days, I had not failed to have taken note of it." The Bocane was fashionable at Court under Louis XIII. and during the Regency of Anne of Austria. According to Piganiol de la Force, its * Vcstris. r-rr"l r-T n / (Eil«it. dct Ecbol du Tempt Pk.ij _ A. DwW & Ff]>, i&taan) THE PA VANE IOJ inventor was Jacques Cordier, surnamed Bocan, a dancing-master absolutely illiterate, and even ignorant of music. He was crook-shanked and gouty, his hands and feet being distorted by his malady. Yet this poor wretch was the wonder of his age, playing the violin miraculously, and composing charming airs. He taught all the great ladies ; among his pupils were the queens of France, Spain, England, Poland, and Denmark. Charles I. of THE roOL* DAKCK After * Ikiotc by P. CoM* in lb* Hague Mutcum - England held him in high esteem, heaped presents upon him, and invited him often to his table. " The Pavanc," writes Madame Laura Fonta, " was a noble and beautiful dance, in high favour from about 1530 until the minority of Louis XIV'., who preferred the Courante. Historians differ as to its origin : some refer it to Spain, others to Padua. " The Pavane, although dating, so far as its mimetic movements arc concerned, from the thirteenth century, appears to have gradually assimilated the character of the Basse Danse. It was, however, both in its step and its time (which was duple) less grave than the latter ; and it was io6 A HISTORY OF DANCING undoubtedly an amiable kind of dance, since it permitted at its wind-up • the stealing of a kiss ' from one's damosel, instead of the mere ' discreet ogling ' of the Basse Danse." This majestic Pavane was a dance of courts ; all the princely caste of ANDANTE Europe adopted it ; it was a point of honour to dance the Pavane gracefully. Admiring crowds gathered about the dancers. And it was truly beautiful to see kings, princes, and great lords, draped in fine cloaks tilted up by swords, and queens and princesses in robes of state, held up by maids of honour, advancing to the sound of instruments, and pacing in cadence, rather than dancing, with a pomp and a majesty as of gods and goddesses. " Splendeur doree et rose et bleue D'un innombrable diamant, Le paon miraculeusement THE PAVANE 107 Developpcra son ample queue ; En la largeur de ses deplis Tout un ctal d'orfcvrc tremble, Et la Pavane lui resserable, Mais avec des pieds plus jolis ! " One understands why certain authors derive the name from the Latin pavo, peacock ; for these dancers recalled the slow strutting of that bird of marvellous plumage as he spreads the glittering sheen of his tail. Thoinot Arbeau tells how the earliest Pavanes were sung and danced by their performers to the music of tabours, viols, hautbois, and sackbuts, in duple time. Marguerite de Valois, whom Brantome calls " the sweetest lady on earth," was as supreme in the Pavane as in the Volte. Henry III., too, distinguished himself in this dance, among his minions, at the sumptuous fetes of his Court. We have noted the various phases through which dancing passed in the Middle Ages, the sixteenth century, and the early years of the seventeenth. We shall see it becoming grave and pompous at the Court of Le Rot Soleil, like that monarch himself, who was, indeed, a proficient in the art, and we shall have yet another opportunity of pointing out how faithfully this graceful pastime reflects the character of different epochs in our history. dmci or mum Fiwa * MS. in ib« BiWotUquc Nuiouk THE MINUET After a Picture by Toudouze CHAPTER IV 'Dancing in the " G-reat Century" — grand 'Ballets under Louis XIV. — (Masked 'Balls — The Tavane — The Courante — The Cjavotte — The Chacone — The Saraband — The cillemande — The Passepied — The Passacaille JATHERINE DE' MEDICI, Henry IV., and Cardinal Richelieu, passionate admirers of choregraphic spectacles, had encouraged all such displays, and made them fashionable. Louis XIV. supported them even more actively than his predecessors. The continuity of such pageants at his Court and in his capital caused dancing to be finally accepted as one of the habits of LOUIS XIV. IN BALLETS 109 French society. The influence he exercised on the art was strongly felt throughout the eighteenth century, and has persisted to our own times. There was a great deal of dancing under Le Roi Sole: I. " On n'a de plaisir que d'cxerccr des violons, Danser un pcu dc chaque danse, Et lcs tricotcts d'importancc," a covmn tx thi uuit or night niWMs !■ WSJ said a rhymer of the day. I '4 ^h! ^F Choregraphic spec- y tacles had hitherto been confined exclu- sively to Courts. Louis XIV., who fre- quently figured on the stage himself threw open the doors of the theatre to the public, which soon ^g developed a passion for the new amusement ; and, under the impulse given it from such exalted quarters, dancing, no less than the other arts, shone with unparalleled lustre. The ballet de- veloped all sorts of novel combinations and happy audacities, resulting in marvellous effects. Poets and musicians could count most surely on the King's favours by de- voting themselves to inventions of this class, as Bcnserade, Lulli, and even Molicre himself discovered. VIV. At t.l RM Xttrit IN 111! SALtST or mi.nr I'trfurmtd In 165) I IO A HISTORY OF DANCING The grand ballet d'action, which gave rise to a considerable development in theatrical dancing, dominated the choregraphy of the cen- tury of Louis XIV. But there was also much dancing of a more in- timate kind, Minuets, Gavottes, Courantes, Pavanes, Passacailles, and Passepieds. The middle-classes danced the Pavane, Cotillions, Con- tredanses, and Brandons ; the people affected Branles, Rondes, and the ancient rustic measures. In 1 66 1, the Royal Academy of Dancing was founded by royal decree. But the appointed mem- bers of this new Areopagus took very little interest in it, and their. proceedings were chiefly confined to revels in the tavern of l'Epee-de-Bois, which they had chosen as their meeting-place. Besides the ballets introduced in the operas of Lulli and other musicians of the period, a great many ballets were danced at the Tuileries, and others at the Louvre, at Versailles, and at Fontainebleau. In 165 1, when the King was thirteen, he danced in public for the first time in the Masque of Cassandra. It was not until 1670 that he ceased to appear on the stage. It is said that the following couplets in Racine's Britannicus caused him to discontinue the practice : BALLET DANCER OF THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY After a Print in the Bibliotheque Nationale " Pour toute ambition, pour vertu singulicre, II excelle a conduire un char dans la carricre, LOUIS XIV. IN BALLETS in A disputer des prii indigncs dc ses mains, A se donner lui-mcme en spectacle am Romains, A venir prodiguer sa voix sur un th6atrc, A reciter des chants qu'il veut qu'on idolatre." The King generally figured as one of the gods, but he occasionally appeared in a less ex- alted character. In the Triumph of Bacchus, for instance, he took the part of a thief, excited by copious libations. In the Ballet of the Trosperity of the Arms of France, the King played the lead- ing part, and appeared surrounded by his whole Court. This spectacle caused some surprise among the Parisians, who came in crowds to see him. As was customary in all the Court ballets, the King wore a mask typical of the character represented, after the fashion of the classic stage.* Father Mcnestrier describes this ballet, an extraordinary jumble of the siege of Casscl, the taking of Arras, Flemish topers, Spanish and French soldiers fighting to music, and the gods of Olympus ! I- »l I I I DANCE* or I HI. -ntMI.ISIII CKKTIKV After a Print in the Bibliothcquc Nationalc • Girdcl the elder was the first dancer who appeared on the stage without a mask. Strange to sajr, this innovation was not much to the taste of the spectators. It persisted however, and two yean later, when Gactan Vcstris was urged to resume his mask, he could not make up his mind to do so. I 12 A HISTORY OF DANCING It would be tedious to enumerate all the ballets given at the Court. Suffice it to say that the King danced in twenty-seven grand ballets, not to mention the intermezzi of lyrical tragedies and comedy-ballets. "Dans des ballets brillants que la France admirait Entoure de sa cour, lui-meme il figurait." We may instance, as a typical example of such performances, the famous Ballet du Carrousel, held on a large open space in front of the Tuileries in 1662. On this occasion, royalty was well represented in the cast. The King danced at the head of the Romans, his brother led the Persians, the Prince de Conde commanded the Turks, and the Due de Guise the Americans. In the Grand Ballet du Roi, performed at the Louvre in 1664, Mercury, Venus, and Pallas sang a prologue. Cupids, disguised as blacksmiths' appren- tices, issued from Vulcan's cave to the clang of hammers. Venus then appeared, showing Mark Antony and Cleopatra in a galley drawn by Cupids, while a naval engagement raged on the horizon. Then came Pluto, carrying off Proserpine, Nymphs, and more Cupids. The gardens of Ceres, and of Armida and Rinaldo appeared in turn. It was one of the most marvellous ballets of the period. The year following, the poetical ballet of the Birth and Power of Venus was given at Versailles. In this, of course, the gods and goddesses appeared in full force. " Neptune and Thetis, followed by Tritons, who acted as chorus, MLLE. SUBLIGNY From an old Print in the Bibliotheque Nationale A COVCT HALLUT Eagranaf by ttkmtim U dot ia Um BibKotMqa ii4 A HISTORY OF DANCING expressed their pride and delight that a goddess of incomparable beauty, destined to reign throughout the world, should be born in their realm. Neptune began thus : " Taisez-vous, flots impctueux, Vents, devenez respcctueux. La mere des Amours sort de ma vaste empire. Voyez comme elle brille en s'elevant si haut, Jeune, aimable, charmante, et faite comme il faut Pour imposer des lois a tout ce qui respire. > Quelle gloire pour la Mer, D'avoir ainsi produit la merveille du monde, Cette divinite, sortant du sein de l'onde, N'y laisse rien de froid, n'y laisse rien d'amcr. Quelle gloire pour la Mer ! " Venus then rises from the sea on a throne of pearl, surrounded by Nereids, and is presently car- ried up to heaven by Phosphor and the Hours. The marine gods and goddesses press for- ward to see her. The Winds arrive with a rushing sound. iEolus, apprehensive of the destruction they generally work, locks them up in their cave. Castor and Pollux de- clare that navigation shall henceforth be prosperous, in honour of this birth. Sea- captains, merchants, and sailors rejoice at their appear- ance. The Zephyrs, who had left the other winds to bring the happy news to earth, an- nounce it first to Spring, From a Print lu ihc BiWiotl.eque Nationale i O' THE BALLET OF HERCULES IN LOVE "? Frolic, and Laughter, who hasten to devote themselves to the new divinity. Flora and Pales, with a band of shepherds and shepherdesses, swear to obey no laws but hers. The Ballet of the 'Birth of Venus ended here, the second part illustrating her power. The Graces proclaim it, declaring that the sway of the goddess extends through- out the whole world. The rest of this allegory, composed for the late Madame of France, was made up of some dozen entrees of Cupids, Jupiter, Apollo, Bacchus, Sacrificing Priests, Philosophers, Poets, Heroes and Heroines subject to Beauty, and the episode of Orpheus seeking Eurydice in hell." The Ballet of Hercules in Love was given on the occasion of the King's marriage in 1660; it is memorable for its ingenious mechanism. The first tableau showed a rocky region with a back- ground of sea and mountains. Fourteen rivers under the sway of France appeared reclining upon the mountains. Clouds descended from the sky, and parted near the ground, disclosing fifteen women, symbolical of the fifteen imperial houses from which the royal family of France was derived. These, after perform- ing a stately dance, were again enveloped by clouds, and carried up to heaven. Then mountains, rocks, sky and sea, moon and stars, sang in chorus, praising the King and Queen. The Ballet of Cupid and Bacchus, the music of which was by Lulli, and the dances by Beauchamp, was performed before the ladies of the Court in AN ACTRESS DANCING From * Kvcntecnth century Prim in the Bibliothcque Nation*!* n6 A HISTORY OF DANCING 1672, by the Master of the Horse, the Duke of Monmouth, the Due de Villeroy, and the Marquis de Rossey. On February 14, 1667, Benserade's ballet of The Muses was given at Sai nt- Germain- en- Laye. In this ballet, Moliere's Melicerte and Pastorale Comique were performed as interludes at first, and were replaced afterwards by his little comedy, Le Sicilien. A masque of Moors followed after the comedy, and brought the ballet to a close. Four noble Moors and four Moorish ladies were ' represented by the King, M. Le Grand, the Marquis de Villeroy, the Mar- quis de Rossan, Madame Henrietre of England, Mile, de la V a 1 1 i e r e , M'm e . d e Rochefort, and Mile. de Brancas. A few months later Le Sicilien was played at Moliere's theatre in the Palais-Royal by the author, La Grange, La Thorilliere, Du Croisy, Mile, de Brie and Mile. Moliere.* THE BALLET OF THE TRIUMPH OF LOVE From an old Print in the Bibliothique Nationale * On January 20, 1 86 J, this ballet-comedy was revived at the Comcdie Francaise. Lulli's intermezzi were replaced by a Pas-de-trois, danced by Mile. Nathan, Morando, and Genat, of the Opera. The dance called the Swallow, which forms part of the ballet, is suggested by Isidore, one of the characters, who asks : "What gratitude do I owe you, if you but change my present slavery to one still harsher, and do not allow me any taste of liberty?" This dance is an imitation of a game played by Greek girls, the tradition of THE BALLET OF IMPATIENCE "7 In the Triumph of Love, performed in 1 68 1, women first appeared on the stage. Their parts had hitherto been taken by men. Quinaut and Lulli broke down the tra- dition, and persuaded some of the greatest ladies of the Court to play, among others, the Dauphiness, the Prin- cesse de Conti, and Mile, de Nantes. Impatience was a comic ballet, composed of a series of disconnected scenes, all bearing upon the title of the piece. It was very curious. Famished persons burnt their mouths in their haste to swallow their soup ; fowlers waited in vain by their snares ; impatient creditors appeared, litigants, &c. Dupin, who played the part of an owl, recited these verses: " Mon petit bec est asscz beau, Et le reste de ma figure Montre que je suis un oiseau, Qui n'est pas de mauvais augurc." COMIC DANCER IN PEASANT s IIKESS From a Print in Ihc RibliothoHic Xalionale which survived till the eighteenth century. (Sec the letters of Andre" Chcnicr's mother.) In this game a young girl held a swallow captive. It escaped, she and her companions pursued, and finally recaptured it. At the last performance of the piece, which was given at the Opera on March 19, 1892, during the Franco-Russian fttti, for the benefit of city ambulances and the sufferers in the Russian famine, the Moorish masqueradcrs were supplemented by four couples of Harlequins, four couples of Louis XIII. pages and waiting- maids, and eight couples of gardeners, male and female. They danced a Rigaudon by Rameau, a Chacone by Lulli, a Sicilicnnc by Bach, and a Forlanc from Campra's F.'tti Viwiiitnnti. 1 1 8 A HISTORY OF DANCING J ^•^ a ^r r*K u^Bk. ■ . "^ • 1 Ta^^SBB^t^JT ^ ^ fe S v r A H^&^« IV Mr- H *\ - 1 I&JjP ^^^^^M Jr W^BI The following couplet occurred in Louis XIV. 's part : " De la terre et dc moi qui prcndra la mcsure, Trouvera que la terre est moins grande que moi." In this series of curious and remarkable ballets we must include that of The Game of Piquet, an intermezzo in Thomas Corneille's Triomphe des Dames, played in 1676. The four knaves appeared first with their halberds, to pre- pare the stage and place the spectators. Then came the kings, leading the queens, whose trains were borne by slaves. These slaves represented Tennis, Billiards, Dice, and Backgammon, and were dressed in appropriate costumes ; the dresses of the kings, queens, and knaves were exactly copied from ordinary playing-cards. They proceeded to dance with their suites of aces, eights, nines, &c, in com- binations forming tierces, quarts, and quints; eight champions in the background represented the ecart, or reserve of cards. Red and black cards then ranged themselves in opposite lines, and finished the ballet by a general dance, in which the colours intermingled. Sainte-Foix is of opinion that this intermezzo was not a novelty, and that Thomas Corneille or his collaborators took the idea from a grand ballet performed at the Court of Charles VII., which suggested the game of piquet. This piece of information is offered to those persons who play .piquet every day, unconscious of its origin (Castil-Blaze). There was some idea of reviving this ballet at Angers, in 1892, for the quingentenary of the invention of playing-cards. MLLE. DUFANT From a Print in the Bibliothcque Nalionale \ FAMOUS DANCERS UNDER LOUIS XIV. 119 All the historical and allegorical ballets of the reign of Louis XIV. were distinguished by the extraordinary complexity of the mechanical con- trivances, and a theatrical pomp, a presentment of strange and imposing effects, unprecedented in those times. As we have already shown, the composers of the period were ably seconded by the in- terpreters of their grandiose conceptions. La Bruyere compared Pe- cour and Le Basque, two famous opera-dancers, to Bathyllus of ancient Rome. "He turned the heads of all the women by his airy grace," he re- marked of one of them. Beauchamp, the inventor of choregraphic writing, a con- summate artist and learned composer, was Director of the Royal Academy of Dancing, Master and Superintendent of the King's ballets, and after- wards Ballet - master of the Royal Academy. He excelled in lofty and imposing compositions, and often danced himself, side by side with the King. At a somewhat later date, Dupre (the Great) outshone all his predeces- sors by the graceful distinction of his steps and the nobility of his attitudes. " It was the rare harmony of all his movements that won for Dupre the glorious title of the God of Dancing," says Noverre in his letters. Indeed, this famous dancer is said to have looked more like a god than a man upon the stage. At last Ballon appeared, justifying his name by the lightness of his steps. BALLON, AN OPERA DANCER OP THE KVESTEKM'H CENTCRY From an old Prist in the Bibltoihcquc National* 120 A HISTORY OF DANCING The balls given by Louis XIV. were very magnificent, but not very enjoyable. Cold ceremonial is the natural enemy of pleasure. The grandest of these balls was perhaps that given on the occasion of the Duke of Burgundy's marriage. " The gallery at Versailles," says an eye-witness, " was divided into three equal parts by two gilded balustrades four feet in height. The middle portion formed the centre, as it were, of the ball, having a dais of two stages, covered with the most beautiful Gobelins tapes- try, at the back of which were placed chairs of crimson velvet, ornamented with deep gold fringe. These were for the King, the King and Queen of England, the Duchess of Bur- gundy, and the princes and princesses of the blood royal. The three other sides were lined in the front row with very handsome chairs for the am- bassadors, the foreign princes and princesses, the dukes and duchesses and great officials of the Crown ; other rows of chairs behind these were filled by important personages of the Court and town. To right and left were crowds of spectators, arranged as in an amphitheatre. To avoid confusion, these spectators were admitted through a turnstile, one after the other. There was another little amphitheatre for the King's twenty-four violinists, six hautbois-players, and six flautists. " The whole gallery was lighted by large crystal lustres, and a number of branched candlesticks filled with thick wax candles. The King had sent cards of invitation to every one of any distinction, with a request that they should appear in their richest costumes ; in consequence of which command, MLLE. MAUPIN From an old Print in the Bibliotheque Nationale H HAM. IM f »■» of ih*l , . ts "Jv /-♦ ..- iTTV life — » r-» rrrtc !r:t,j-c * * , f.f-Z» . , w. i fTffBfJ i 1 • ." . 5- \^— rH ■ « ♦T+ttll +/&: + THE PASSACAILLE '37 grave movement, in triple time, was full of grace and harmony. The ladies took much pleasure in this dance ; their long trains gave it a majestic character." These, if we exclude ballets, were the principal dances in favour in the Circat Century. • VI.IET OA.VCIKi "t THE ElOHTrrvrH CEVTIHV Frrm Print in the Hennin Collection, Bibttotheqae Nationals MADAME COCHOIS DANCING After a Picture by Pesne in the Ilerlin Museum CHAPTER V Dancing under Louis XV. — Tainters of Fetes Galantes — (Maaemoisehe Salic — La Camargo — 77c [Minuet — The TassepieJ — 3{ji'erre and the 'Ballet — Gaetan and duguste Vestris RT, at the close of the seventeenth century, was full of vague aspirations towards new developments. The open- ing of the eighteenth century was marked by a reaction against the majestic solemnity, the monstrous etiquette, and the official piety that had prevailed during the later years of the Grand Monarque. The art of the new era inclined to artificiality ; but it had a peculiar and distinctive charm. Painters sought inspiration in love and joy, in sylvan delights, in dainty idylls. The influential classes were less ostentatious and more refined than in the seventeenth century. The nobles THE ART OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY i i9 still ruled society, but great financiers began to patronise dawning talent, and to encourage the growth of a luxurious elegance. It was a reign of daintiness and of taste, of a very fine-spun taste, of a daintiness perhaps a trifle mincing and affected. Pictorial art lacked energy and deep feeling — lacked greatness, in a word ; but it was pretty, it was seductive. Decorative art was charming. On the walls of the rooms, between the windows, long mirrors were embayed in finely voluted woodwork. Pearly tinted boudoirs and drawing-rooms, scented with ambergris and benjamin, and gay with garlands of painted flowers, displayed frail serpentine caprices of ornamental carving, furniture of the school of A I'.WOK l\ It \V\Sr f-llMl. After Aug. de St. Aubin m& Jf^K "^* ^J, mr * \ Mil*. tnm a PriM m Um BiMiotMqiM NiiMaal* Boule, and Vernis-Martin panels — vivid, glowing like flower-beds, islanded in gold. Workers in pre- cious metals designed graceful, multicurvi.il ornaments. Miniatures were enshrined in price- less cases. Ladies affected gauzy tissues, bedecked with mauve ribbons and bouquets; they put patches on their cheeks and carmine on their lips, and cased their dainty feet in high - heeled shoes. 140 A HISTORY OF DANCING There was a passion for painters who could fix the gala lire of this elegant time on canvas. Such were Watteau (already famous at the end of Louis XIV. 's reign), Lancret, and Boucher. Much of their work was inspired by the theatre, at that time the delight of the whole nation. Watteau, who was the incarnation of his age, dressed his characters in the most elegant cos- tumes, decking them out in ruffles and jabots. He was the creator of The Embarkation for Cythera. From the palette of Boucher, the king's painter, flowed an unending stream of Loves- and roses, ex- quisitely in keeping with the delicate panel- ling, water green, pale blue, ivory relieved by gold, in which they were set. Boucher and Watteau filled the boudoirs of the day with pictures of curly sheep led in green pastures by be-ribboned shepherds and shepherdesses. Lancret painted graceful courtiers dancing the Minuet with dream-womeru. on flowery lawns, in a setting of rose and azure hillsides. Latour/fne pastellist, the lover of a dancer, was inspired, unwittingly perhaps, by the gauze of his mistress's skirts ; and modelled his portraits in diaphanous tones, fresh and dewy as the dawn. Dancing followed the new impulse of the other arts. The cold and majestic Pavane gradually made way for the graceful and noble Minuet, the rapid Passepied, the lively Gavotte. The ballet yielded to the same inspiration — in its pursuit of elegance, in the variety of its steps, of its A DANCING LESSuN After Pietro L-onghi ran 1n SALLE AND LA CAMARGO '4 1 attitudes, of its grouped combirntions. Noverre appeared, and attained undeniable success in a hundred ballets. d two women, two dancers, Mademoiselle Salle and Mademoiselle ■Kjk F-j'^m i i .. i ■ ■ -. - . _ _ ^nUt' u .if i r*^R . m to ' ■ ^f-^SPl 1 rx ^£rf3 M rl >^m^ *ll' 1 l'au..i« au th*At«e nuutCAM i a I'rml after Walteau in the Bibliolhlrquc Nationals Camargo, stand out in graceful silhouette against the rosy background of the eighteenth century. taire apostrophises them thus: " Ah ! Camargo, que vous ctcs brillantc ! Mais que Salic, grand Dicu, est ravissantc ! Ouc vos pas sont legers ct que les siens sont dou» ! F.llc esc inimitable ct vous ctcs nouvcllc ! Les nymphes dantcnt cotnme vous, Et les Graces danscnt commc cllc ! " Mademoiselle Salle knew how to give expression to her dancing, but I4 2 A HISTORY OF DANCING she disliked very rapid measures and choregraphic eccentricities, and would never attempt them. She was idolised. The huge crowds that pressed about the doors of the theatre fought for a sight of her. Enthusiastic spectators, who had paid great sums for seats, had to make their way in with their fists. Upon her benefit appearance in London, at the close of the piece, purses filled with guineas and jewels were showered on the stage at her feet. The Cupids and Satyrs of her troupe, keeping time to the music, picked up this spontaneous tribute. On this memorable night, Mademoiselle Salle received more than two hundred thousand francs, an enormous sum for that time. As to Mademoiselle Camargo, she revealed the bent of her genius almost in her cradle. It is said that on hearing a violin played when she was but ten months old, she moved to it so excitedly, and yet so rhythmically, that those who saw her prophesied that she would be one of the first dancers of the world. Born in Brussels, she was the daughter or. a dancing-master. Her grandmother was of the noble Spanish family of Camargo, which had given several cardinals to the Sacred College. In her tenth year, the prediction called forth by the incident of the violin entered upon fulfilment. She was sent to Paris by the Princesse de Ligne, who had remarked her extraordinary talent, and became the pupil of Made- moiselle Prevost, the famous performer of the Passepied. Three months later she made her debut at Rouen. At sixteen she appeared at the Opera, in the Caracteres de la Danse, with unparalleled success. Nimble, coquettish, light as a sylph, she sparkled with intelligence. "She added," says Castil- Blaze, " to distinction and fire of execution, a bewitching gaiety which was all her own. Her figure was very favourable to her talent : hands, feet, limbs, stature, all were perfect. But her face, though expressive, was not remarkably beautiful. And, as in the case of the famous harlequin Dominique, her gaiety was a gaiety of the stage only ; in private life she was .sadness itself." When she danced, people fought for places at the doors of the Opera as they had done to see Mademoiselle Salle. Disputants wrangled fiercely as to her merits ; novelties in fashion took her name ; a shoemaker made his LA CAMARGO , 4 ^ fortune out of her — the most elegant ladies of Paris demanded to be shod () la Camargo. Introduced at the Tuileries by the Marquise de Villars, she was received with an ovation. This splendid triumph awoke the jealousy After a Picture by Watuau in the New Palace, Itetlin of Mademoiselle Prevost, who discontinued her lessons, and even intrigued against her brilliant pupil. La Camargo then put herself under the instructions of the celebrated dancer, Rlondt. In spite of her successes, she had to resign herself at first to Ik- a mere 144 A HISTORY OF DANCING figurante in the corps de ballet. One night, however, Dumoulin, nicknamed the Devil, was to have danced a pas seul. Something occurred to retard his entrance, although the musicians had struck up his tune. A sudden inspiration seized the Camargo (who was one of a troupe of attendant demons), and quitting her place, she executed Dumoulin's dance with diabolical energy before an enthusiastic audience. La Camargo brought about an abso- lute revolution in opera by her fanciful and ingenious improvisations. The con- quest of difficulties of execution delighted her. She offended the upholders of the classic tradition, who sang of her as : "Ccttc admirable gigotteusc, Grande croqueuse d'entrcchats." But they were wrong about these entrechats (of which La Camargo " cut " the first in 1730).* She crossed her feet in the air four times only ; thirty years later Mademoiselle Lamy of the Opera crossed hers six times ; and, later still, eight crossings were achieved. " I have even seen a dancer cross sixteen times," writes Baron, " but don't suppose I admire such gymnastics, or your pirouettes either." The Comte de Melun carried off the young dancer when she was eighteen years old. La Camargo had made it a condition that she should be accompanied by her little sister ! Their father, Ferdinand de Cupis de Camargo, petitioned Cardinal de Fleury that the Count should be made to marry the elder girl and portion the younger. Mademoiselle Camargo had certainly no vocation for marriage. She soon left the Count for his cousin, Lieutenant de Marteille. This brilliant officer was eventually killed in Flanders, when his mistress was DANCING ATTITUDES Alter an Engraving by Gravelot in the Ilibliothcque Nationale " In the entrechat, the dancer springs up, crossing his lett several times in the air. : (Professor Desrat.) OPERA BALLS 145 so profoundly affected as to retire from the stage for six years. She quitted it finally in i~4i, and lived in seclusion till her death. " Her neighbours and friends regretted her as a model of charity, of modesty, and of good conduct," says one writer. " She was granted the A CARNIVAL DANCE From a Print »ft«r Tiepolo in lh« BiblKXhoiut Nalionalc honours of a ' white,' or maiden's, funeral. She had had, however, many lovers, among whom were the Due de Richelieu and the Comte dc Clermont, to whom she had borne two children. But she was remembered only as the grave, sweet woman whose last years had been spent in lone liness and meditation." Opera-balls were inaugurated in the early days of the Regency, and with such success that three took place every week throughout the carnival. The theatre buildings then formed part of the Palais-Royal. On lull- nights, the auditorium was converted into a saloon eighty-eight feet long ; the boxes were adorned with balustrades draped with costly hangings of the 1 146 A HISTORY OF DANCING richest colours. Two buffets, one on each side, separated the boxes trom the space set apart for the dancers. These fetes were arranged on a scale of the most luxurious magnificence ; " the room was lighted by over three hundred large wax candles, to say nothing of the tapers and lamps, arranged in the wings. The orchestra was composed of thirty musicians, fifteen at BALL COSTUMES OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY From a Print in the Bibliothcque Nationale each end of the ball-room. Half an hour before the ball began, the musicians assembled in the Octagon room, with kettledrums and trumpets, and gave a concert, performing the great symphonies of the best masters." In connection with these balls, G. Lenotre describes an adventure of which Louis XV. was the hero. "On Shrove Tuesday of 1737," he says, "we find in Barbier's Journal that Louis XV. came from Versailles incognito to the opera-ball. The Due d'Ayen had supped with the King, who said nothing of the project. After the Court had retired, the King, attended by a footman, went up to the Duke's apartments. D'Ayen had gone to bed. The King knocked. AN ESCAPADE OF LOUIS XV. , 47 The Duke inquired who was there. 'It is I.' 'I don't know who you A I V f k A'Ur * P>ctur* by W«ii«m ia the Edinburgh fMhrj mean. I am in bed.* ' It is I, the King.' The Duke, recognising the King's voice, hastened to open the door. 'Where are you going, Sire, at 148 A HISTORY OF DANCING this hour ? ' ' Dress yourself at once.' ' Allow me to ring, I have no shoes.' 'No,' replied the King, 'no one must come.' 'But where are we going ? ' ' To the Opera Ball.' ' Oh, very well ! ' said the Duke ; ' let me find the shoes I have just taken off.' When he was dressed, they descended into the courtyard. The King, who .had not put on his blue ribbon, took the Duke's arm to pass the sentries. The latter made himself known- 1 It is I, the Due d'Ayen.' ' I have the honour of knowing you perfectly well, Monseigneur,' said the guard. " They got through, and went to the carriages that were waiting for them in the street. Relays had been posted at Sevres since six o'clock in the evening. " The King wore a blue costume, with a rose-coloured domino. He got out of his carriage in the Rue Saint-Nicaise, and with his eight companions, all, like himself, in dominoes, made his way to the Opera House. By some mistake, only seven tickets had been taken, so they were stopped at the door, where they paid two crowns of six francs to be allowed to go in all together. The King remained for over an hour and a halt, unrecognised by any one. He enjoyed himself greatly, and mixed freely with the crowd. He did not take the road to Versailles again till six o'clock in the morning. " But he had to pass through the private apartments, which were shut up and guarded. They knocked. A sentry of the bodyguard demanded who they were. The reply was : 'Open at once. It is the King.' 'The King is in bed, and I shall not open the door or allow you to pass, whoever you may be.' They had to wait and get a light. The sentry then recognised the King. ' Sire, I beg your pardon, but my orders are to let no one pass ; therefore, have the goodness to cancel my instructions.' ' " The King," says Barbier, " was much pleased by the sentry's pre- cision." " The courtiers of Henry II., the cruel associates of Charles IX., the favourites of Henry III., the warlike nobles of Henry IV., the flatterers of the Cardinal Minister, the great men of Louis XIV.'s Court, the rakes of the Regency — all alike danced the unbending Haute Danse," says Elise Vo'i'art. Gayer measures were only permitted at the end of a ball. The Minuet, a dance of little steps, as the name indicates, had come ? § 21 - 7 -a 1 * c < * *° A HISTORY OF DANCING BALLET DANCERS After a Print in the Hennin Collection, Bibliothcque Nationale from Poitou, where it contrasted sharply with the clog-step of the Branle Poitevin. At first a gay and lively dance, simple, yet not without distinction, it soon lost its original vivacity and sport- iveness, becoming grave and slow, like other fashionable Court dances. It was in this denaturalised Minuet that Louis XIV. excelled. Pecour, the great dancer, gave a new vogue to the Minuet by restoring some of its original charm.* But the golden age of the Minuet was the reign of Louis XV., when this dance held the foremost place. It was the fashion then both at the Court and in the city. The Court Minuet was a dance for two, a gentleman and a lady. It was danced in moderate triple time, and was generally followed by the Gavotte.f The Minuets most memor- able in the annals of dancing are the Dauphin's Minuet, the Queen's Minuet, the Menuet d'Exaudet, and the Court Minuet. In his T)ictionnaire de la Danse Compan dilates at some length upon HAI.I.ET OAHCBKS After a Print in the Hennin Collection. Bibliothcque Nationale * " The characteristic of this dance is a noble and elegant simplicity ; its movement is rather moderate than rapid ; and one may say that it is the least gay of all such dances." — [Grande Encyclopedic) t "The Minuet consists of three movements and a step on the point of the foot. The first is a demi coupe of the right foot and one of the left. The second is a step taken on the point of the right foot, both legs straight at the knee. In the third, at the end of the last step, you drop the right heel gently on the floor, so as to permit a bending of the THE MINUET ,£, the Minuet. He tells how in " set " balls, a king and queen were thk ccMrrmMum From a Print after Waiteau in the £cole des Beaux Art* appointed, who opened the dance. The first Minuet over, a fresh cavalier was chosen by the queen. This gentleman, when he in his turn had danced knee, which movement causes (he left leg to rise ; it pastes to the front with a dtmi aupi iefmpft —which it the third movement of the Minuet and its fourth step. "The true step of the Minuet is composed of four steps, which nevertheless by their connections (to use the technical word) arc but one step. "There was another and easier method of executing the Minuet. Bringing the left foot in front, let it support the weight of the body ; and bring the right foot close to the left in the first position. This right foot is not, however, to touch the ground ; the right knee is bent a little, so that the foot is clear of the floor. Next, with this right knee sufficiently bent, the right foot is brought to the front, in the fourth position, and the body raised on the toes, both legs being straightened one after the other. Thrn, in its turn, you allow the right heel to support itself on the floor (without putting the left down), and you bear with ike weight of your body upon the right foot, and pass the left foot forward (just l I £2 A HISTORY OF DANCING his Minuet, escorted the queen back to her place and, bowing, inquired her pleasure as to her next partner. The queen having pointed out the partner of her choice, her late cavalier went in search of him, and, bowing low, requested him to dance. The Minuet was introduced into opera -ballet. "Composers introduced its airs in sonatas, duets, and other musical pieces, as they had formerly done with the Jig and the Gavotte," says Vestris. " But of all these," he adds, " the Minuet alone was long-lived. Indeed it is still introduced in sym- phonies." As we have seen, the Minuet was the fashionable dance, the Passepied and the Gavotte claiming a fair share of popularity as well. We have already spoken of the Passepied. As to the Gavotte, it was popular under Louis XV. ; but it was supreme under Louis XVI., and we shall consider it later on in the height of its glory. In 1745, Rameau introduced the Contredanse in ballets. It was so favourably received that it at once superseded the Bourree, the Minuet, and the Cosaque, and even temporarily eclipsed the ambitious Gavotte. BARBARA CAMl'ANIM, CALLED LA BARBAR1NA After a Picture by Pesne in the Palace, Berlin formerly did with the right) to the fourth position. Then you raise yourself upon this left foot and walk the two remaining steps on the toes, the first step being on to the right point, the second on to the left again — but at the last you must drop once more on the left heel, so as to start again firmly." — (Vestris.) Compan says : "The number of bars in each of these repetitions should be four, or some multiple of four, for this is needful to the due execution of the Minuet step. And care should be taken by the musicians to emphasise each division by a noticeable drop in the music, so as to aid the ear of the dancer, and keep him in time." There are divers other Minuet steps, such as the Minuet Backwards, and the Sideways or Open Minuet ; but these are mere variants upon the standard dance. 11 THE BALLET IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY i?* The majority of writers derive the French word Contredanse from Country Dance. If we accept this etymology, the Contredanse was of English origin. It bears some resemblance to our modern Quadrille. Pecour, Beauchamps, Dupre, Feuillet, Desaix, and Ballon make up a THE OLD AGK OF A l-kr Aflrr * Picture t> Rowi By pennU'.ion of Meuis. Boutsod Valjilou and Co. brilliant constellation of composers and choregraphers at this period. But, thstanding their renown, they diverged but little from the old routine, and effected no thorough-going reform of ballet-opera or of operatic entertainments. Every opera had Passepieds in its prologue, followed by Musettes in the first act, by Tambourins in the second, and by ChacOMt and Passepieds in the acts following. Such was the consecrated formula, upon which no one dared to innovate. "These matters," says Baron, "were decided, not by the development of the opera, but by considerations quite apart from this. Such and such a dancer excelled in Chacones, »S4 A HISTORY OF DANCING such another in Musettes. Now, in every opera, each leading character had to dance his special dance, aid the best dancer always concluded. It was by this law, and not by the action of the poem, that the dancing was governed. Anil what intensified the mischief was that poets, musicians, costumiers, decorators, never con- sulted one another. Each had his prescriptive routine ; each pursued his own old path, indif- ferent as to whether he MASQUERADEKS After a Piint in the Bibliotbcque Nationale arrived at the same goal as his neighbour. To reform all this was a Herculean task. No single individual could diverge from the beaten track till all abandoned it, till there was mutual understanding, concerted action. Concerted action — that was asking too much ! "Enfin Noverre vint, et le premier en France Du feu dc son genie il anima la danse ; Aux beaux temps de la Grece il sut la rappeler; En rccouvrant par lui leur antique eloquence Les gestes ct les pas apprirent a parler." ^^Noverre, the celebrated ballet-master of the Courts of France, Stuttgart, Vienna, and St. Petersburg, revived the art of pantomime, and created the Grand Ballet a" Action in its present form. The two Gardels and Dauberval perfected it, giving it a more scrupulous correctness, a more elegant refinement. Noverre revolutionised dancing. Rejecting outworn conventions, he appealed straight to nature. " A ballet," he said, " is a picture, or rather a series of pictures, connected by the action which forms the subject of the ballet." To him, the stage was a canvas on which the composer expresses 1 9 < | E I o Ul a t 5 >S* A HISTORY OF DANCING his ideas, notes his music, displays scenery coloured by appropriate costumes. " A picture," he continued, " is an imitation of nature ; but a good ballet is nature itself, en- nobled by all the charms of art." We pass over Noverre's definition of painting ; to discuss it would be to wander from our subject. He expands it thus : " The music is to the dancing what the libretto is to the music " — a parallel by which he meant that the musical score is, or ought to be, a poem, fixing and determining the move- ments and the action of the dancer — a poem which the artist is to recite and interpret by means of energetic and vivid gestures, and by the flexibility and animation of his countenance. It follows that the action of the dancer should be an instrument for the rendering and the exposition of the written idea. Noverre not only carried his care for de- tail to an extreme in his regulation of the ballet, but he persuaded himself that dancing could express every- thing : THE BALLET OF THE PRINCE OF SALER After an eighteenth Century Print i ; ■ r/v.c" Sutfuif xS^M^uW^mStXt^t.-- > • ' mp m - m ^» i i k j \ • / \ i t I >• a parliamentary decree. In the treatise on choregraphy published in Paris about 17 13 by Feuillet and Desaix, there are some fifty plates in which dancing is represented by means of engraved characters. They look like forms of incantation, the mysterious pages of a book of magic. Lines, perpendicular, horizontal, oblique, complicated curves, odd combinations of strokes, somewhat akin to Arabic characters, musical notes sprinkled apparently haphazard over the page, represented the movements of the dancer's feet with the most logical precision. THE DANCING UMOM After an Engraving by Lcbu in the Btbliotheque Nalioule THE VESTRIS FAMILY 167 To Noverre we owe the constellation of ballet-composers who succeeded him — Gardel, Dauberval, Duport, Blasis, Milon, and the Vestris family ; just as we owe the brilliant dancers of the end of the eighteenth century to the inspiration of Mademoiselle Salle and La Camargo. After the retirement of La Camargo, the principal honours of the stage fell to the lot of the fa- mous Gaetan Vestris, pupil and successor of Dupre. Dupre had shone before the footlights for thirty years ; he was tall, of a superb carriage, and he danced Chacones and Pass- acailles with incomparable mastery. The Vestris family, of Florentine origin, swayed the sceptre of dancing for nearly a century. Gaetan, who was called "the hand- some Vestris" (to distin- guish him from his four brothers in the same profession), appeared on the stage in 1748, at the Opera, from which he did not finally retire till 1800. "Few dancers have been so highly favoured by nature," says Baron. " He was about five feet six inches in height, with a well-turned leg, and a noble and expressive face. He made his first appearance on the stage in 1747 and retired in 1781. But having, like the actor Baron, the rare good fortune to preserve his vigour and grace to extreme old age, he reappeared at intervals — in 1795, 1799, and 1800 — always with great applause." I Is dancing was full of grace and distinction. He carried himself superbly, surpassing even the great Dupre. His fatuous conceit, however, became proverbial. He used to say : " This century has produced but 1 68 A HISTORY OF DANCING 'ftgjl " '«6\ a» ; ^- THE VESTRIS FAMILY 169 T1IK DANCING SCHOOL From an Engraving in the Bibliothcque Nationals D'un temps mis ;i sa place enscigna lc pouvoir, Et soumit Terpsichore aux regies du devoir. Par cc mattrc savant la dansc rcpardc, N'ofTrit plus ricn dc rude a la scene cpurcc. Let danseurs en mesure apprircnt a toraber, Et le pas sur le pas n'osa plus enjamber; Tout rcconnut les lois dc cc guide fidclc, Gardcl ct Daubcrval, il fut votrc modele."* Augustc V'estris, the son of Gaetan, was received with enthusiastic applause on his first appearance before the public, August 25, 1772, in the ballet of La Cinquantaine, at the Opera. Born in March 1760, he was not quite twelve years old at the time. He was a youthful prodigy. His Dcsprcaux, L Art dt U 'Dan it. i 7 o A HISTORY OF DANCING mother, Madame Allard, of the Opera, used to say that the first steps her son had taken in this world were dancing steps. His sublimely fatuous father, recognising the talent of the child, named him " the god of dancing " ; reserving, however, for himself the title of " his inspired creator." In two strides the young Auguste used to cover the whole distance from the back of the stage to the footlights. His high bounds were so prodigious that they drew forth from his father the well-known boast : " If Auguste does not stay up in the air, it is because he is unwilling- to humiliate his comrades ! " Fragment of a Picture by Watteau in the Berlin Gallery ML \ aha JL V ,, B ■ ■ / |L^% /^ ■^ Bw j»-'.»- -1 {■ t 3c ^t - *m jgPjj A WOODLAND DANCE After a Picture by Lancrcl in ihc Berlin liallcry CHAPTER VI CSladeltme Gurnard— Dancing under Louis XVI.— 1 'he gavotte— Tie Ballet— 'Dances and Fetes if the Revolution and the Republic— Walls and "Ballets of the Directory, the Empire, and the Restoration — CMarie Taglioni >WARDS the end of the last century a brilliant dancer appeared, who was the darling of the Court and city for twenty-six years. She was not content to enchant all beholders by the expressive grace of her dancing, the voluptuous elegance of her movements, the rhythmic harmony of her steps. " She is a shadow, flitting through the Klysian groves, a graceful Muse who captivates mortals," said an author of the day. She dazzled 172 A HISTORY OF DANCING society by her magnificence and the splendour of her entertainments, which rivalled those of royalty. She was born in Paris in 1743. She is said to have been marvellously gifted, to have had an exquisite figure, marvellous grace, and extremely distinguished manners ; and, further, a disposition at once impressionable, tender-hearted, and kindly. During the construc- tion of her house, she noticed a young artist engaged in painting the panels, who seemed very sad. On asking the cause of his trouble, she learned that he was greatly dis- tressed at his poverty, which prevented him from continuing his studies. She immediately obtained a pension enabling him to go to Rome. The painter was David. She was also the patroness of Fragonard, who was a constant visitor at the little theatres she had built in her country-house at Pantin, and in her hotel in the Chaussee d'Antin ; these certainly inspired some of his prettiest scenes, notably those in which his characters are masked, for, in spite of Noverre's efforts, the mask was worn at the theatre until 1772. Year after year the Prince de Soubise made her a handsome present of jewellery as a new year's gift. On one occasion, the winter having been particularly severe, she wrote to the Prince and asked him if he would let her have the value of his usual offering in money. M. de Soubise sent MLLE. GUIMARD From a Lithograph MLLE. GUIMARD 17* her six thousand livrts ; whereupon she explored the dreary tortuous alleys round about her, and distributed the sum in alms to the poor in their wretched houses and garrets. "Along with these impulses of charity, and pity for the poor and suffering," says M. Bauer, "she had a diabolical spirit of intrigue, and was the soul of all the cabals which were the despair of the Opera. Backed up by Saint - Huberty, she made the theatre subject to her will, and imposed her authority on the Court, her associates, and even on the public, brook- ing no rival about her." Ardent, proud, gene- rous and passionate, she was equally reckless in the expenditure of her wealth and of her affections. Both at her country- house and in the Chaussee d'Antin, her theatre was provided with private boxes, to which the ladies of the Court resorted to see the comedies in vogue. The brilliance of this fascinating assembly was incomparable. The prettiest women of Paris vied with each other in beauty, grace, and toilettes. Princes of the blood, dignitaries of the Court, and Presidents of Parliament were noticeable among the men, and the darker boxes were often visited by prelates, and occasionally by academicians. It was a gala day, «ay» Fleury, for one of our actors, when he could escape from the desert of the Corned ie Francaisc, and disport himself on the boards of a theatre so perfectly arranged.* * Henri Bauer, IllnitratitH. i jSsup r^r^ - ~_^C*»* MLLE. GL'lHARIi From a Lithograph 174 A HISTORY OF DANCING Ov? y»»~ *o In addition to the most distinguished persons of the day, Mile. Guimard received the habitues of the Court, and delighted to vex the authorities by making her entertainments clash with those given by the King. She discussed questions of dress and coiffure with the Queen, who sought her advice on these matters. Her table was long the meeting-place of courtiers, celebrated authors, and all that was great and illustrious in Paris. She was pen- sioned by a prince, a financier, and a bishop. The revolution- ary storm,which destroyed so many things, was the ruin of Guimard. " Some years before this," says M. Henri Bauer, " Mile. '7fi»t> r' jf* *"** V^' Sk^^iM'M % MLLE. GUIMARD From a contemporary Drawing (1770) -I Guimard's money difficulties obliged her to get rid of her mansion in the Chaussee d'Antin. Her mode of selling it was some- what original : she had it put into a lottery, issuing 2500 tickets at 120 livres a-piece. The prize was won by the Comtesse du Lau, who immediately resold the house for 500,000 livres to the banker Perregaux. Seventy- five years later it was the scene of M. Arsene Houssaye's marriage with his second wife, Mile. Jane della Torre." Mile. Guimard retired from the Opera in 1789, and married the dancer Despreaux. After having enjoyed every pleasure, and revelled in splendour, Guimard ftExt MARIE ANTOINETTE IN THE BALLE T DE LA REINE A I4LL IN A rAKK « IV I. ir* by LaactcI ta ibc Bcrlio C*Ucr) 176 A HISTORY OF DANCING had to struggle in her old age with difficulties verging on misery, and she died neglected at the age of seventy- three.* The Gavotte was the favourite dance under Louis XVI. and throughout the time of the Direc- tory. This dance was of very ancient origin ; it dated from the sixteenth century, and was, as we have said, a sort of Branle. Not only did the leading couple choose and kiss the lady and gentleman who 'were to lead after them, but the leaders generally embraced all the dancers one after the other. In Sandrin ou Vert galant there is an account of a Gavotte, in which instead of kisses, little presents were given : " Michaud prcnd Marion, la tire de la dance, Et apres avoir fait sa noble reverence, VESTRIS AS COLAS From a Print in the Bibliotheque Nationale * " Monsieur de Goncourt," says M. Henri Bauer, "has given us quite a touching picture of her old age. She lived in the Rue Mcnars, at the corner of the Rue de Richelieu, and still received a number of her old friends and associates. The conversation naturally often turned on the brilliant successes she had achieved on the boards of the Opera, which still interested her. " One day the company pressed her strongly to dance some of the steps that had made her so celebrated, with her husband, Desprcaux. They refused for some time, but finally yielded. Some boards were put up on trestles in an adjoining room, but with what seems to us quite a fine touch of coquetry, the dancers arranged a curtain to conceal half the stage, so that only their legs were visible. Those present at the performance were fired with enthusiasm, and accorded a regular ovation to the two dancers, who were great artists still. "But entreaties to repeat the experiment, even with the promise of a great financial success, were in vain : they were wise enough not to do so, knowing that the brilliant days of the winter of life have no to-morrows. " Her feet on her foot-warmer, she liked to talk of the past, and when the conversation turned to memories of the ballets in which she had danced, she took from beside her, where it was hidden under her dress, a little toy theatre, put her hand into the aperture, and with her thin bony fingers indicated with swift, unerring gestures the steps, movements, and attitudes of herself and her comrades." THE GAVOTTE II la baise a la bouche et cliquetant lesdois, Monstrc qu'a bien dancer il ne craint villageois ; Or, il a lcs deux mains au cote, puis se tourne, Et devanc Marion presence sa personnc ; Puis resautant en l'air gambada lourdemenc ; Haut troussant le talon d'un sot contournement. •77 A DAKC* Allir a itctuic by Lucnl in Uk llcrlin Gallery La tillc s'cnhardil ct son hommc rcgardc, Et a tout ce qu'il fait de prcs cllc prend garde. S'il fait un taut en Pair, Marion saute aussi ; S'il dance dc costc, cllc fait tout ainsi, Tant qu'a let voir dancer, a tout lc mondc il scmblc ^u'llt aicnt rccordc leurs tricotci ensemble. Or, Michaud ayant fait suant ct hallctanr. Son devoir dc dancer, lc bouquet bicn content i 7 8 A HISTORY OF DANCING II Iivre entre les mains de Marion, puis passe, Et seulc la laissant se remet a sa place. Marion tourne autour et si hien se conduit Qu'au vueil des assistants prend Sandrin, qu'ellc suit. Qui lui prete la main comme par moquerie, Puis dan^ant de plus beau, saute comme une pie. Sandrin, qui la dedaigne, avecques gravitc, V'ous dance a la grandeur d'un pas non usite Aux dances du village, et tant et tant s'oublic Qu'il ne daigne baiscr la fillette jolie, Laquelle souriant lui laisse le bouquet, Puis reprend pour dancer la gauche de Jaquet." Then farther on : " Claudin premiercment En tire lc miroir qu'il donnc gentiment A cellc qu'il menait, qui, honteuse fillette, L'ayant rccu montre sa couleur vcrmeillettc. La fille dc Pierrot, que Thibaut conduisait De luy le peloton, et la bourse recoit, La fille dc Samson, gentille de nature, » Gaycment prend du don la plus belle ccinture." &c. &c. Sec. " By the term Gavotte, properly speaking," writes Mme. Laure Fonta, " we must understand the dances in short parts when good merry dancers vary the movements in the most fantastic fashion, even intermingling with the duple rhythm of these dances the triple rhythm of some Gaillarde. But this bright, sparkling dance was modified like -so many others that have undergone the influence of time. In the eighteenth century it had points of resemblance with the Minuet ; it became languid and gliding, rather solemn, and somewhat pretentious. Vestris tells us that the Gavotte consisted of three steps and an assemble. Littre says that the step of the Gavotte differs from the natural step, in that one springs upon the foot which is on the ground, and at the same time points the toe of the other foot downwards. This movement is the sole indication that one is dancing and not walking. The air of the Gavotte was in duple time, moderate and graceful, sometimes even tender and slow ; it was divided into two parts, each of THE GAVOTTE •79 which began with the second beat and ended with the first, the phrases and rests recurring with every second bar. Famous Gavottes were written for the stage by Gluck, Gretry, &c. The one in Panurge by Gretry was a particular favourite, and was danced 2t every ball ; its success was due to its strongly marked rhythm, a valuable quality for ordinary dancers. This Gavotte had no second part, and, to supply the want, the composer had the first part repeated four times, a convenient device certainly, but a puerile one, necessitating a good deal of wearisome iteration. The Gavotte had lost favour, save at the theatre and among professional dancers, when Marie Antoi- nette restored it to fashion. We know that this graceful queen danced the Minuet to perfection ; she was delighted with the one which Gretry composed on the air of a Gavotte in his opera Cephale el Procris, though Gretry's air is said to have been wanting in spirit and in charm, and to have made the steps difficult of execution. Be this as it may, the Gavotte became the fashion hence- forth at society balls, with a few other dances reserved for distinguished amateurs. Moreover, various Gavottes in light and tender rhythms were in vogue at this period. Fertiault, in his Hisloire di la Danse, describes the Gavotte as follows : I us IHK THURACr. Al vi. After A. tic St. Auhin 180 A HISTORY OF DANCING " Skilful and charming offspring of the Minuet, sometimes gay, but often tender and slow, in which kisses and bouquets are inter- changed." All evidence shows that the Gavotte was closely akin to the simple Branle, to which it owed its origin. This dance, which was in great AN Ol'EN-AIR DANCE After Charles Eisen favour for six centuries, still retained the first three steps of the Branle. under the Directory, and at the beginning of the present century. "In 1779," says G. Lenotre, " we catch a glimpse of Marie Antoinette at the Opera Ball in the Comte de Mercy's letters. She had been once with the King, who encouraged her to go again, in -strict incognita, accompanied only by one of her ladies. " The Queen accordingly left Versailles without any suite, and at the barrier, got into a hired carriage to avoid recognition. Unfortunately, the carriage was so old and ramshackle, that it broke down at a little MARIE ANTOINETTE AT THE OPERA BALE i3i distance from the theatre. The Queen, with the Comtesse de Henin, who r»«l» OH THI OCCAM"* 0* III* HI 111 ii or mi Ml rain Aftar an Engraving by Mom the younger was in attendance, were obliged to go into the nearest house, which was a silk-mcrcir's shop. She did not unmask, and as it was impossible to mend 182 A HISTORY OF DANCING the carriage, the first hackney-coach that passed was hailed, and Marie Antoinette arrived at the ball in this equipage. She there found several of her household, who had come on separately, and who remained with her all the evening. The details of this little adventure produced no effect at Versailles, beyond causing the King to laugh, and to rally his consort on her journey in the hackney-coach ! " M. de Mercy was mistaken," adds Lenotre. " The numerous enemies the Queen had already made would not allow such a fine opportunity for calumny to pass by. " Opera Balls were then the common scene of all sorts of adventures. Two days after Marie Antoinette's accident, another adventure took place which eventually became a matter of some importance. On Shrove Tuesday the Comte dArtois took advantage of his incognito to address some rather cavalier speeches to the Duchesse de Bourbon, who, in a moment of irritation, threw aside the muslin veil that concealed the features of the future Charles X with her fan. The Prince, angry in his turn, pulled her away from her partner, M. de Toncherolles, and crumpled up her mask on her face. " The next day, M. de Bourbon sent a challenge to his cousin, which the King forbade his brother to notice. The Comte d'Artois was inclined to obey ; but most of the princes and nobles of his circle agreed between themselves, and notified to the prince, that if he refused M. de Bourbon satis- faction, the nobles would refuse him all service and honour in the kingdom, and that his regiment would no longer consider him worthy of his command. " The two princes accordingly fought. M. de Crussol, Captain of the Bodyguard, begged them, as they crossed swords, to be sparing of blood that might be precious to the State. The duel took place in the Bois de Boulogne, and during the engagement the Queen and her suite were present, in a sadly preoccupied frame, at the first night of Irene at the Comedie Francaise. All at once the persons in the pit got up and began to clap their hands. The Comte dArtois, who had been slightly wounded in the arm, came in arm-in-arm with the Due de Bourbon. The whole audience rose and cried ' Bravo ! ' The popular joy knew no bounds when the King's brother advanced to the front of his box, and gracefully saluted the Duchesse de Bourbon with his wounded hand." .'///-. Tran-mlUicAt trie., tnibiaede if i Mf .' ' t.UilIrJ itrr/ormrj it/ Sir/i/m ■ tatuuuy ''■'! AUGUSTE VESTRIS »8j Auguste \'estris, the son of Gaetan, who, according to his father, "only refrained from floating in mid-air lest he should mortify his comrades," made his debut on August 25, 1772, in the ballet of La Cinquantaine, in which he achieved a brilliant success. We find him still to the fore under Louis XVI. ; for thirty-six years he was premier It** AND DANCKk KXKCt'TKD HV IMt HKKVAL AT lilt From a coatraporary Print in the Hibliothh|ue Nationals danseur of the Optra, retaining the favour of the public until the end. His popularity seemed as great as ever at the age of sixty-six, when he- had retired, and was a professor at the Conservatoire. In 1826, a perform- ance of Paul el V'trginie was given at the Opera for his benefit. Vestris took the part of the negro Domingo, and was much applauded. " He died," says M. Bauer, "in 1842, and was therefore eighty-two years old. These instances of longevity are very frequent among dancers : Vestris the first was seventy-nine years of age ; (milliard lived to be 1 84 A HISTORY OF DANCING seventy-three ; La Carmargo died at sixty, and Dauberval, Despreaux, and Noverre all lived to a great age." "On June II, 1778," says M. Pierre Veber, "Mile. Guimard and the younger Vestris danced in the new ballet Les Petits Riens, with Dauberval and Mile. Agelin. The performance was a great success. The only author mentioned was Noverre, the celebrated ballet-master. It was he who had imagined the three scenes, the three ' little trifles,' which were in fact the groundwork of his ballet. The first scene represented Love, caught in a net, and put in a cage ; the second, a game of blind-man's buff - ; and in the third, which was the greatest success, Love led two shepherdesses up to a third, disguised as a shepherd, who discovered the trick by unveiling her bosom. ' Encore ! ' cried the audience. Mile. Guimard, the younger Vestris, and Noverre were heartily applauded, but not one 'Bravo ! ' was given to the composer of the music — who was no other than the divine Mozart. "Mozart, who, fifteen years ' before, had been acclaimed in Paris as an infant prodigy and an inspired composer, was vegetating in the city in poverty and obscurity. The success of Les Petils Riens apparently made little difference to him, for a few days after the performance we find him leaving Paris, and seeking employment as an organist to ensure his daily bread." At the commencement of the reign of Louis XVI., Mme. Allard was still dividing the honours with the great master Dauberval, and dancing the pas-de-six with him. Mile. Allard was as charming as La Camargo, and to the grace of her predecessor she added a fire, a vivacity, and a flexibility peculiar to herself. At one time she was an ideal Sylvia, timid and gentle ; at another, the terrible Medea. Now she displayed the airy grace of the goddess of flowers ; now the voluptuous charm of a sultana. Dorat, in his poem on dancing, exclaims : "Que n'ai-je le genie et le pinceau d'Apcllc! Allard, a mes esprits, ce tableau me rappelle, Jamais nymphe des bois n'eut tant d'agilite, Toujours l'essaim du ris voltige a tes cotes. (_)uc tu melanges bien, o belle enchanteressc, La force avec la grace ct l'aisancc ct l'adresse." GRAND BALLETS 18; At the time when Dauberval succeeded Vestris at the Opera, and danced the divertissement of Sylvie with Mme. Allard, the theatre of the Porte Saint-Martin had become the rival of the Academie de Danse. Grand HAL CHAMriTHK After * Picture by Lencret in the New Palace, Bctlin ballets had been given there, mounted with the utmost splendour. Le Deserteur, La Fille mat Gar dee, Les Jeux d'Eg/ee, Jenny, and various compositions of Dauberval 's had a great success. 2 A 1 86 A HISTORY OF DANCING At about the same time the brothers Gardel composed some of their most masterly ballets. The elder, Maximilian, was born in Munich ; he died from the effects of an accident in 1787, having been premier danseur and maitre de ballet, besides attaining distinction as a violinist, a harpist, and violoncellist. His brother Pierre succeeded him in his functions, and wrote a number DAN'CE OF SHEPHEKDS After a Picture by Lancret in the Berlin Museum of ballets : Telemaque, Psyche, Le Jugement de Paris, La Dansomanie, Alexandre chez Apelle, Paul et Virginie, La Suite de Venus, L 'Oracle, Le Deserteur, Le Coq du Village, Le Retour de Zephyre, Austerlitz, &c, which long retained a place in the repertory. The ballet-pantomime in three acts, Psyche, was given for the first time under the Constituent Assembly, on December 14, 1790, at the Theatre des Arts, passing on a good deal later to the Academie de Danse. It was performed nine hundred and twelve times. LA DANSOMANIE ,8 7 La Dansomanie, a celebrated ballet-pantomime in two acts, was given x , on the 20th Prairial, year VIII. of the Republic. It is said not to have been one of Gardel's best works, and it is possible that the troubles of the times somewhat affected his brilliant talents. Indeed the author, in a sort of appeal to the public, wrote thus : "Since March 5, 1793, I have been apparently sunk in idleness. I have regretted it myself a thousand times. Many of my friends have ALLtr.oirCAI. DANCIt, SYMhoUSINT. TM* MtVOLUTION After Louret complained of it, some have accused me of a total loss of power ; I brought my reason to bear on my despair, answered the complaints of my friends by showing them the causes of my apparent idleness, and let the others say and write what they liked. But at last, now that the time has arrived for submitting one of my new productions to the public, I owe that public the whole truth. I therefore take this opportunity to tell it. Is this a ballet I am about to submit to you ? I answer, * No, it is a joke, a regular farce, a mere trifle, claiming only to show you, under the mask of 1 88 A HISTORY OF DANCING gaiety, the graces and the divine talents, which have so often commanded the admiration of the public," &c. " For all those familiar with the Revolution," says Professor Desrat, " it is easy to read between the lines, and to see that Gardel wrote his ballet of La "Dansomanie in a depressed state of mind, and intentionally avoided recalling his earlier ballets." And the professor adds : " But this did not prevent the great success of La Dansomanie, which kept its place in the repertory for a considerable time. The subject was playful and calculated to please the more fastidious tastes of the period. In the divertissement of the first act peasants, villagers and Savoyard farmers filled the stage ; peasants, dressed like Turks, were the heroes in the second act, and then came Basques and Chinese. The great dancers Milon, Beaupre, Vestris, and Mme. Gardel all figured in this ballet, and Mile. Chameron took a minor part. It was in this ballet that the Waltz was danced at the Opera for the first time. The theatrical ballet lost its old splendour under the Revolution ; it was only associated with the fetes of the Republic in its itinerant form, which had been obsolete for centuries. We must admit, however, that these revivals were marked by a certain solemnity. Actors from the Opera figured in the forefront of these ballets, dressed in classic costumes, and supported by choirs from the Conservatoire (then designated the Institute of Music), singing patriotic hymns and cantatas. Gardel composed the ballet of Guillaume Tell, which was enthusias- tically received by the Committee of Public Safety. The fifty thousand francs necessary to mount it were voted, but twice they disappeared from the cash-box and no one dared to trace them. A THE CARMAGNOLE From a Print of 1793 LA MARSEILLAISE AT THE OPERA 189 prudent silence reigned, and the author took back his ballet without protest. Gardel conceived the idea of giving a spectacular representation of the Marseillaise at the Opera, in some points recalling the Pyrrhic of the Greeks.* THE DANCIN'C MANIA After Dibucourt The performance opened with a blast of trumpets, which was the signal for the appearance of a crowd of warriors, women, and children. The combatants prepared for battle with dances, and a sort of tableau vivant was arranged after each couplet. The last strophe : " Amour sacrc de la patric, Conduii, soutiens nos bras vengcurs : Liberie", libcrtc chcrie." tec. tec. tec. • Subsequently, towards the end of the Second Empire, and during the war of 1870- 1871, Mmc. Bourdat, enveloped in the folds of the tricolour flag, declaimed the MtneilUiif with a vigour that invariably brought down the house. 190 A HISTORY OF DANCING was sung in muffled tones like a prayer. The actors on the stage and the spectators in the hall fell on their knees before Liberty, represented by Mile. Maillard. A religious silence followed. Suddenly the trumpets summoned the valiant defenders of Liberty, the tocsin sounded, the drummers beat the generate, the cannon thundered, the actors sprang up, brandishing their arms, crowds rushed on, armed with hatchets and pikes, and all, seized with heroic frenzy, shouted the refrain : " Aux armes, citoyens . . ." LA SAUTEUSE (Le bon genre) The Festival of the Supreme Being, decreed by the National Convention, designed by David, and conducted by Robespierre, was the most important of the itinerant ballets of that time. It was a ceremony of a classic nature, and not without grandeur, in spite of a certain declamatory character. On the morning of the 20th Prairial, year II., all the doors and windows in Paris were garlanded with flowers and boughs of oak. The joyous inhabitants, summoned by the drum, repaired to their Sections. The LA SAUTEUSE (Le bon genre) THE FESTIVAL OF THE SUPREME BEING i 9I women and young girls, clad in white and crowned with vine-leaves, carried roses in their hands. The Sections arrived in good order at the Jardin National, where from a fountain rose a colossal statue, representing Wisdom, who pointed heavenward with one hand and held a crown of tlCHOU OIOYABKA IACCBLU After Thoaau Gauuborougk, K.A. stars in the other. There was dancing and singing under the ancient trees ; a ray of joy shot across the gloom. The members of the Convention presently took their places on a platform, and choirs of singers chanted a hymn to the Supreme Being. The President delivered a speech, and, quitting the plat- form, he set fire with a torch to an image of Atheism. 192 A HISTORY OF DANCING The members of the Convention, each bearing in his hand a bunch of corn, flowers, or fruit, then proceeded to the mustering-place between two parallel lines of the people who accompanied them, the men on one side, and the women on the other. They surrounded a car, drawn by oxen with gilded horns, on which was set up the statue of Liberty, seated under the shadow of a tree, and surrounded with sheaves of corn and agricultural tools. Upon the steps were displayed the symbols of trades : the printing-press, the hammer, the anvil, &c.,* and a trophy of musical instruments showed that a charming art had not been forgotten. Symbolic groups marched by the side of the Representatives : Infancy, decked with violets ; Adolescence, crowned with myrtle ; Manhood, his brows bound with oak-leaves ; and Old Age, whose white hair was decked with vine and olive leaves. During the march, the statue of Liberty was covered with offerings and with flowers. At the gathering ground a mountain, bearing the tree of Liberty on its summit, represented the national altar. " Pure souls and virtuous hearts," exclaims the author of the official report, " a charming spectacle awaits you here ; it is here that liberty accords you its sweetest delights." " An immense mountain," says Castil-Blaze, " symbolised the national altar ; upon its summit rises the tree of liberty, the Representatives range themselves under its protecting branches, fathers with their sons assemble on the part of the mountain set aside for them ; mothers with their daughters place themselves on the other side ; their fecundity and the virtues of their husbands are the sole titles to a place there. A profound silence reigns all round ; the touching strains of harmonious melody are * " You who live in luxury and indolence," said the official report of this///*, " you whose existence is nothing but a weary sleep, perhaps you will dare cast a glance of scorn upon these useful instruments. Away, away from us ! Your corrupt souls cannot delight in the simple joys of nature." THE DANCE THE FESTIVAL OF THE SUPREME BEING •9* heard : the fathers and their sons sing the first strophe ; they swear with one accord that they will not lay down their arms until they have annihilated the enemies of the Republic, and all the people take up the finale. The daughters and mothers, their eyes fixed on the heavens, sing a second strophe ; the daughters promise only to marry men who have served VIEW or THE TL'ILEKIE* (.AKUKNS IN 1808 fnm Norblin'i Caltrii Jn I'mtt it Parit their country, the mothers rejoice in their fecundity. * Our children,' they say, * after having purged the world of the tyrants who have coalesced against us, will return to fulfil a cherished duty in closing the eyes of those who brought them into the world.' The people echo these sublime sentiments, inspired by the sacred love of virtue." "A third and last strophe is sung by all present. General emotion prevails upon the mountain : men, women, girls, old men, children, 2 B 194 A HISTORY OF DANCING fill the air with their voices. Here, the mothers press the babes they are nursing to their bosoms ; there, seizing the younger of their male children, those who are not strong enough to follow their fathers, and raising them in their arms, they reverently present them to the Author of Nature ; the young girls cast heavenward the flowers they have brought, their only possessions at this tender age. At the same instant the sons, fired with military ardour, draw their swords, place them in the hands of their old FRENCH BALL DRESS OF THE YEAR XI fathers, and swear to make them victorious, to make Equality and Liberty triumph over the oppression of tyrants. Sharing the enthusiasm of their sons, the delighted old men embrace them, and give them their paternal benediction. A formidable discharge of artillery, the voice of national vengeance, inflames the courage of our republicans, for it announces that the day of glory has arrived. A manly, warlike song, premonitory of victory, responds to the roaring of the cannon. All FRENCH BALL DRESS OF THE YEAR XII THE VICTIM BALLS »9? Frenchmen express their feelings in a fraternal embrace, with one voice they raise to the Divinity the universal cry, Vive la Republique. The 20th Prairial, year II., ought to be noted in indelible letters among the splendours of our history ; the name of the Supreme Being echoed on the same day, at the same hour, through- out the length of France. Twenty- five millions of people assembled at the same time under the vault of heaven, addressing to the Eternal hymns and songs of joy." FRENCH BALL DRESS OP THE DIRECTORY PERIOD It might fairly be supposed that the events of the Revolution dealt the death-blow to dancing, strictly so called. But, if we may credit the author of Paris pendant la Revolution, scarcely was the Terror at an end when twenty-three theatres and eighteen hundred dancing saloons were open every evening in Paris. "Read," says M. Henry Fourment, "Mercier's description of the Victim Balls. The women modelled their attire on that of Aspasia, with rtaaca uu noat or the directory period 196 A HISTORY OF DANCING bare arms, bare bosoms, sandalled feet, and hair bound in plaits round their heads, for fashionable hairdressers dressed their customers' hair with casts of classic busts before them. " The chemise had been banished for some time, and replaced by a knitted silk vest which clung to the figure. It was the mode to be dressed a la sauvage. "Will posterity believe," says Mercier, " that people, whose rela- tions had died on the scaffold, inaugurated, not days of solemn PARISIAN BALL DRESS OF THE YEAR XIII general grief when, assembled in mourning garb, they might bear wit- ness to their sorrow at the cruel losses so recently incurred, but days of dancing, drinking, and feasting. For admission to one of these banquets and dances, it is necessary to show a certificate of the loss of a father, a mother, a husband, a wife, a brother, or a sister under the knife of the guillotine. The death of collaterals does not confer the right of attending such a fete. FRENCH BALL DRESS OF THE DIRECTORY PERIOD BALLETS BY MILON 197 " Moreover, dancing is universal ; they dance at the Carmelites, between the massacres ; they dance at the Jesuits' Seminary ; at the Convent of the Carmelites du Marais ; at the seminary of Saint-Sulpice ; at the Filles de Sainte-Marie ; they dance in three ruined churches of my Section, and upon the stones of all the tombs which have not been destroyed. " They dance in every tavern on the Boulevards, in the Champs Elysees, and along the quays. They dance at Ruggieri's, Lucquet's, LA T**Msr (L* boa genre) Mauduit's, Wenzel's, and Montausier's. There are balls for all classes. Dancing, perhaps, is a means towards forgetfulness." Under the Consulate we only hear of one ballet, in one act, Lucas el Laurette, given at the Opera on June 3, 1803, and danced by Goyon, Vcstris, and Mme. Gardel. It was by the composer Milon, who became ballet- master from 1813 to 18 1 5, and to whom we owe, in addition to Lucas el Laurelle, Le Relour d'Ulysse, Les Sauvages de la Mer du Sud, Pygmalion, Hero el Liandre, Les Noces de Gamacbe, Clary, Les Fiances de Caserle, 198 A HISTORY OF DANCING IJEchange des Roses, La Promesse de Manage, Nina, L'Epreuve Villageoise and Le Carnaval de Venise. Dancing under the Empire was certainly not very brilliant, as one can easily understand. Nevertheless, M. Nuittier, the learned librarian of the Opera, gives us some curious information concerning the dancers of that period. " In these days," he says, " when the functions of men-dancers are for THE EVE OF THE BATTLE After Raffct the most part limited to supporting or lifting up the lady, it may perhaps seem surprising that male dancers formerly enjoyed a popularity as great, ir not greater, than that of women. Nevertheless it was so, not only under the old regitne, in the time of Vestris, but a period of military glory, when manners were certainly not effeminate, in the early days of the Empire. The dancer Duport was at the height of his success ; his salary equalled that of the first singers ; to keep up his position, he paid 6000 francs for rent ; his table cost him as much, and his carriage 2900. When he danced, the usual guard was increased by five cavalry soldiers. His bust was cast in bronze, and, not content with interpreting the works of others, he ventured 1- £ i > - V \i 3 I 200 A HISTORY OF DANCING to compose ballets himself. It would seem that this was not an official venture, but that he wished to see whether his ballets would equal those of his contemporaries. The result was not encouraging." On the 20th Germinal, year XII., Napoleon took the trouble to write to Cambaceres from Lyons that it was inconceivable to him why Duport had been allowed to compose ballets. " This young man has not been in vogue a year. When one has made such a marked suc- cess in a particular line, it is a little precipitate to in- vade the speciality of other men, who have grown grey at their work." THE FASHIONABLE MANIA After Carle Vernet Wh en we see the sovereign in the midst of the cares of government so well acquainted with the success of a dancer, and occupying himself seriously with a question of choregraphy, we can only bow once more before the all-powerful master of the world. Bonaparte, indeed, seems to have always taken an interest in the art of dancing. In a letter to the commander-in-chief of the Egyptian expedition, after enumerating all kinds of- things necessary for the expeditionary force, such as cannon, guns, provisions, &c, he mentions : " A troupe of ballet-girls."* On the occasion of the marriage of the Emperor Napoleon with the Archduchess Marie-Louise of Austria, a ball took place in Vienna in the saloons of the Imperial Redoubt. The guests, numbering six thousand, * Illustration, December 1894. BALLETS UNDER THE FIRST EMPIRE 20 1 entered in dominoes or in some seemly disguise, with or without a mask ; they were allowed to appear in dress-coats, or in a Hungarian costume without spurs. A magnificent temple was constructed in one room, in the centre of which stood a genius, laying his left hand on the Arms of France and Austria, and crowning them with laurels. On the pediment, two other genii held escutcheons surmounted by imperial crowns, with the A BALL l-NDF.M TIIK HKIT KMPIHK After an Engraving by Botio in the Bi >liothcquc Narooale monograms of Napoleon and Marie- Louise. The Emperor, the Empress, the Archduchess Marie-Louise, the Imperial Family and the French Ambassador made their appearance at the beginning of the ball. Among the ballets of the Empire we may mention Les Filets de Vulcain, by Blachc, given at the Opera on June 27, 1806. This ballet, which had been alreadv performed at Lyons, where Blache was a professor of dancing, was a great success. La Laitiire Polonaise, by the same author, excited the greatest enthusiasm. A dance of skaters introduced into this ballet added greatly 2 c 202 A HISTORY OF DANCING to its success. La Porte Saint-Martin adopted this new idea, which probably gave rise to the skaters' dance in Le Prophete. Isidore Auguste Blache, one of his sons, composed the ballets of Polichinelle and of Joco for the celebrated dancer Mazurier. They were given at La Porte Saint-Martin. The part of the monkey in the ballet of Joco was eventually taken with so much suppleness and agility by the dancer HALL AT THE COURT OF NAPOLEON I After an Engraving by II. Zix in the Bibliotheque Nalionale Paul, that he was nicknamed Paul the Aerial, so lightly did he spring from tree to tree. A second son of Blache's was also a ballet-master at the Porte Saint- Martin for three years. He then went to St. Petersburg, where he gave Don Juan, Gustave Vasa, Les Grecs, Malakavel, and Jtmidis des Gaules with great success. Le Retour d'Ulysse was played for the first time on February 27, 1807. Mile. Chevigny was a great success in the part of the Nurse, but this performance was marred by a sad accident : Mile. Aubry fell from a BALLETS BY BLASIS 20 $ cloud, on which she was seated, and injured her arm. She never recovered, and never appeared on the stage again. The ballet of Antolne et Cleopatre, with music by Kreutzer, performed March 8, 1808, was a brilliant success for Mile. Chevigny, who took the part of Octavia. Desdetot, of the Academie Roy ale, ballet-master to the Court of Russia, composed the ana- creontic ballet of Zepbyre et Flore, which was per- formed at St. Peters- burg and Paris in 1815. The two acts entailed a grand exhibition of ballet- girls. Beaupre took the part of Pan, and Albert that of Zephyr. The libretto was lively, the mounting taste- ful, and the success of the ballet was considerable. Blasis, whose ballets seem to close the cycle of grands ballets a" actions, was premier danseur to the King of England, and a ballet-master as celebrated as Dauberval and Gardel. His six principal ballets arc fine compositions, and he further wrote an excellent book on dancing. His Achille a Scyros, though it bears the same name as a ballet by Gardel, has an entirely different plot. Mokanna, ar THf VK*>C After En 204 A HISTORY OF DANCING Oriental subject, is a ballet in four acts taken from Thomas Moore's Veiled Prophet. The scene is laid in Persia, in the year 163 of the Hegira. Vivaldi, a grand ballet in two acts, takes us to Venice towards the middle of the sixteenth century. In Les Aventures Nocturnes, Blasis, usually a choregrapher of a serious bent, obtained a great success in the comic style. In Zara, the romantic element predomi- nates, and, according to com- petent critics, it is a first-rate work. Finally, Alcide, or L'Essai de la Jeunesse, was written in the allegorical style. In year VII. of the Re- public, a certain Mademoiselle Taglioni appeared at the Opera with some success. Her name often figures in the playbills from 1804 to 1 806 ; she took part in La Caravane, Le Connetable de Clisson, and Les Noces de Gamache. She was the aunt of the celebrated Marie Tag- lioni, who had such an extra- ordinary success on the same stage some twenty years later. Marie Taglioni was born at Stockholm of an Italian father and a Swedish mother ; she made her debut at Vienna in 1822, in a ballet composed by M. Taglioni expressly for his daughter, and called, Reception d'une jeune Nymphe a la Cour de Terpsichore. In 1827 she made her debut in Paris in Le Sicilien, and appeared in La Vestale, Mars et Venus, Fernand Cortes, Les Bayaderes, and Le Carnaval de Venise. Her talent, so instinct with simple grace and modesty, her lightness, the suppleness of her attitudes, at once voluptuous and refined, made a MARIE TAGLION! From a Lithograph in the Bibliotheque Nationale MARIE TAGLIONI 205 sensation at once. She revealed a new form of dancing, a virginal and diaphanous art, instinct with an originality all her own, in which the old traditions and time-honoured rules of choregraphy were merged. After an appearance of a few days only on our boards, this charming mirage vanished to shine in great triumph at Munich and Stuttgart. But she came back, and an enthu- siastic reception awaited her. In Les Bayaderes and, above all, in La Sylphide, her art attained the utmost limits of spirituality. And in the midst of these brilliant successes, taking the hearts of the people by storm, admitted to the inti- mate friendship of the £)ueen of Wiir- temburg, she remained sweet, simple, and reserved. In 1 832, she married Comte Gilbert des Voisins ; but this union was or brief duration, for almost on the morrow of the wedding she was forgotten by her husband.* In 1837, Marie Taglioni gave her farewell performance before her departure for Russia. MLtX TAGLIONI AND M. MAZIMKN * "Arsenc Houssayc," says Henri Bauer in V lllustrathtt, "has described their last interview at a dinner given twenty years afterwards in 1852, by the Due dc Morny, at which Rachel and Taglioni were present. " Comtc Gilbert des Voisins arrived when they were already at table. His first words were : * Who is that the-professor on Morny's right ? ' [She was very cultivated, and spoke all the languages of Europe.] His interlocutor, by no means afraid of hurting his feelings, replied, * It is your wife.' Des Voisins considered, and at last remarked : ' After all, it is quite possible.' * Mile. Taglioni, pointing out her husband, asked Morny why he had invited her to dine in such bad company. "After dinner Gilbert des Voisins who feand nothing, not even his wife, had the impertinence to ask to be introduced to Marie Taglioni. She entered into the joke, saying: ' I fancy, monsieur, that I had the honour of being presented to you in 183a.' That was the year of their marriage." 206 A HISTORY OF DANCING We hear of her later on in London in great distress, giving lessons in dancing and deportment. " It was a sad sight," says M. Henri Bauer, " to see her, a white-haired woman, escorting a bevy of English schoolgirls in Hyde Park in the winter, at Brighton in the summer, or, accompanied by a little old Italian, who played the kit for her, teaching dances and court curtseys to the proud daughters of the gentry." She died at Marseilles, very old and very poor. "incroyahle" dance After a Print in the Bibliothique Nationale RBTL'HNIKC FROM 1HK VINTAGE After a Picture by Deleft By permifeica of Mean. Bouwxi VaWon and Co. CHAPTER VII Runic enA Pastoral 'Damn — Rounds — Hourrics —"Bretonnc 'Dances — Catalan Kails — The Farandole — Open-air Dances in Foreign Countries IK have seen how, in the age of dreams, the nymphs of the fountains, treading the grass and flowers under their dew-be- spangled feet, danced virginal rounds by moonlight. The Ciraces, holding each other by the hand, swayed and circled in chaste undulations, and it was thus that Terpsichore appeared to mortals, leading her joyous band. We have seen the maidens of Greece, inspired by radiant fictions, dancing rhythmically under forest boughs, in honour of sylvan divinities, and of returning spring. . . . What remains to us of this divine dream, of the charming rites of a vanished worship, save the Round ? >o8 A HISTORY OK DANCING The Round was the first expression of dancing, and now, as in the remotest ages, children take each other by the hand and dance in circles, to express delight, and even to celebrate the joys of days that are no more. " Nous n'irons plus au bois, Les lauriers sont coupes." A whole world divides the expression of joy which makes them clasp hands, intertwine, and mingle their movements by a common ^jj/BM impulse, from the dances of advanced civilisations. The Round is the primi- tive dance, the true rustic dance. It existed even before Syrinx, plaintive under the burning lips of Pan, poured a new intoxication into the souls of dancers.* There is .something so natural, so instinctive, in its movements, that we shall find it in all primitive and rustic societies. Thus, in early days, young girls danced Rounds in tie meadows of our ancient Celtic Limousin, to celebrate "the coming of fair weather." Here, in this region, the original rudeness of whose inhabitants had been tempered by the Gallo- Romans, delight in the renewal of the earth entwined their fingers, and gave a rhythm to their movements and attitudes. These Rounds of theirs were the Maiades, or May Dances, of antique origin ; the CHILDREN DANCING A ROUND After Mouilltjon (1850) * Pan was accounted the inventor of rustic dances by the ancients. Syrinx was a nymph of Arcadia, daughter of the river-god Ladon. Pursued by Pan, she fled to the banks of the river and disappeared. In her place the god found only a cluster of reeds, from which he fashioned the Pan pipes, or seven-tubed flute, which took the name of the nymph. THE ROUND 209 leafy beeches under which they took place were called the trees of the Maiades. At Merlines, there is a piece of table-land which still bears the name of the Coudert des Maiades, and a short time ago the aged tree of the Maiades still outspread its hoary branches in the forest of Chavanon. The word came in time to be applied to all places where dancing could be enjoyed ; such, for in- stance, as the lonely country inns, where couples meet to dance on fine Sundays. The dancing -song proper to these May festivals was called the Calenda Ma'ia, and the Queen of Spring, in whose honour the dance was performed, figures in early Limousine poetry under the pretty title of Regina avrilloza. The ancient Round still lingered in those late centuries, and the Mai'ade of Limousin and Poitou was, in fact, the dance of Ariadne, the dance engraved upon the shield of Achilles by Vulcan. The maidens of Greece still dance it, one of their number leading, and holding in her hand a kerchief or a silken cord to denote the windings of the labyrinth. This dance, transmitted to us by the Romans, was performed by a long, undulating chain of persons, whose movements were regulated sometimes by songs, and sometimes by instrumental music. Like the dance described by Homer, it was led by a singing choregus. 2 D THE FIRST DANCING UUON After a Lithograph by Grcnicr 210 A HISTORY OF DANCING "The dance," says M. Bedier, in his study on the May festivals, " moved from right to left ; it consisted of an alternation of » three steps to the left, and of a f&*0~ ~^^3fc- l swaying of the body without ▼V -JbjLalh _, *m& gaining ground. The three steps were made to one or two coup- lets sung by the soloist ; the refrain, which was taken up by the whole circle, marked the time devoted to the balancing motion." The MaYade of Limousin has been transformed into a wedding- dance, and a popular dance called the Promenade. Children dance the Wedding Round in the evening, after the marriage feast. " The Wedding Round," says Jean Dutrech in Lemouzi, " is danced by an indefinite number of persons, who join hands, either in a chain or a circle." The first verse of the song runs thus : "On dit, monsieur, que vous etcs Amoureux d'une bcaute ; Auriez-vous bien la bonte De nous la faire connaitre, En donnant un doux baiser A celle que vous aimez." VILLAGE DANCERS After H. Teurt The second is addressed to the girl : "Et vous, charmante brunette, Qui captivez tous les coeurs, Cessez, cessez vos rigueurs ; Ne faites pas la severe, Embrassez le serviteur, Qui a su charmer votre coeur." 1. I - T I C DANCING Aflei Witleau 212 A HISTORY OF DANCING Sometimes these verses are sung : " Lcs lauriers sont au bois, Qui les ira cueillir ? J'entends le tambour qui bat, Et l'amour qui m'appelle ; Embrassez qui vous plaira, Pour soulager vos peines, Vos peines, vos peines." " The person to whom these various objurgations are addressed," says Jean Dutrech, "goes and kisses one of the other dancers, and returning, takes his or her place in the middle of the circle with the partner chosen. The dancing and singing are then resumed. "C'est la fille a Guillaume, Et le fils a Gendremont, Qui airnent le pain tendre (bis) ; Entrez dans cc petit rond, Tout rond. " Mettez-vous a genoux, Et jurez devant tous D'etre fideles epoux, Et puis embrassez vous Sur l'air de tra la la la, Sur l'air de tra de ridera, Et Ion Ion la." " When this Round is danced on the actual day of the wedding, the game always begins with the newly wedded bride or bridegroom, and continues till each dancer has had a turn." In the Permenada, or Promenade, an indefinite number of dancers join hands in a line, and sing, forming figures, and skipping, as they advance towards a solitary dancer who confronts them, as in the childish Round : C'est le chevalier du roi. In all its variations, the Round is essentially a joyous dance. I have, nevertheless, lighted upon one singular anecdote in its history. A painter, very famous in his day, died at Harlan in 1574, at the age of seventy-six. As he was very rich, and had no heir, he set aside a part of his fortune in his will for the purpose of starting two young couples in DANGE OF SARDINIAN PEASANTS 213 life every year in his native village. He made it a condition, however, that on the wedding-day the happy pair and their guests should form a circle, and dance to the music of violins and hautbois round his grave ! In the course of my travels I once saw a very graceful Round danced by peasants in Sardinia ; they accompanied their dance by a song, in the Sardinian rhythm, the most extra- ordinary kind of music imaginable. It is hardly the sound of the human voice, but a kind of musical buz- zing which swells, dies away, and swells again. Some- times a high note broke in, pure and sonorous ; then the bass resounded in its turn. Now and again the voices chanted in unison, forming a sort of muffled accompaniment to the improvisations of the soloist. This strange and original singing, which it is very difficult to analyse, might be compared to an Arab cantilena, accompanied by a grave murmur of sacred chants. It was in the village of Belvi, in Sardinia, on the slope of the great Gennagentu. At the sound of this singular music cast on the evening breezes by mountain musicians, young girls and men advanced to form a circle round them. The maidens took hands and stood closely side by side ; the young men did the same, the two groups joined at one end, and the dancers circled, retired, and advanced in a slow cadence, regulated by the melody of the singers. Such is the Sardinian rhythm, and the Douro-douro dance. The music THI VIGIL OP ST. JOHN After an Illustration for M. dc Laborue'i Song*, by MoraM 214 A HISTORY OF DANCING is grave and beautiful, as is the dance, which is a kind of undulating movement. In Gascony, too, we find the Round associated with popular festivities and weddings. My friend M. Kauffmann, coming away from a wedding-mass in this district one day, heard some musicians strike up a slow, gently modulated chant, to which all the party at once responded. " The bridegroom," he said, " took his bride by the hand, the various couples fol- lowed their example, and all marched along, accommodating their steps to the air with rhythmic movements of much grace and elegance. Now re- volving, now gliding forward, in a gradual crescendo, they broke at last into a lively, rapid dance, the un- dulating movements of which produced the most graceful attitudes, and the most unexpected effects, recalling certain aspects of the Provencal Fandango. This dance is called the Rondo. It continued till we reached the little rustic house, in the courtyard of which, under the shade of green boughs borrowed from the neighbouring forest, an excellent meal, suited to the well-known sobriety of the guests, had been provided by M. B , to which we did not fail to do ample justice." LE TAMHOURIN After Taunay THE BRETON RONDO 215 "The honest folks of the Landes, who are passionate lovers of dancing, left the table to mingle joyously in their favourite Rondo. Towards evening it became a formidable crescendo, a mad, headlong race, reckless, and even terrible at last. Excited, not by drink, but by their much-loved UAXCE AT A\ INN 1 ngravini by Buan after A. ik St. Aubin pastime, all the young couples, turning, twisting, jumping over obstacles, climbing, leaping, escalading, running, only paused when the sounds of the fife died away for lack of breath on the part of the exhausted musicians. The great points to observe in the dancing of the Rondo are never to unclasp hands, and to follow every movement of the leader blindly." M. Georges Perrot, in his travels among the Southern Slavs, saw a Romaika, which seems to be a variety of the Round. " There are very few Eastern dances," he says, " in which the two sexes 2l6 A HISTORY OF DANCING mingle, and even when this occurs, as in certain varieties of the Romaika, it is only in a kind of Round, in which all the men first join hands and dance, and then all the women. They never dance in couples. Even in the Romaika, only the leader of the Round dances ; the others form up and march while the choregus leaps and bounds. Except in this exercise, which recalls the Homeric choruses, and in which a whole village takes part, dancing is merely a spectacle, as in our ballets." DANCE OF PEASANTS M. Charles Yriarte gives an elaborate description of the national dance of Dalmatia, the Kollo, a rustic dance, with certain characteristic features which distinguish it from the ordinary Round. " The word Kollo means a circle. It is a Round, formed by alternate male and female couples, its peculiarity being that the man does not take the hand of the woman next to him, but passes his arm under hers to clasp the hand of her neighbour. The whole ring, thus intermingled, stamps on the ground, singing a monotonous air, somewhat mournful, but not unpleasing. One Sunday, at Gradisca, the banks of the Save for a distance of about a league were covered with groups of women strangely adorned with glass beads, huge crowns, artificial flowers, false pearls, and jewels of curious design, the brilliant hues of which stood out against their richly embroidered bodices. It was in honour of some local fete ; the women rlTK CMAMrtTHK AfWr a Pklurt by Dcboconn 2l8 A HISTORY OF DANCING danced together in groups, slowly, without change of place, giving a sort of challenging expression to the undulations of their bodies." According to M. Dora d'Istria, this Round is of a variable character, agreeing with the age and temperament of the dancer. " Sometimes," he says, " a young virgin performs it, exciting the spectator's admiration by her modesty ; some- times the wife of a Bosnian troubles all hearts by the signifi- cance of her move- ments." M. Dora illustrates" the intense fascination of the Kollo by the following legend : The Haidouk Ra- doi'tza, who had been cast into a dungeon of Lara, feigned death so aptly, that Bekis gave orders for his funeral. But the Aga's wife, doubting the reality of this sudden decease, advised that fire should be kindled on the Haidouk's breast, to see if the " brigand " would not move. Rado'itza's heroic soul was equal to this ordeal, and he never stirred. The Turkish woman demanded a further test ; a serpent, warmed in the sun, was laid in his bosom. The motionless Haidouk showed no sign of fear. The Aga's wife then proposed that twenty nails should be driven in under his finger and toe nails. Firm of purpose, he did not even breathe a sigh. His tormentor then ordered a Kollo to be danced round the prisoner, hoping that Ha'ikouna would force a smile from the Haidouk. Haikouna, fairest and tallest of the daughters of Lara, led the Round. Her silken trousers rustled, the necklace round hei throat tinkled with every step. Radoitza, unmoved by tortures, could not resist her spells ; he looked at her and smiled. But the young Servian, at once proud of her SERGEANT BELLEPOINTE DANCES WITH CAT1N After Charlet THE ROUMANIAN HORA 219 triumph and touched by it, dropped her silken kerchief on Radoitza's face, that her companions might not see him smile. This ordeal ended, Radoitza was thrown into the sea, but he, a practised swimmer, reached the <=hore, returned by night to the house of Bekis Aga, struck off his head, killed the " Turkish vixen " by driving the nails he had pulled from his ■I as mraoitrTU dance After a Picture by Dcyrolk own hands and feet into hers, carried off Ha'ikouna, " heart of his breast," took her away to Servia and married her in a white church. In Roumania, an ancient Round known as the Hora is danced in languishing cadence to the lingering notes of bagpipes. The youths who dance it hold hands, advancing to the left in four or five steps, then stamping on the ground, pausing, and repeating the measure. " (iradualiy," says M. Lancelot, " the mandolin strikes in to enliven the solemn strain, and seems desirous to hurry it, emitting two or three sonorous notes, but nothing moves the player of the bagpipes ; he perseveres 220 A HISTORY OF DANCING in his indolent rhythm. At last, a challenging phrase is thrice repeated; the dancers accompany it by stamping thrice on the ground, and looking back at the girls grouped behind them. The latter hesitate ; they look at each other, as if consulting together ; then they too join hands, and form a second circle round the first. Another call, more imperious still, is sounded ; they break from each other, and mingle in the round of young men. "At this moment, the old gipsy opens his keen little eyes, showing his sharp white teeth in a sudden smile, and shaking out a shower of joyous, hurried notes over the band, he expresses, by means of an agitated harmony, the tender thrill that must be passing through all the clasped hands. "The Hora proper now begins. It lasts a long time, but retains throughout the character of languor that characterised its commencement. Its monotony is varied, however, by a pretty bit of pantomime. After dancing round with arms extended, the men and their partners turn and face each other in the middle of the circle they have been describing. This circle they reduce by making a few steps forward ; then, when their shoulders are almost touching, they bend their heads under their uplifted arms, and look into each other's eyes. This figure loses something of its effect from the frequency with which it is repeated ; and the cold placidity with which the dancers alternately gaze at their right-hand and left-hand neighbours is disappointing, and robs the pantomime of all its classic aroma. " Attempts have been made to identify the Hora with the Roman dance depicted on so many bas-reliefs, and they may possibly have a common origin ; but the slow, dragging measure of the Roumanians, that excludes all expression of emotion, even to a smile, is far removed, indeed, from the passionate animation with which we may credit the daughters of ancient Rome, to judge by the frank gaiety and unrestrained mirth that distinguish the noisy rounds of their Trasteverine descendants." ... I was wandering one evening on the lande. The sun was setting, and his dying rays still lingered on the distant mountains of Auvergne, the rosy peaks of the Puy Mary and the Puy Violent. The sunlight had faded from the plain, but twilight had not yet fallen ; the luminous THE BOURRKE OF AUVERGNE 221 reflections from the sky touched the gorse and heather with pearly glints. Here and there, in the distance through the oak-trees, the slumbering pools shone with a motionless lustre. I strolled slowly back to the village. Suddenly, the sound of bag- pipes, playing a Bourree, rose upon the soli- t u d e . The notes, nasal and somewhat vul- gar when I listened to them in the village inn, took on a strangely poig- nant music here, in the evening peace of the monotonous fields, encircled by the distant peaks of the Cantal. It was neither joyful nor melancholy, but full of infinite sweetness. And the music crept into the lande, into the horizon, and seemed to tremble in the mists that rose from the valleys. Shepherds were dancing a Bourree to the pipes, before folding their flocks: " Jeou i 'ay lant ccrcada, Boimton per bouisson, A la fin t'ay (rouvadc, Amc 'un gcntil garynin." I-"IHKIK OF Al'VKKGKAT I'KASANTs From a Lithograph in the Biblioth^tjue Nilionak I felt more strongi\ than ever that music and dancing, like everything else, must be judged of in their native setting to Ik- appreciated. The Bourree of Auvergne is looked upon as a heavy dance, somewhat coarse in character. The stamping of sabots or hob nailed shoes is a characteristic accompaniment, marking every third beat of the measure. 222 A HISTORY OF DANCING But when you light upon the dancers on a lovely summer evening in the fields, how charming is the vision you bear away with you ! The Bourree is a native of Auvergne. It is said to be derived from a very ancient Branle. It is the popular dance throughout Cantal, Puy-de- DAN'CERS IN THE BOIS DE VINXENNES After an Engraving of the Time of the Consulate Dome, Correze, Haute-Vienne, Creuse, a part of Dordogne, Lot, Aveyron, Cher, Indre, Vienne, Charente, and Haute-Loire. According to an old proverb, the Auvergnats are the folks to dance ! Yes, say the Limousins : but " Per ben la dansar. Viva lous ouvergnatz," " Per ben la chantar, Vivas les limouzinas. . And, indeed, the women of the Limousin have a collection of Bourrees no less varied than original. You will hear their songs on moors flushed AU. t > IV II IHAMrftTKK ■ Collection, by Thomti Stothanl, K A 224 A HISTORY OF DANCING with the purple of heather, in savage gorges where mountain torrents churn among the rocks, under the mysterious shade of forest oaks, and, like me, you will listen entranced. The Bourree was introduced at the Court of the Valois by Marguerite daughter of Catherine de' Medici. The success it obtained continued till the close of Louis XIII. 's reign. It is a mi- metic dance. The woman hovers round the man as if to approach him ; he, retreating and returning to flee again, snaps his fingers, stamps his foot, and utters a sonorous cry, to express his strength and joy. Bach, Handel, Rameau, and other masters composed Bourrees, the rhythm of which differed slightly from that of the traditional Bourrees. Some of our modern musicians have also treated the theme, among others M. Saint-Saens, in his Rhapsodie d ' Auvergne, M. Raoul Pugno, in the entr'acte of Petite Poucette, and M. Sylvio Lazzari, in his charming orchestral suite. The Catalan dances have no sort of affinity with the Bourrees of Auvergne or Limousin. They are, indeed, distinguished from all other dances by special features. The Catalan Bails have a touch of the sentiment that informed the antique Hormos, in which virginal grace joined hands with masculine vigour. In my childhood I often witnessed the Bails of Roussillon, and I still retain charming recollections of these dances. At the first notes of a short flageolet, and a little drum, slung on the performer's arm, which constitute the orchestra, the dancers come forward. They wear a red cap hanging at the back of their heads, a short jacket with metal buttons, a broad sash, the faxa, rolled round the waist, tight breeches, and the thin shoes known as the aspardenya : the male dancer begins by a prodigious leap, passing his right foot over his partner's head. This feat, which demands great agility, is called the Camada redona. The female dancer at once retreats, but presently runs back to her cavalier, who NEAPOLITAN DANCERS After Victor Maurin CATALAN BAILS 22 5 retires in his turn. Then the couples change partners many times, first the cavalier and then the lady. Finally, all the couples join in a Round, and the women, placing their hands on the shoulders of their neighbours, spring into the air above their heads. The latter support them, holding them up under the arms, and they, bending their heads, kiss their respective cavaliers. The brilliant costumes, the faces, flushed with pleasure, make up a radiant picture in the sunshine. Sometimes the woman rushes up to her partner, places her left hand in his right, and with a sudden spring, stiffening her left arm the while, she rests her right haid on his shoulder. He at once lifts her up, and holds her above his head, seated on his hand. Some- times, instead of seating her on his hand, he catches her up, and holds her hanging across it. The Neapolitan dance of Victor Maurin's sketches seems to be identical with this Bail. The Catalan dance struck Father Vaniere, a Jesuit of Beziers, as so poetic, that he gave it a place in his 'Protdium rustic um. He describes it as a harvest pastime. " The beauty of these dances," says M. 1 fearjr, who has made a study of the Catalan Bails, " consists in the smoothness with which the female dancer retreats. There must be no suspicion of jerkiness or jumping in her movements. She must slide on tip-toe, without making any regular steps, her hands in her apron, her head a little on one side, that she may see the retrograde course she has to follow in the Round. She circles languidly, though rapidly, round the central space of the enclosure, with a movement full of grace." Santa Kulalia, in the Island of Ivic,a, I was present at a dance in which the posturings of the female dancers, though quieter and more subdued, rccallcj those of the Catalan women. The young giils revolved in a sort of slow waltz. The young men whirled round energetically to the sound of drum and flute, but the brilliantly dressed maidens, their eyes modestly NKAPOUTAN DANCKKS After Victor M uirin 2 V 226 A HISTORY OF DANCING downcast, moved with a sort of undulation, their elbows against their hips, their hands slightly raised, like idols. The male dancer, a coloured scarf rolled round his neck, a handkerchief or a pair of enormous castanets (cas/agnolas) in his hand, sometimes in gala dress, sometimes in a simple short jacket, throws himself about, stamps, leaps into the air, and at intervals kicks out furiously on either side. PEASANT DANCE AT ANDORRE After G. Vuillier The intention of this mimetic dance is clear enough. The young girl sways and trembles, chaste and gentle. Her partner follows her, protects her, drives off other wooers, and bounds into the air at last, in joyous token of victory. The Farandole, the old popular dance of Southern France, still survives in Provence and in Roussillon, where I well remember seeing it danced at village festivals in honour of the patron saint. The dancers stand in a long line, holding each other by the hand. Sometimes handkerchiefs, the ends of which are held by the dancers, add to the length of the human chain. as I " - Ha !>• (wmuHloa of Horn. Bound VaJadon and Co. 234 A HISTORY OF DANCING and cannot fly. The music swells in a rapid crescendo, the voices become louder, the clapping of the hands more vigorous, the dancer's movements more hurried, the upper part of her body is almost motionless, while her arms beat the air like wings that struggle helplessly to lift her into space. She becomes impatient at last, a sort of rage possesses her. She runs A GIPSY DANCE After Carl BOker panting round the circle that encloses her, the ground re-echoes dully to the beating of her feet ; she twists her arms, her hands, her fingers convulsively, At last she pauses in despair, and we all applaud her." The natives of the New Hebrides celebrate the banana harvest with festive dances. " Persons of every age take part in these," says Dr. Hagen, " from the infant whom the mother carries on her hip, to the toothless old grandmother. The female dancers are tricked out in frippery of every hue. They form a circle, from which each one comes forward in turn ; she chants a couplet, to which her companions reply, advancing towards her, and then retreating." DANCING A UNIVERSAL PASTIME 235 Dancing, that mirror of human passions, has mingled its slow or rapid measures with all the events of human life. We find it under the chilly skies of the North, under the burning sun of the Equator, in the remotest islands of the Pacific ; it is, in fact, a universal language. In Denmark, fathers train their children to dance to the fiddle in rustic inns ; Spanish parents look proudly on as their little ones make their first H \w I DAItCl attempts to the music of the guitar, and are overjoyed to see signs of a vocation in one of their dark-eyed girls. The Bashi-Bazouks execute war-dances round their camp-fires ; Tziganes and Gitanas gather crowds around them now, as in the Middle Ages, when they wandered from town to town, bearing the voluptuous charm of Oriental dances throughout Europe. Dancing, however, is greatly modified by climate. In the northern and temperate zones it is a pastime more or less popular ; in the south, it is a passion. Thus the soul of each nation informs its dancing. In one country, ferocity and delight in bloodshed find expression in frenzied 236 A HISTORY OF DANCING measures ; in another, dancing is a diversion, reflecting the prevalent gentleness of manners. The most barbarous races indulge in it ; among certain savage tribes, it serves to ratify treaties or to declare war. The Calumet Dance of the Iroquois, for instance, is said to have had all the prestige of a national institution consecrated by law. "DELIGHTFUL WYOMING From an Engraving by G. E. Hicks after E. Webb A DANCE AT SEGOVIA After a Picture by Garcia Mencia CHAPTER VIII S paiish Dances — Danzat and 'Baylti — The Fandango — The Bolero — The Seguidillas Manchegai — The J it a Aragonesa — The Jaleo de Jerez. — The Cackuca. >w.- 'ANISH dancing is of great antiquity. It doubtless under- went various Moorish modifications, and certain of its steps are obviously of Arab origin. But everything goes to show that in all its essentials it is heir to the traditions of the Gaditanas — whom we have already mentioned — those famous dancing-girls of Cadiz, who created such a furore in ancient Rome. Obscurity envelops the history of the national dances of Spain during the Middle Ages. In a study dealing with public amusements, the learned Jovellanos suggests that the art of dancing took refuge in the Asturias during the Arab invasion. We know that minstrels and troubadours (juglares and trovadores) did not cease to compose baladas and danzas, and 238 A HISTORY OF DANCING that the dance known as that of King Alonzo the Good belongs to the twelfth century. Among the earliest dances of the Peninsula were the Turdion, the Gibadina, the Pie-de-gibao, the Madama Orleans, the Alemana, and the Pavana. Under Philip IV., theatrical dancing rose to an eminence hitherto unattained in Spain. In the Court Theatre at Buen Retiro, certain Danzas Habladas (spoken dances) were performed, in which allegorical and mytho- logical subjects were developed with immense success — not, however, in a manner wholly new, as something of the sort was already known in the days of Cervantes. Here, as at Versailles under Louis XIV., ballets were organised with extraordinary magnificence of decoration and costume, members even of the royal family taking part in the performances. Celebrated poets, such as Quevedo and Luis de Benevente, composed several of these ballets, follow- ing thus in the illustrious footsteps of their predecessors, Lope de Vega, Mendoza, and Calderon, among whose works pieces of the same class are to be found. Little by little these ballets d'action supplanted the national dances on the stage, so that the Zarabanda and the Chacona were almost extinct early in the eighteenth century. But then a new impetus was given to choregraphy, and the Fandango, the Bolero, and the Seguidillas appeared. " What people so barbarous," cries the poet Tomas de Yriarte, " as not to be stirred by the tunes of its national dances ! " All Spain, indeed, thrills to the notes of the Fandango — pre-eminently the national air, and one that accompanies a step so ardent and so graceful as to be " worthy of performance at Paphos, or in the temple of Venus at Cnidus." " Like an electric shock, the notes of the Fandango animate all hearts," says another writer. " Men and women, young and old, acknowledge the power of this air over the ears and soul of every Spaniard. The young men spring to their places, rattling castanets, or imitating their sound by snapping their fingers. The girls are remarkable for the willowy languor and lightness of their movements, the voluptuousness of their attitudes — beating the exactest time with tapping heels. Partners tease and entreat and pursue each other by turns. Suddenly the music stops, and each dancer , //„ !i.\„//' i ,,,/,/. THE FANDANGO 2*9 shows his skill by remaining absolutely motionless, bounding again into the full life of the Fandango as the orchestra strikes up. The sound of the guitar, the violin, the rapid tic-tac of heels (taconeos), the crack of fingers and castanets, the supple swaying of the dancers, fill the spectators with ecstasy." The measure whirls along in a rapid triple time. Spangles glitter ; the THE rANDANC" After a Picture by France* sharp clank of ivory and ebony castanets beats out the cadence of strange, throbbing, deafening notes— assonances unknown to music, but curiously characteristic, effective, and intoxicating. Amidst the rustle of silks, smiles gleam over white teeth, dark eyes sparkle and droop, and flash up again in flame. All is flutter and glitter, grace and animation— quivering, sonorous, passionate, seductive. OR ! ole ! Faces beam and eyes burn. Oft, ore I The Bolero intoxicates, the Fandango inflames. 240 A HISTORY OF DANCING Father Marti, Dean of the Chapter of Alicante, wrote as follows in 17 1 2 : "You know that dance of Cadiz, famous for centuries for its voluptuous steps, and still performed in every house and suburb of the city to the delight of all spectators ; not only is it in favour with negresses THE FAN'DANtiO After a Picture by Kindler and other low people, but also with ladies of the highest repute and birth. " The step is danced by one or by several couples, who follow the measure with the most pliant undulations of the body." The Fandango has points of resemblance to the Seguidilla. "A singular anecdote, the authenticity of which I do not guarantee," writes Baron Charles Davillier, " is related by a seventeenth century author in connection with this famous dance. It is said that its indecency so scandalised the Vatican that its proscription was resolved upon, under pain THE BOLERO 241 of excommunication. A consistory having been convoked to try the matter, sentence was about to be pronounced, when a cardinal interfered to say that it was unjust to condemn even the guilty without a hearing : he moved that the Fandango should appear before its judges. This being agreed to as equitable, two Spanish dancers, one of each sex, were summoned. They danced before the august assembly. Their grace and vivacity soon drove the frowns from the brows of the Fathers, whose souls were stirred by lively emotion, and a strange pleasure. One by one their Eminences began to beat time with hands and feet, till suddenly their hall became a ball-room ; they sprang up, dancing the steps, imi- tating the gestures of the dancers. After this trial, the Fandango was fully pardoned and restored to honour." If the Fandango as danced by the populace is too racy of animal life and passion, it grows milder when introduced into society. Moderated by the laws of the theatre, it gains in grace, though it loses in vigour. The light and lively Bolero, or Volero, is not an ancient dance. It dates from the end of last century, and its invention is ascribed to Sebastian Ccrezo, a celebrated dancer of the time of Charles III. Experts, neverthe- less, trace in it remnants of older dances- of the Chacona, for example, and the Zarabanda. It is a more dignified and modest dance than the Fan- dango ; but it has, like the latter, certain affinities with the Seguidilla. The Bolero, which is a dance for two persons, consists, says Blasis, of five parts : 1 he paseo, or promenade, which is introductory ; the differentia, in 2 H A KIM K UANCR After EilcUn 242 A HISTORY OF DANCING which the step is changed ; the trayersia, or cross-over, in which places are changed ; then the so-called finale ; followed, in conclusion, by the bien parado, distinguished by graceful attitudes, and a combined pose of both the dancers. The Bolero is generally in duple time, though some Boleros are written in triple time. Its music is varied, and abounds in cadences. The tune or air may change, but the peculiar rhythm must be preserved, THE YOUTHFUL DANCKK After a Picture by Cabral y IJejarano as well as the time and the preludes, otherwise known as feintes pauses (feigned pauses). The Bolero step is low and gliding, battu or coupe, but always well marked." On the stage, the Bolero is performed by several parejas, or couples. One of its most graceful posturas, or attitudes, is that called the dar la vuelta, in which the dancers find themselves face to face after a half turn. The woman's part in this dance is infinitely more expressive and im- passioned than that of the man. " Ole ! ote ! the Bolero intoxicates ! " as says a Spanish writer. By Seguidillas are to be understood not only the national dances, SEGUIDILLAS -> 43 but also certain popular stanzas by which they are accompanied. The step of the Seguidilla of the present day had its origin in La Mancha (hence the term Seguidillas manchegas), and it dates from the early part of the eighteenth century ; but Seguidillas of some sort — very different, perhaps, from those we know -are extremely ancient. They are mentioned by Cervantes in Don Quixote, and also in the Vida y Hechos del Picaro Guzman A MUX DANCIK After a Picture by Worms Bjr perniuion of Mean. Bouieod Valador and Co. de Alfarache, by Mateo Alcman, who lived in the latter part of the six- teenth century. "Our buildings and weapons of war," says Alcman, "are renewed from day to day. . . . Chairs, cupboards, tables, lamps, candlesticks are also changed. It is the same with our games and dances, our music and songs. I he Zarabanda has gone ; Seguidillas arc in fashion ; which, in their turn, will disappear to make room for newer dances." Mariano Soriano Fuentes, one of the most popular composers in the 244 A HISTORY OF DANCING Peninsula, and the author of an excellent history of Spanish music, is of opinion that the Seguidillas may be regarded as the oldest dances of Spain, excepting only those dances called Bailes en Coro (Rounds), and the Danza Prima, still in vogue in the Asturias. Senor Fuentes eulogises the Seguidilla as an ideal popular pastime, full of variety in its figures, graceful, spirited, gay — yet not immodest, and comparing favourably in this respect nth the Andalusian dances. But even in Andalusia, the penny fans {abanicos de calania) sold in the precincts of the bull-ring on feslas, the tambourines, and the quaint yellow carriages in the streets, are all decorated with pictures of Seguidillas — very primitive pictures in glaring colours : " No ka de f altar zandunguera, Puesta en jarras una dama De las que la liga ensenanj' " In which there is always a fine lady, with her arms a-kimbo, and not ashamed of her garters." The Andalusian Seguidillas have a rapid rhythm, and are accompanied by verses {coplas de baile) which are usually gay and lively. In La Mancha — whose inhabitants, lovers of music and dancing, are the merriest folk in Spain — Seguidillas are improvised by popular poets to suit every occasion. Whistled by muleteers, sung in taverns, echoing through the torrid air of the plains, the coplas de Seguidillas are innumerable : " Dans la Mane he les jeunes files Triomphent dans les seguidilles." The coplas of La Mancha are famous. Many of them are ephemeral ; others endure to enrich that patrimony of ancient song transmitted from generation to generation, printed at Barcelona, or in the neighbourhood of Seville or Madrid, and sold at bookstalls, or hawked by blind men through the country-side. Need it be said that the theme of these coplas is love — the longing and the joy of the lover, or his jealousy, his anguish, his rage ? The structure of these verses is simplicity itself — a more or less regular couplet or two, (the copla proper) and an estribillo, or refrain. seguidillas 2 45 Baron Davillier, in his Espagne, gives specimens of some popular Seguidillas : " Mi carazcn valanda Sf/ui- J tu ftttt i Lt cortastt las alas. A Ml After a Picture by D. PucbU Y qutdt dentra. Par atrrrida Se quedari par sitmpre En el metida." " My heart flew to thy breast. Thou didst cut its wings, so that it remained there. And now it has waxed daring, and will stay with thee for evermore." " San Iks ejas, hrmasa. Flirts arptnes, Que can mirar iraspasan Las earazanes. 246 A HISTORY OF DANCING Miraste el mio, T desde aquel instant e Por ti deliro." " Thine eyes, O my beauty, are cruel spears, that pierce hearts with a glance. Mine thou hast looked upon — and ever since, I have been mad." Now it is a young girl who sings : " Aunque me ves que canto, Tengo yo el alma Corno la tortolilla Que llora y canta, Cuando el consorte, Herido de los celos, Se escapa a I monte." " Lo, I sing ! but I sing and weep like the turtle-dove, whose mate, stricken of jealousy, flies away towards the moun- tain. " These songs," continues Davillier, " probably go back to the seventeenth century, to the days of Gongora. To us they may appear very lackadaisical and insipid ; yet, as compared with our own popular poetry — with our street catches and our bon-bon mottoes — these Seguidillas are superior both in taste and style." During my own travels in the Balearic Islands, I halted in the little town of Pollenza, near Cape Formentor. Here I noted down certain malaguenas which seem to me to have something in common with the cop/as de Seguidillas. Love is still the theme of these verses, which are tender and sometimes quaint : " Una estrella se la paraida En el ciel y no parece ; En tu car a se ha metido ; T en tu /rente resplandece." A SPANISH DANCER After a Lithograph by Grenicr SEGUIDILLAS 2 47 " A star is lost and appears not in the sky ; in thy face it has set itself; on thy brow it shines." " A un sabio U fregunti De qui mat me moriria I~ me a'iio ' Del qurrer ! ' Serrana, que le tenia ! " tmk HArrv rAMit.v Alter a Picture by Manuc Yus " 4 What shall I die of?' I asked the wise man. He said, 'Of love ! ' And I loved thee already, girl of the mountains ! ' " I heard these coplas de malaguefias everywhere. The wind bore them up the mountain, the waves of the sea rocked them, they hung about the dusty path of the muleteers, they echoed from the mysterious depths of twilit patios to the tinkling accompaniment of guitars. Nearly every Spanish province has its special Seguidillas, similar in character to th««c of La Mancha, but modified by the temperament of its 248 A HISTORY OF DANCING inhabitants. In Andalusia these dances are called Siquiriyas. Elsewhere such qualifying terms as Gitanas, Mollaras, Sevillanas, Aragonesas, Valen- cianas, are used. Seguidillas Gallegas are peculiar to Galicia, Pasiegas to Santander, Quipuzcoanas to the Basque Provinces. Few Spaniards are unacquainted with the Seguidilla step. ON STRIKE, MALAGA After a Picture by Ferrandiz Baron Davillier describes one of these dances which he witnessed at Albacete : "One day at the fair of Albacete, one of the principal towns of La Mancha, we saw Seguidillas Manchegas characteristically danced. The dancers of the district met in a low-roofed room of the parador de la diligencia (coaching-inn), the best hostelry of the place. The guitarist wore,- instead of the usual gaudy short jacket (marselles), a thick lambskin zamarra ; and had substituted for the classic sombrero of the Andalusians a cap (montera) of wild-cat skin. He began in a minor key with some SEGUIDILLAS 249 rapid arpeggios ; and each dancer chose his partner, the various couples facing each other some three or four paces apart. Presently, two or three emphatic chords indicated to the singers that their turn had come, and they sang the first verse of the cop/a ; meanwhile the dancers, toes pointed and arms rounded, waited for their signal. The singers paused, and the guitarist began the air of an old Seguidilla. At the fourth bar the castanets A. DAHCI or ARACfiNrtK rIASANTS After a Picture bjt Ru-x Aficr a Prist la ibe IUUiofhr.|nc National! THE TARANTELLA AT NAPLES From a Photograph by Sommer and Son CHAPTER IX (Modern Greek Dances — The Italian Tarantella — Some European D.wces — 'Bayaderes and ullmees — Savage Dances SIXTY Greek women with their children took refuge on a height when Ali Pacha of Janina put the villages of Suli to fire and sword. These women watched the pitiless slaughter of their husbands and brethren. Then, in despair, they threw their children from the precipice into a torrent that roared at its foot, and, taking each other's hands, danced a last distracted round. One by one they left the dancing circle and flung themselves into the abyss. As victim after victim disappeared, the circle narrowed, and resumed its funeral measure. When the dance ceased, the cliff was deserted. There was silence, broken only by the eternal roar of the torrent. Nothing stirred, MODERN GREEK DANCES 26; save the thin wreaths of smoke rising from the heaps of embers that had once been villages. Greece still guards the glorious memory of her ancient dances. This sombre round, danced by Suliot women about to die, expressed their despair, like the dances of their ancestors on the eve of battle. For many centuries past dancing has been dissociated from religious rites among the Greeks. It is only in the mountain fastnesses of certain semi-barbarous clans that the old union still lingers, though scattered vestiges of the ancient choregraphy are to be found here and there in the peninsula of Hellas. The dance that Homer describes as engraved upon the shield of Achilles is still performed. Lightly clad girls, dancing hand in haul, follow a leader through windings that represent the Cretan labyrinth, and indicate the episode of Theseus and Ariadne. The dancers move with a slow, sweet rhythm through scenes of surpassing loveliness. The spectator dreams that he is watching that round of Nymphs and Graces described by Hesiod. The Greeks have retained several other antique dances. The Arnout Dance recalls that of the ancient Greeks, when they went to battle dancing — as did also the Lusitanians, according to Diodorus Siculus. The Arnout leader* animates his company by cracking a whip or shaking a staff, as he rushes from one grcup to another, followed by dancers moving in cadence with hands entwined. The Ionian, a true Bacchic dance, still survives among the Greeks. A rUMLIC DAKCKK From an eighteenth Century Print * Mm Greek dance* ire guided by 1 leader, a*bp ii >r< bMj a tucccnor ol (lie ancient 264 A HISTORY OF DANCING especially at Smyrna in Asia Minor. The Agrismene, once a dance of the festivals of Aphrodite, is not extinct. Young girls, when they have filled their jars at the sacred wells of Callichorus, join hands and dance and sing. To this day kilted Greeks, quiver on shoulder and bow in hand, perform the ancient Pyrrhic Dance. The Klephts, or Brigands, follow their thoregus in a long chain, dancing and singing while he marks time by nodding his head. In modern Sparta, M. Henri Belle saw a performance of the Syrtos, a grave, slow dance, evidently of ritual origin : " The dancers, taking each other by the hand, turned monotonously in a circle. But after the resinous wine began to circulate there was more animation. A tall fellow danced a few steps, gravely and seriously, yet lightly and gracefully. Then he began to rotate with wonderful speed* sometimes almost crouching on the ground, sometimes straightening himself with a leap, swaying to and fro, gesticulating with his arms, utterly without method or grace, or the least concern for the movements of his companions. Having at last become, as it were, the fugleman of the whole band, he directed their movements with a handkerchief, supporting himself on the shoulder of a companion. And so, silently and sedately, the dance went on till fatigue forced the performers to desist. "Northern Negropont," he writes in another part of his travels, "is famous for its dances ; that executed by the natives of Mantoudi is apparently a rhythmic pantomime of the hauling ashore of fishing-nets. " In Chios the natives danced to a rather pretty Turkish air, something like the music of the Farandole of Provence ; men and women hold each other's hands, while a detached couple dance before the group." But the dance seen by M. Belle at Megara was the most attractive of all : " The village women, gracefully and vividly dressed, were drawn up in long files of forty or fifty. Those of the first file gave their hands to those of the third file over the shoulders of the second. In the same way, the women of the second line joined hands with those of the fourth, over the shoulders of the third — the whole forming an alternation and interlace- ment not easily described, but very charming. This done, all moved together, three quick steps forward and three back, singing a slow and 1HK TARANTELLA 265 measured chant, their gold embroideries glittering and their silken vests showing the varying colours of a sea under the setting sun. " This is a very ancient dance, the learned tell us. It is distinguished by a virginal and graceful sobriety, by a pure elegance in marked contrast with the libidinous undulations and contortions of the Moslem harem dances. Mere brazen animalism has never become acclimatised among the Hellenes, and though their rhythmic dancing is pursued to-day mainly for pleasure and healthful exercise, it is easv to realise that it was once a religious symbol, or even a ritual ceremony." " The ancient May dances still exist in Greece," says M. Fertiault. "On May- day in certain villages, women and children assemble in honour ot Flora, visiting green meadows, gathering flowers, covering themselves with blossoms from head to foot. The most beautiful among them being chosen leader, they dance and sing. One sings, ' Welcome, O Nymph, goddess of May ! ' i the chorus echoes the refrain, ' Goddess of May ! ' " Let us pass from the azure skies of Greece to those of Italy, where we shall find the Tarantella, a dance that owes its name to the great spider, whose bite was supposed to be cured only by dancing to the point of exhaustion, both names being derived from Tarentum. This dance is dcscriScd with much vivacity and humour by M. M. Monnier : " Back to Naples and quickly ! for in that Villa Rede I quitted so abruptly I hear the tabour calling to arms the tabour and the Castanet* that joyous tabour of long descent, as ancient, says Bidera, as Cybclc — but Bidera loves to make all things old ! Yet the tabour 2 1. 1 t f t- IAH\MK!I.\ m NAI l-t-s From an eighteenth Century Print 266 A HISTORY OF DANCING is at least as old as are the frescoes of Herculaneum, where it is painted in the hands of slim Bacchantes whose light fingers shake it. Follow the sound : it is the Tarantella ! "The dancers salute each other, dance timidly awhile, withdraw a little, return, stretch out their arms, and whirl vehemently in a giddy circle. Then partners turn their backs on each other, and go their several ways, as in the scene between Gros-Rene and Marinette. '"J'aime lc bruit du tambourin. Si j'ctais fillc de marin, Et toi pccheur, me disait-clle, Toutcs lcs nuits joyeusement, Nous danserions, en nous aimant, La tarentcllc ! ' " This is what one sees in royal Naples on the eve and day of Piedigrotta." Other dances are known to gondoliers and sailors in this land of sunshine. The villagers, gardeners, and vintagers of the Roman Campagna affect the antique rhythm of the Saltarello. Men twanging the guitar and women shaking the tambourine vie with each other in agility. It is the popular dance of country fetes. The heavy herdsmen of Calabria have a rough dance called the Sheep Dance. The Italian upper classes prefer the simple and graceful movements of the Montefiorina. Thus, in Italy, dancing varies according to place and circumstances, yet everywhere reflects the peculiarities of the people. Let us now turn to the other extremity of Europe. According to Fertiault, Russians tread on one spot almost without changing ground in their popular dances. '-They turn and turn, on the flat of the foot, moving their shoulders, and arms, and hips clumsily, to the sound of a long guitar called the balaleica, supplemented by the singing, the shouts, and even the whistling of the spectators." But M. Fertiault knew nothing of the dance known as the Little Russian, nor of the dancing songs and scenes of the Russian army. " On fete days," says M. Gaston SchefFer, " in a barn or at a tavern door, the guitarist, whom we find here as in Spain, plays a slow air. Some n m 111 l i ^ ~5 "C l< fc3 RUSSIAN PEASANTS DANCE 267 dancer, singing the while, then executes a step by himself. He thumps the ground with his heels, at first slowly, then with increasing speed, but with an air of gravity, his hands on his hips and his chest erect. This done, he drinks a cup of scalding tea and begins again. But no longer alone. A partner presents herself, and, without touching each other, the two perform a pantomime, the motif of which is the eternal theme of RKTURXIXG AITRI Til* rtMTAGS, ROMA* CAMI-AGNA Frost an Etch og by Pinclli coquetry. The girl is coy and the lover pursues. To divert his attention she throws down a flower ; he picks it up and strives to catch her. . . This is the so-called Little Russian." Soldiers sing and dance on the march and in camp. " It is only in the Russian army that regimental choirs exist. At the head of each regiment .rides or walks a squad of the best singers, who while away the hours of marching by popular songs that make the men forget their fatigue. A soloist sings a verse, his comrades take up the chorus. During the long 268 A HISTORY OF DANCING summer evenings, the soldiers dance in couples accompanied by these singers. In Russia, as in other Slav countries, and in Greece, dancing and singing are generally associated. Dancing songs are common to all the Russian provinces. The measure is always rapid, sometimes of dizzy speed. M. Dijon describes a quaint Russian dance. " Let us join," he says, BAYADERE DANXING After a Picture by Weeks " this circle of peasants, young and old. The men and maidens do not commingle, but stand silently apart, like groups of dumb creatures. At last the piper begins. Then one of the dancers takes off his cap and waves it, bowing towards a girl. She, if amicably inclined, unfolds her kerchief, of which each takes a corner, and the couple begin to turn on the green, but in absolute silence, unbroken by word or laughter. Resplendent in her holiday bravery, and proud of her long tresses, the young girl dances stolidly, not permitting her partner to touch so much as her fingers. The INDIAN DANCES 269 piper drones on monotonously for hours ; and the honours ot dexterity in this ' turning,' as the dance is called, are eventually awarded by the spectators to her who during the whole fete nas most successfully preserved a wooden impassivity, unbroken by a syllable or a smili. Upper class Rus- sians dance the dances ot all nations, more or less, but their fav- ourite is the light and graceful Cainaca, a 1 of swaying waltz. We now turn from Europe to the land of the Brahmins, to Bengal, and the banks of the (ianges, that mighty and sacred river. Mirrored in its waters, we see magnificent palaces and temples, shaded by gigantic baobabs and tamarind - trees, half hidden by flowers. This is Benares, the holy city of innumer- able pagodas, whither pious pilgrims and priests and illuminati come to die, in the ecstatic hope that their souls miv, after many transmigrations, attain the blessed rerose of Brahnu. A »AYAI>««* Aller a Picture by Cc* of Maw*. Bonaod Valadoa u4 Co. 270 A HISTORY OF DANCING Savage bulls and monstrous serpents, consecrated to the gods, wander in the precincts of these temples, within the mysterious walls of which are immured girls who never leave their prison — Devadassis and Bayaderes, chosen for their beauty to dance before the idols. The word Devadassi (meaning a slave of the god) is derived from deva, a god, and dassi, a slave ; but a Devadassi is commonly called a Nautch, that is to say, a dancer. As for the name Bayadere, it is used only by Europeans, and is of Portuguese origin. " Any Hindoo," says M. H. Fourment, " may devote his daughter, or his daughteis, to the service of the deity ; but, in the case of the caste of the Kai'd Koleti (or weavers), it is obligatory thus to consecrate the fifth daughter, or the youngest, should the family contain less than five girls. These Devadassis are admitted to the temple in their ninth or tenth year, when they are decorated, as a sign of their marriage to heaven, with a jewel of gold (the taly) strung on a cord of a hundred and eight strands — one for each of the hundred and eight faces of the god Roudza. This string is stained with saffron in memory of Lakme, the goddess of joy. The Devadassis dance thrice daily, at the hours of the poudja, in the pagoda. Their dance is a prayer of love. Their ecstasy symbolises the annihilation of the individual soul in that of universal deity. "Their long-lashed black eyes are melting, languishing, and dreamy; their skin is golden and transparent, like that of all the Hindoo women, but what distinguishes them from women of every other race is their exquisitely supple and voluptuous gait. The blossoms of a land which breathes forth every sort of fragrance serve to bathe them in sweet scents, and balmy breezes rock them as with mystic cadences and sacred chants. . . ." The ancients deified Love; the Bayaderes, living mementoes ot antiquity, are still its priestesses. They are the delight of Eastern nations. No feast or festival is complete without them ; they adorn religious pageants, and add to the luxury of royal entertainments. When an Asiatic wishes to honour a guest, he shows him the Bayaderes ; it is the necessary complement of his hospitality. They dance to the music of the talan (a couple of discs, one of which is of polished steel, the other of copper), the hautbois, the flute, and the drum, and generally choose hideous or deformed musicians as foils to their beauty. BAYADERE DANCES 271 Their hair, anointed with aromatic oil, falls in a shower about their hips ; among its jetty waves sparkle diamonds, precious stones, and gold chains, interspersed with flow Their dance, says Arago certain affinities with the Spj Fandango. Hoffher says, in his tra that the young veiled Devac form groups before beginnir dance. " A double bagpipe, monotonous tourte, drones the prelude, the melanc notes of the hautbois and flute without holes strike reinforced by the steel copper discs, and drums, j signal from the ballet-ma tney advance and unveil. ^ infinite grace and exquisite they mingle, intertwine, glide apart in their expre dance. The old dancing-wc who surround them sing clap their hands, while the toxicating scent of flowers f on the warm air. . . ." There are variations in tl was present at a dance at Srii elite of the Bayaderes, from I jewels from head to heels. with their dancing, which consisted of a succession of statuesque poses of a purely antique character. They advanced in couples, gliding along the ground, moving slowly and languidly, with studied art of" a very correct character. It was like a bas-relief on a Greek temple of the best period. 272 A HISTORY OF DANCING A sort of quivering motion of their naked feet caused a jingling of the golden rings and belis with which their legs were laden, and this metallic, cadenced sound at last produced a most curious effect upon the ear and the nerves." T. er . ,,„. _.,.,<., ,u iyj Aif rec i Grandidier. The dance of the Bayaderes impassioned, pantomime, generally accompanied ;STIVAL )h by Neurdein by songs, chanted to a slow, monotonous rhythm. Three men, with a drum and cymbals, accompany the movements of the dancer, while her comrades, crouching on the ground, clap their hands and sing in chorus. As a rule, only one dancer performs at a time ; stamping on the ground with her bell-laden (eet, she is content to turn round and round, with undulations of her arms and body that are rather strange than harmonious. The songs are generally simple recitative, which the singer interrupts at BAYADERE DANCES >- 7) intervals by piercing notes, which seem tD rise into the air like the lark mounting skywards from his furrow. The European newly arrived in India, who has often heard the Bayaderes described as irresistible enchantresses, will assuredly feel astonishment and disappointment at the sight of these dances and the sound of these songs, so different to those his imagination had pictured on the faith of travellers' tales. " The Bayaderes' costume is very rich, and extremely modest, more so than that of the women who are seen in the streets. " It must be admitted that in hot countries, where mind and body both demand calm and tranquillity above all things, nothing less suitable to the enjoyment of life could well be imagined than our swift, intricate dances and learned music. With us, pleasure itself is a toil, whereas the performances of the Bayaderes cause no fatigue. Plunged in a gentle drowsi- ness, no lassitude of mind <>r body supervenes, as the spec- tator allows himself to be lulled by these poetic tales of love, the eternal theme of all such representations. 1 must confess that I felt a certain pleasure in them, especially after having lived seme time in the East. Under the influence oi my hookah, the pantomime and the chants of the Bayaderes appeared to me as the visions of a dreamer, without arresting my attention in a fatiguing manner.'* We will quote Louis Roussclct, whose studies on the India of the K.ij.ih- 2 M After a Picture by I'cralla 274 A HISTORY OF DANCING made a great sensation, as our readers will remember ; he describes various scenes of which he was a spectator. " I seated myself," he writes, " on a luxurious divan, and was at once surrounded by servants, offering me sherbet and fruit, or sprinkling me with rose-water from large silver bottles. A few paces from me I saw the pale-faced, large-eyed Bayaderes, covered with diamonds and costly tissues, crouching on the ground by the musicians, awaiting the signal for their dance. . . . " Rising, they unfolded their scarves and shook out their pleated skirts, jingling the little bells on their anklets, by which they mark the cadence. After a preliminary chorus, accompanied by viols and tam-tams, they formed a half-circle, and one of them advanced in front of us. Her arms extended, her veil floating about her, she began to turn slowly round and round, with a slight quivering of her body, which made her bells tinkle. The soft and languorous music seemed to lull her ; her eyes were half closed. Each dancer took her turn in a pas seul ; one imitated a serpent-charmer or a wrestler ; another, more impetuous, twirled about with great rapidity. A third, who wore a pretty pearl-embroidered cap, followed the music with a coquettish movement of the- body peculiar to herself. They concluded with a lively round, accompanied by songs and hand-clapping. " In all this there was no trace of the obscenity, supposed to be characteristic of the Bayaderes' dances. Their bearing, though it has a touch of coquetry, is always modest, and their costume stricter than that of other women. Nor must we look for dancing from them in the ordinary sense of the word. Postures, attitudes, and chants make up the official Nautch Dance of the Hindoos. I say ' official,' because I did see, upon occasion, dances of a very .different character, to which strangers are rarely admitted. These were regular ballets, somewhat like those of our own operas, but full of the ardent and voluptuous Eastern spirit. Under ordinary circumstances the Nautch Dance is so serious and, indeed, so unattractive, when the dancers are neither young nor pretty, that many disappointed Europeans imagine they are assisting at some lugubrious ceremonial rite." After describing the Festival of Dassara at the Court of Baroda, and the BAYADERE DANCES 275 curious licence accorded to the Hindoo Bayaderes during this celebration, M. Rousselet tells us that in R:ijputana the Bayaderes always enjoy special privileges. He was present one evening in the Armondjan Palace at the religious dances of" the Nauratri, performed by Nautch-girls. " They were placed on the upper terrace of the Palace ; an immense Yt m in t lAYADfcRtt Ka(ravi»g hy Poiwoo after Sol iK'st carpet was spread upon the ground ; brasiers filled with resin flared in the angles of the wall, struggling with gusty flashes against the brilliant star- light. In the midst of 1 compact circle of women, who crowded the vast platform, glittering with jewels and spangles, a dancing-girl moved languidly to the sound of the ancient music of Indian worship. The scene was truly beautiful and poetic. The uncertain light, glancing fitfully upon the graceful crowd ; the starry vault above us ; the tufts of palm and Him that waved at our feet, shaking out their intoxicating scents upon the clear mountain air, that came to us laden with the keen odours of the jungle ; the mysterious rhythm of the music- all combined to give a strange charm to the evening," 276 A HISTORY OF DANCING At the Court of the Begum of Bhopal he saw the most charming of all the dances. " After a dance of young men, cathacks, a dancing-girl triads her appearance. She was dressed in the costume of the women of the people, a bodice and a very short sarri, and bore on her head a large wheel of osiers, placed horizontally on the top of her skull. Round the wheel hung strings at equal distances, each terminating in a running knot, kept open by means of a glass bead. The dancer advanced to the spectators, carrying a basket of eggs, which she handed to us that we might satisfy ourselves they were real. " The musicians struck up a monotonous staccato measure, and the dancer began to whirl round with great rapidity. Seizing an egg, she slipped it into one of the running knots, and, with a sudden jerk, threw it from her in such a manner as to draw the knot tight. By means of the centrifugal force produced by the swiftness of her rotations, the string flew out, till the egg stood in a straight line with the corresponding ray of the circumference. One after the other, the eggs were all thrown out on the strings, until at last they formed a horizontal halo round the dancer's head. Hereupon her movements became more and more rapid ; we could scarcely distinguish her features. It was a critical moment ; the least false step, the slightest pause, and the eggs would have been smashed one against the other. How then was she to interrupt her dance, how stop it ? There was but one way : to take out the eggs as she had put them in. Though it hardly appears so, this last operation is the more difficult of the two. By a single movement of the utmost neatness and precision, the dancer must catch the egg and draw it to her ; it will be readily understood that if she were to put her hand into the circle unskilfully, and touch one of the strings, the general harmony would be at once disturbed. At last all the eggs were safely extricated, the dancer stopped abruptly, and apparently not in the least giddy after her gyrations of some half-hour, she walked firmly towards us and presented the eggs, which were immediately broken into a dish to prove that there had been no deception." M. Emile Guimet, a more recent traveller, thus describes his experience of a Bayadere dance : BAYADERK DANCES '-11 "The music begins. The melody, marked by loud percussions at intervals, is plaintive, sad, languishing, but belongs to our own order of harmony. There is nothing Chinese, nothing Arab, above all, nothing Japanese about it. If Arab music has preserved the tonality of antiquity, Indian music reveals the origin of modern European methods. "There are three dancers, who dance in turn. The first has very \ m mm nvtcER From a Photograph regular features and wonderfully expressive eyes. Her dancing is more in the nature of pantomime than of a succession of steps. She advances with an expression of restrained passion, then retires, as if' alarmed and humiliated by her involuntary confession. Her movements follow the rhythm, her gestures emphasise her supposed sentiments with much grace and energy. In her face and attitudes she seems to express in turn sympathy, terror, joy, anger, recklessness, shame, self-aban;!onment, delight and humiliation, the intensest passion and the bitterest remorse. 278 A HISTORY OF DANCING "How remote from this touching poetry are the sensual Almees of Cairo or Algiers, or the cold Geishas of Kioto ! Even the ouled-nails of Biskra, who have preserved the traditions of antiquity in the oases of the desert, give but a feeble reflex of this Brahminic epopee, at once burning and delicate, expounded to us by glances and gestures. "•The dancer's costume is red and gold, her black bodice is covered with gold spangles. Her hair is very simply dressed, with a few flowers A DANCE 1\ THE HAKIM After a Picture by Richtcr for ornament. She wears jewels in her nostrils, numerous bracelets and anklets, and enormous toe-rings. " The Bayadere who takes her place has a colder cast of countenance, but she is much handsomer. Her head-dress of fragrant flowers, without leaves or stalks, forms a sort of coronet, and falls down on the nape of her neck with the ends of her hair. She wears costly bracelets on the fleshy part of her arms, and her feet are plated with rings and golden circlets. It seems marvellous that she should be able to stand up and dance under the 280 A HISTORY OF DANCING weight of all her sumptuous fetters. Her dance, though less expressive than that we have just witnessed, is statelier and more elegant ; her very coldness gives more distinction to her attitudes. " As to the subject, it is still an amorous drama, a scene inspired by the touching episodes of the Ramayana, or some other mythological poem." The Egyptian, Tunisian or Algerian Almees differ greatly from the Bayaderes, for the very essence of their dances is obscenity. The Egyptian Almees wear a long silken robe, covered with a pattern and fastened about them with a sash ; a gauze veil is drawn across their breasts. Like veritable Bacchantes, they give themselves up to suggestive contortions, to the sound of castanets, tambourines or cymbals. The ouled-ndils of Algeria, adorned like idols, laden with necklaces, are famous- for their Danse du Ventre. They may be seen nearly everywhere throughout the country, but in greatest perfection at Ouargla, where any one may witness their dances by the expenditure of a halfpenny for a cup of coffee. • At the sound of the rhaita, a shrill-toned clarionet, the thar, or tambourine, the dherbouka, a skin stretched over a pot from which the bottom has been knocked out, and which emits a hollow resonance, the thebel, a big drum, on which the performer strikes with a piece of bent wood, the Almees advance. They wave their arms, loaded with jewels, their silken sashes interwoven with gold, above their heads, and walk, swaying their bellies, half naked, in a manner more alluring than decorous. " Eastern dance," says Jules Lemaitre, " is essentially a solo and a spectacle. ... It is eminently private and intimate in its character. Within the narrow limits and the dim light of a Moorish room it may interest an artist, a voluptuary, or a student of manners by the suppleness of its movements, the harmony of its lines and contours." At Tunis, Almees are to be found everywhere, even in the lowest dens. Their obscene dances are performed throughout the province, in cafes, at private entertainments, and even at certain ceremonies. I was once a guest at a Jewish wedding, and after the marriage had been solemnised at the synagogue I followed the procession to the home of the newly wedded pair. The festival was held in the patio. All around, A JEWISH WEDDING IN TUNIS 281 from ground-floor and first-floor windows, hung bunches of human fruit, women gleaming with jewels ; an orchestra, composed of a harmonium, a flute, a violin, and a long-necked mandolin, gave out a deafening music. The music ceased for an instant ; a look of attention came into every THE DANSE Dl Afar a Picture face, as if something important, the nature of which was well known to all present, were about to happen. A little girl came forward, her eyes modestly downcast. She raised them, and cast a languishing glance at the spectators. Then, half closing her lids, she began to dance, to the monotonous accompaniment of voices and orchestra, swaying her body to and fro in attitudes that contrasted painfully with the solemn character of the preceding ceremony. Mean- ZN 282 A HISTORY OF DANCING while women, lost in the obscure recesses of the rooms, gave utterance to the you-you, the cry which emphasises this dance. Much the same kind of dance obtains in savage Africa. Commandant Colomieu relates that one evening at Metlili, during his journey across the Algerian Sahara, he saw the negroes and negresses of the oasis perform one of their ceremonial dances with great pomp. The instruments of the AN ORIENTAL DANCE After a Drawing by Decamps in the Louvre orchestra were iron castanets, accompanying a kind of chant, to which the dancers, male and female, twisted themselves about with contortions that suggested a veritable infernal ballet. The negresses, excited by the applause, gave themselves up to a choregraphic onslaught, in which the boldest and most daring attitudes alternated with postures of mincing grace and affectation. Dancing is still a rite among all primitive races, just as it was under the antique civilisations, and in our wanderings throughout the world we find it associated with religious ceremonies, festivals, and even with funerals. PATAGONIAN DANCE 28$ The religious sect of Aissaouas in Mussulman countries execute frenzied dances, the performance of which I have often witnessed. It is a strange spectacle to see the howling crowd, excited by the fumes of incense, bending and throwing back their heads in cadence, their haggard eyes rolling wildly, and the guethdia, the long tresses of hair on the summit of their shaven crowns, flying round them, now falling on their shoulders, now covering the napes of their necks. The movement of head and body •HOAX DAXCI From a Photograph becomes more and more emphatic, the boom of the tam-tams deepens, until at last the Aissaouas, seized with delirium, crunch wood, iron and glass between their teeth, scorch their flesh with red-hot coals, and swallow live scorpions. The Patagonian Indians of America hold a festival once a year in honour of Vita Oucntrou, the god of good. On this occasion they grease their hair, paint their faces with extreme care, and dress in the most grotesque costumes ; but it is unlawful to laugh during the ceremonies. The tribesmen form themselves in line, their faces to the cast, their women behind them. The dance then begins, the only change of position being from right to left ; the women sing, accompanying themselves on a wooden 284 A HISTORY OF DANCING drum, covered with a wild cat's skin of many colours. The men pirouette on one foot, the opposite one to that on which the women balance them- selves, and blow with all their might into hollow reeds. Suddenly, at a signal from the Cacique, cries of alarm resound ; the men spring hastily to horse, and breaking off their dance, follow each other in a fantastic cavalcade. The Mandans, one of the Indian tribes of the upper Missouri, perform what is known as the Bison Dance at a certain religious festival which they celebrate with fasting, prayer, sacrifices, and all the tokens of profound devotion. Eight Mandans, wrapped in bison-hides, on which the horns and the eyes are left, are the actors in this strange ballet. Naked but for these skins, their bodies painted in bands of red, white and black, and bearing on their shoulders a fagot of willow-branches, they imitate the movements and appearance of the bison. Space forbids a more detailed account of the religious festivals accompanied by dances, in which the Indians mimic the fauna of their country, serpents, beavers, vultures, &c, while the master of the ceremonies invokes the Great Spirit. The Indians of the Amazon solemnise their great religious festivals with the most curious processions and ceremonies. At Exaltacion de la Santa Cruz, M. Franz Keller-Leuzinger saw a dozen macheteiros (sword-dancers) in head-dresses made from the tail feathers of the araras and down from the breast of the toucan, with stags' feet fastened to their ankles, and large wooden swords in their hands. They marched under the leadership of their chief, who brandished a huge silver cross, and were followed by the whole of their tribe. They went from Calvary to Calvary, singing psalms and waving censers. Before each cross these braves executed a sort of allegorical dance, which evidently symbolised the submission of the Indians to the Church, and their conversion to Christianity. This manifestation accomplished, the macheteiro, bathed in sweat, approached the Calvary with many genuflexions, and laid his wooden sword and fantastic aureole at the foot of the crucifix. Descriptions of this kind abound in books of travel. In the Philippines the Negritos dance a sort of Pyrrhic at marriage feasts. The men form a circle, each one laying his left hand on the hip of the one in front of him ; with their right hands they brandish bows and arrows with a threatening air ; they move round slowly, with jerky steps, striking DANCES OF CENTRAL AMERICA 285 the left heel hard upon the ground. Three women occupy the centre of the circle, chanting, or rather screaming, an air, which is restricted to a few shrill, piercing notes. A young Negrito, who wears garters of wild boar skin, strikes a drum at intervals, and rushes into the circle. He prowls round the women, backwards and forwards, goes away and comes back again, running about with the anxious and cunning look of the thief fascinated by DANCS IN THE ISLAND OP LLIETKA OR WOLEA From an Eagm iug by Bartolozri after Cipriani for Ctk'i I VrCI«*I"V BALL IN iSjo After an Engraving by Lacoott long time the fifth figure of the French Quadrille went by the name of the Sainf-Simonitnne, because it introduced the Galop. from my father. These lessons were given after the fashion then usual, and comprised all the rudimentary exercises, batttmtnts, plih. Sec. One evening the Baron was going to a grand ball given by the Comte de Mole, then Foreign Minister, and expected to dance with some charming Russian ladies. He accordingly asked his teacher to practise the steps with him. Great was my father's wrath at hearing him talk of a waltz with two iteps, for this seemed to him a manifest contradiction to the three beats of the accepted Waltz measure. But he was soon appeased when he saw that his pupil made his (hani by taking the first step to the first ttot beat*, and the second step to the third beat. My father at once understood that the (tassi was composed of one long slow step, and one short quick one. Master and pupil waltzed together amicably, and M. de Nieuken'i success was so complete that from that night the aristocracy in a body forsook the V*kt a trtis tempt for that a dttx t*'"— (Dcsrat, Diitiiuntire it U Danit.) 292 A HISTORY OF DANCING During the reign of Louis Philippe, four grand balls were given at the Tuileries in the winter, and two smaller balls in the Queen's apartments. After the marriage of the Due d'Orleans, one ball was given in his apart- ments during the season. At the Queen's balls, the guests were not expected to wear full Court dress. The men, with the excep- tion of those who had to appear in some special uniform, wore blue coats, and were free to indulge individual fancies in the embroideries on collars and facings. White kerseymere trousers with wide gold stripes down the sides were worn with these coats. The ladies were always in full dress. At the small dances given by the Queen, the Due d'Orleans, or the Due de Nemours, the gold-striped trousers were replaced by white kerseymere breeches and buckled shoes. It was customary to give a grand ball at the English Embassy in honour of Queen Victoria's birthday. " The supper," says M. de Beaumont, " was laid in the con- servatory, and it was an understood thing that Lady Granville's fair THE WALTZ IN THE TYROL After a Lithograph THE END OF THE BALL After a Lithograph by Pigal DEJEUNERS DANSANTS 29J guests should all appear in pink and white, the Queen's colours. All the men wore " button-holes," made of a rose, and two or three sprays of lily-of-the-valley ; the politician and the serious man displayed the pink and white badge no less punctiliously than the greatest dandy of the circle." THI GAVOTTE After a Print of the Restoration Period in the Bibliotheque Nationale It was at the Austrian Embassy that the famous dejeuners dansants were inaugurated. "The guests arrived in broad daylight, about half-past two in the afternoon. Each lady as she entered received a bouquet before passing into the magnificent rooms, the honours of which Countess Appony did so gracefully. She was indeed a literal embodiment of the old aristocratic social tradition. The Count, with the Golden Fleece hanging from his neck, and the Order of St. Stephen on his breast, was a perfect type of the great noble, affable, but full of dignity. Dancing began at once. There was a positive craze for the Valse « deux temps. . . . All the couples 294 A HISTORY OF DANCING followed in the wake of the two Rodolphes and Julio Appony. . . . The Dukes d'Ossuna, de Valency, and de Dino ; Counts Esterhazy, Zichy, de Morny, de ChAteauvillars, de Jumillac, de la Tour-du-Pin, and Guillaume de Kniff were supported by all the great financial luminaries, the Roths- childs, Hopes, Barings, and Thorns. The women represented the supreme elegance of Paris ; among them were Miles. Fitzwilliam, de Terzzi, PARISIAN DAN'CERS After a Print of the Restoration Period de Stackelberg, de Chanterac, de Ganay, de Nicola'i, de Virieu, Lady Canterbury, the Duchess of Sutherland, the Princesse de la Tremouille, the Marquise de Contades, the Duchesses d'lstrie, d'Otrante, de Plaisance, Mmes. de Vernant, de Magnoncourt, d'Haussonville. ... At about five o'clock, there was a pause in the dancing, and the company descended the flight of steps leading to the gardens. There, under the shade of the trees and among the shrubberies, were set charmingly appointed little tables, at which the guests seated themselves haphazard, or in select little parties, and THE POLKA 29? prolonged the delightful emotions of Waltz and Galop in conversations animated by champagne. . . ." Towards 1 844, the furore for waltzing began to show signs of abatement. It had long reigned supreme in society, the Galop being no longer danced, save in the carnival balls. The introduction of the Polka brought about an extraordinary revolution in dancing. It created a veritable mania among fAIIMAS DAKCKtS After • Print of the Restoration Period the middle and the lower classes, a terpsichorean epidemic which no one escaped. All did not die of it, but all alike took the disease. Society resisted for a time ; hitherto it had given the tone to fashion, and it was not inclined to follow a movement. But the fame of this dance became so widespread, and its popularity so immense, that at last a duchess opened the doors of her reception-rooms to admit it, and thereupon the Polka reigned supreme in the high places of the earth.* • ■ The first time it was formally introduced into society was at a ball given by M. G ... ., the Lucullut of our age. The smartest gentlemen rider* and a host of pretty 296 A HISTORY OF DANCING The Polka came from Bohemia. It appeared first at Vienna, and afterwards with brilliant success at Baden. It was introduced into Paris by Cellarius, the famous dancing - master, among whose pupils were Hun- garians, Poles and Wal- lachians, who played their national dances on the piano for the others to dance. Cellarius' school at the end of the courtyard, at No. 41 Rue Vivienne, became the sanctuary of the new dance, which owed something of its success to the gold spurs which were looked upon as indispens- able for a brilliant polkaist of the male gender. The young professor became the man of the hour. Dancing took place every Sunday, Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday evening, from eight to eleven, THE WALTZ After Gavarni women were present at this solemnity, at which M. Cellarius and M. Eugene Coralli were to meet face to face and polka to polka. All the votaries of the Polka were on the tiptoe of expectation. Chledowski himself had composed the music for the occasion. Cellarius appeared, with carefully dressed hair and glossy beard, triumphing in advance ; he was surrounded by four or five experts carefully chosen from among his best pupils. A certain anxiety was nevertheless visible in the master's face ; every now and then he sprang nimbly upon the platform where the musicians were installed, and made them play over the new composition, the third polka that had been written. Then he returned in haste to his disciples, passing along the ranks, haranguing them in brief, decisive phrases, animating them both by words and gestures. The great Germanicus could have done no more, pace Tacitus. "While the master was thus engaged, Eugene Coralli, Lucien Petipa, and two or three other accomplished Labordians of the opposition preserved a scornful silence and a redoubt- able calm. "At last the orchestra gave the signal of battle. The spectators made way respectfully, Cellarius led out one of his sisters, dressed in pure white like a vestal virgin, and started in full career, followed by his faithful cohort. CKLLARIUS 297 under his auspices, and during the winter he gave a nocturnal fete every Wednesday. He further gave balls every year, to which ladies were admitted A <*Rt>l-r Or fAKIMAH DAHCEIM Prom a Print of the Restoration Period on the sole condition that they should appear in very elegant toilettes. I [c afterwards carried out what may be described as a social coup d'etat by " It wis like Achill»s rushing under the walls of Troy to defy Hector, and avenge the death of Patroclus ; but 'O rage ! O descspoir ! O fortune enncmic, N'avait-il tant polkc que pour ccttc infamic ! ' "Oh, agony ! No one could dance to the new tunc ; they required the old routine with which they had sucked the milk of Mother Polka ! The performers stopped and gazed at each other in astonishment. The master in vain endeavoured to revive their courage in this extremity. 'At least give us enemies we can cope with ! ' they exclaimed. These words were an inspiration for the master. Rushing to the orchestra, he threw down the traditional score before them, and the complaisant musicians once more struck up the old wearisome tunc, the most wearisome ever written, perhaps, with the exception of the Tklir* Ji "Dt»j L'M CSUnttz.. As the familiar strains fell on their cars, the Ccllarians took 2 P 298 A HISTORY OF DANCING inaugurating artists' balls, to which admission could only be obtained by means of a letter of invitation, signed in most cases by some famous opera-dancer. For the struggle had become deadly ; rival professors had arisen, Markowski andLaborde. The latter disputed the honour of having intro- duced the Polka into France with him. Did the King dance the Polka ? An irreve- rent couplet of the day declares that he did : " C'est le. grand Louis Philippe Qui s'est fichu par tcrrc, En dansant la polka Avcc la reinc Victoria." THE GALOi' After Gavarni Books, feuilletons, novels, poems, plays, music, all dealt with the Polka. There was even a Polka Almanack, published in 1845, an ^ tne courage ; they advanced with great spirit, bringing their heels up among their coat-tails in the most daring fashion, and remained masters of the field. " But their triumph was not of long duration. The crowd presently parted to make way for their terrible rivals, whose very first steps ensured the discomfiture of the Cellarians. The whole cohort dispersed, and the unhappy chief, his eyes darting flames, his heart full of fury, withdrew to swallow the affront as best he might. "Such was this memorable day, the events of which are so suggestive of a mock heroic poem that our very prose has been affected. Thenceforth an unquenchable hatred, direr than that of Capulets and Montagues, reigned between the rival schools. Immediately after their defeat the Cellarians are said to have assembled in the little Pink Boudoir and, before the statue of the Hermaphrodite, to have vowed an enmity to their foes, which might very well have found expression in something more than words." — {La Polka enseignie sans Ma"it,e.) THE POLKA 299 dance was made a pretext for political satire, the diva polka being thus apostrophised : "Dansc dc libertc, d'amour, de pocsic, Ouc vicns-tu done cherchcr, 6 polka, parmi nous ? . . " The Country Dance, it was said, suits the sanguine, the Galop the bilious, the Waltz the lymphatic, the Polka the nervous and passionate. Ai.GI'il I' of PARISIAN DANCKKS After a Print of the Kestoraik n Period An amusing little treatise of the time contains the following reflections : " The entry of the Polka into Paris took place without pomp of any sort, without any public rejoicings, without the ghost of a sergent-de- vilte. " No miracles heralded its advent, no dogs barked as at the birth of Csesar, no chimneys were blown down as at the death of Macbeth." The rivalry between Laborde and Ccllarius became more and more acute; the brilliant star of Markowski appeared on the horizon; the newspapers engaged in fierce polemics concerning these professors. $oo A HISTORY OF DANCING According to Delvau, Mme. de Girardin and Eugene Vitu took the trouble to discuss this Polish Cancan. "The Labordian," said one of the two, "turns his foot inwards, which gives the true foreign stamp to his step ; he raises his heel but very slightly behind him, and rests much more on the point of the foot, which gives greater elegance as well as greater lightness to his dancing. " The Cellarian, on the other hand, twirls round with great delight, stamps with alarming vigour, and lifts his heels as if he intended to put them into the tail-pockets of his coat ; we purposely exaggerate the Cellarian faults a little the better to show their absurdity. All this would be well enough it the Polka were simply a stagc-iance ; then, the more choregraphic prob lems, Cyclopean strides, and tours- deforce it could introduce, the better. But, as the Polka is destined to be danced in ball-rooms, I cannot see why, instead of retaining its national simplicity and original grace, we should rack our brains to transform it into a kind of convulsion, no less dangerous to the joints of the performer, than to the sensitive parts of the spectator." Meanwhile the Polka, its invasion of the capital completed, slipped through the city barriers, and took possession of the provinces. We are told that the Northern districts, with the exception of Rouen and Verdun, remained fairly calm, but from Orleans downwards and throughout the South, a frenzy of enthusiasm reigned. Every town was attacked by Polkamania. Lyons, Marseilles, and Toulon were the most ALWAYS ASK MAMMA TO DANCE Afler a Lithograph by H. Bellang£ MARKOWSKI JO' impassioned ; at Bordeaux the Polka was danced in the theatres, the streets, and even in the shops, &c. I'tim'i cinmiiiii i But, as I have said, the star of Marlcowski had risen in the choregraphic firmament. The professor introduced certain Polish dances. Cellarius' •}02 A HISTORY OF DANCING Polka began to wane. It shone with a last furtive splendour for a time, like a flame on the point of expiring, and then the general enthusiasm died out completely. Markowski's origin was shrouded in mystery. It had its legend, too. At his birth his father dreamt that he saw gnomes dancing round a cradle. MLLE. BUSE AND M. CORSET From a Print of the Restoration Period All that was known about him when he started a dancing-class in the Rue Saint-Lazare was, that he had arrived from Poland at the age of eighteen, very poor, and had gone about giving lessons in schools, his pocket-fiddle under his arm. In 1848, after many vicissitudes, he opened a dancing-school at the Hotel de Normandie, which suddenly had a great success. The aristocracy and society generally thronged to his rooms. He very soon made a fortune, which soon melted away in his hands. It was at this stage of his MARKOWSKI 303 career that, as director of the Enghien balls, he gave a brilliant fete, which was long remembered, in the establishment he managed. A BALL IN 1830 From a Print of ibc Period The entertainment in question was a pantomime of Robert the Devil, performed by the light of Bengal fire. The effect was extraordinary, the crowd immense, so much so that certain journalists, who had been unable to get in, mounted a poplar-tree in order to give an account of the spectacle. The receipts amounted to 37,000 francs. Markowski afterwards created the magnificent El Dorado of the Rue Duphot, and lived in great luxury, but his career was full of ups and downs, of lights and shadows. Shortly afterwards, his effects were seized, and his furniture and carriages sold by auction. From 1851 to 1857 he was sunk in the deepest poverty, and he who had known wealth, who had been seen in the Hois daily with a carriage and servants in livery, was neglected aiui lor^ken. PROM CCLI.AMK> After A lithograph try Vcrrccr *o4 A HISTORY OF DANCING He lodged in a cold and wretched garret, and slept on a heap of shavings ; no landlord would let him a flat, for he had nothing to offer as security for his rent ; he was insolvent. And each time he appeared on the stage he was virulently attacked in the press. One evening he danced at a charity ball at Ranelagh, poorer himself than those for whom the fete was given, for he had eaten nothing since the day before. Returning to his miserable den, some four kilometres distant, through the darkness, shivering under an icy wind, the soles of his boots came off" as he waded through the mud. Poor Markowski thought it lucky that this accident had not befallen him at Rane- lagh in the middle of his brilliant perform- ance. And it was during this time uf loneliness and poverty that he composed his finest dances. Shivering with fever on his pallet, and racked with the cough he never lost after the memorable night at Ranelagh, he created the Schottische, the Sicilienne. the Friska, the Lisbonienne, and, above all, the Mazurka, the success of which was nearly equal to that of the Polka. Markowski at last found his capitalist, M. Covary, who placed all his fortune, three thousand francs, at his disposal for the decoration and arrangement of the saloons of the Rue Buffault, a place of entertainment X A RALL IN 1830 After a Lithograph of the Period MARKOWSKI m organised for the demi-monde and Bohemia, but where the flower of the aristocracy and of the arts was often to be encountered. Marlcowski, with three thousand francs in hand for the preparation of his rooms, promptly" spent sixty thousand. His creditors — numerous enough in all conscience ! — were alarmed, and began to dun him. One fine day a policeman arrived to carry him off to Clichy. Markowslci fled through THE MAtV VTtUUH vfAUkll.UC After a Lithograph by Eugene Limy his dwelling, the policeman after him, and, the better to escape, made for a dark narrow staircase leading to the offices. The policeman stumbled, and rolled to the bottom of the staircase. He declared in court that he had been enticed into an ambush, and an inquiry was held, which proved the professor's innocence. Throughout all his misfortunes the kindliness of this man, who had suffered so bitterly, and whose friends had deserted him in adversity, remained unchanged. His warmth of heart is attested by innumerable traits. ifl }o6 A HISTORY OF DANCING Markowski's public consisted in a great measure of foreigners, English- men, Wallachians, &c, with a few artists and men of letters. Among the writers occasionally to be seen in his rooms were Villemessant, Gustave Claudin, Roger de Beauvoir, Murger, Lambert Thiboust, &c. Markowski gave his farewell entertainment in the Rue BufFault in 1863. The hall had been requisi- tioned in view of the exten- sion of the Rue de Lafayette. Markowski's star had set. Catherine de' Medici created Cours-la-Reine, be- tween the road to Versailles along the Seine, and certain waste lands. In 1660 Louis XIV. transformed those waste-lands into the Champs Elysees, and laid out a vast quincunx on Lenotre's plans, which crossed the high road to Saint-Germain. Between the Versailles and Saint-Germain roads a shady avenue was planted, to which the name of Allee des Veuves was given. pg By a curious irony of fate it was here that the Bal Mabille was established about 1840, to become in time the rendezvous of fashionable women and dandies. At first it was nothing but a little rustic dancing-room, frequented by ladies' maids and lackeys from the Faubourg Saint-Honore. It was lighted by oil-lamps, and the visitors danced to the music of a clarionet. This upper-servants' ball-room, which was only open in the summer months, was managed by Mabille the elder. He was a dancing master, who also held dances at the Hotel d'Aligre, Rue Saint-Honore, which had a certain vogue. Mabille's son transformed the establishment, replacing the smoky lamps by gas, introducing a lively orchestra, suppressing the ticket- collectors, who took payment for each Quadrille before it began, and closing the establishment on Mondays, the popular day, to open it on Saturdays. - -11 f9 /^^■l