THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES GIFT OF Jesnette MacPonald & SON. INC. BOOKSELLERS STATIONERS ENGRAVERS , ' S^E Jeanette MacDonald Raymond 5 Stevie's Books 117 N. Third St. HAMILTON, OHIO "I. CHALIAPINE AS CZAR BORIS. HENRY EDWARD KREHBIEL A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS GARDEN CITY, NEW YORK GARDEN CITY PUBLISHING CO., INC. COPYRIGHT, I9O9, AND IQI7, BY THE MAC- MILLAN COMPANY. COPYRIGHT, I9l6, BY H. B. KRF.HHIEU ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES TO RICHARD ALDRICH OLD AND FAITHFUL FRIEND, GRACIOUS COLLEAGUE,; KIND HELPER greunbfdjatt t tin flttotenftocf auf SR CBAKISeO. 2070531 CONTENTS AND INDEX CHAPTER I BIBLICAL OPERAS England and the Lord Chamberlain's censorship, 1 et seq.-* Gounod's " Heine de Saba," 2 The transmigrations of " Un Ballo in Maschera," 2 How composers revamp their music, 3 et seq. Handel and Keiser, 4 Mozart and Bertati, 4 Bee- thoven's readaptations of his own works, 4 Rossini and his " Barber of Seville," 5 Verdi's " Nebuchadnezzar," 6 Rossini's "Moses," 7, 9, 13 "Samson et Dalila," 8, 12 Goldmark's "Konigin von Saba," 8 The Biblical operas of Rubinstein, 8, 11 Mehul's "Joseph," 9 Mendelssohn's "Elijah "in dramatic form, 9 Oratorios and Lenten operas in Italy, 9 Carissimi and Peri, 10 Scarlatti's oratorios, 10 Scenery and costumes in oratorios, 11 The passage of the Red Sea and " Dal tuo stellate," 13 Nerves wrecked by beautiful music, 15 "Peter the Her- mit" and refractory mimic troops, 15 "Mi manca la voce" and operatic amenities, 16 Operatic prayers and ballets, 16 Goethe's criticism of Rossini's " Mose," 17. CHAPTEE II SIBLE STORIES IN OPERA AND ORATORIO Dr. Chrysander's theory of the undramatic nature of the Hebrew, his literature, and his life, 19 Hebrew history and Greek my- thology, 21 Some parallels, 21 Old Testament subjects : Adam and Eve, 22 Cain and Abel, 22 The " Kain " of Bulthaupt and d' Albert, 23 "Tote Augen," 25 Noah and the Deluge, 26 viii CONTENTS AND INDEX Abraham, 27 The Exodus, 27 Mehul's "Joseph," 27 Poti- phar'a wife and Richard Strauss, 30 Raimondi's contrapuntal trilogy, 80 Nebuchadnezzar, 31 Judas Maccabaeus, 31 Jeph tha and his Daughter, 32 Judith, 33 Esther, 33 Athalia, 33. CHAPTER III RUBINSTEIN AND HIS "GEISTLICHE OPER" Anton Rubinstein and his ideals, 34 An ambition to emulate Wagner, 35 " The Tower of Babel," 35, 40, 41 The composer's theories and strivings, 36 et seq. Dean Stanley, 38 " Die Mak- kabaer," 39 " Sulamith," 39 " Christus," 40, 47, 48 "Das Terlorene Paradies," 40, 41 " Moses," 40, 42 Action and stage directions, 41 New Testament stories in opera, 45 The Prodi- gal Son, 45 Legendary material and the story of the Nativity, 46 Christ dramas, 47 Hebbel and Wagner, 48 " Parsifal," 48. CHAPTER IV "SAMSON ET DALILA" The predecessors of M. Saint-Saens, 51 Voltaire and Ramean, 51 Duprez and Joachim Raff, 52, 53 History of Saint-Saens's opera, 53 et seq. Henri Regnault, 54 First performances, 54 As oratorio and opera in New York, 55 An inquiry into the story of Samson, 56 Samson and Herakles, 57, 58 The Hebrew hero in legend, 59 A true type for tragedy, 61 Mythological interpretations, 61 Saint-Saens's opera described, 63 et seq. A choral prologue, 64 Local color, 67, 78 The character of Dalila, 69 et seq. Milton on her wife hood and patriotism, 70 " Prin- temps qui commence," 73 "Mon coeur s'ouvre h ta voir," 76 Oriental ballet music, 78 The catastrophe, 80. CHAPTER V "DIE KONIGIN VON SABA" Meritoriousness of the book of Goldmark's opera, 81 Its slight connection with Biblical story, 82 Contents of the drama, 82 CONTENTS AND INDEX k et seq. Parallelism with Wagner's " Tannhauser," 85 Firat performance in New York, 85 Oriental luxury in scenic outfit, 86 Goldmark'8 music, 87. CHAPTER VI Modern opera and ancient courtesans, 89 Transformed morals in Massenet's opera, 90 A sea-change in England, 91 Who and what was Salome? 91 Plot of the opera, 92 Scenic and musical adornments, 93 Performances in New York, 94 (footnote). CHAPTER VII "LAKM&" Story of the opera, 95 et seq. The "Bell Song," 96 Some unnecessary English ladies, 97 First performance in New York, 98 American history of the opera, 99 Madame Patti, 100 Miss Van Zandt, 101 Madame Sembrich, 101 Madame Tet razzini, 101 Criticism of the drama, 101 The music, 102. CHAPTER VIII PAGLIACCI " The twin operas, " Cavalleria rusticana " and " Pagliacci," 104 Widespread influence of Mascagui's opera, 105 It inspires an ambition in Leoncavallo, 107 History of his opera, 107 A tragic ending taken from real life, 108 et seq. Controversy be- tween Leoncavallo and Catulle Mendes, 109 et seq. " La Femme de Tabarin," 112 " Tabarin " operas, 113 The " Drama Nuevo " of Estebanez and Mr. Howells's "Yorick's Love," 113 What is a Pagliaccio? 114 First performances of the opera in Milan and New York, 115 The prologue, 115 et seq. The opera described, 119 et seq. Bagpipes and vesper bells, 120 Harlequin's sere- nade, 105, 123 The Minuet, 123 The Gavotte, 124 " Plaudite, amici, la commedia finita est! " 125 Philip Hale on who should speak the final words, 126. x CONTENTS AND INDEX CHAPTER IX "CAVALLERIA RUSTIC ANA" How Mascagni's opera impressed the author when it was new, 127 Attic tragedy and Attic decorum, 128 The loathsome operatic brood which it spawned, 128 Not matched by the com- poser or his imitators since, 129 Mascagni's account of how it came to be written, 129 el seq. Verga's story, 131 et seq. Story and libretto compared, 135 The Siciliano, 137, 140 The Easter hymn, 137, 142 Analysis of the opera, 137 et seq. The prelude, 137 Lola's stornello, 144 The intermezzo, 146 "They have killed Neighbor Turiddu I " 130, 149. CHAPTER X THE CAREER OF MASCAGNI Influence of " Cavalleria rusticana " on operatic composition, 350 "Santuzza," a German sequel, 151 Cilea's "Tilda," 128, 152 Giordano's "Mala Vita," 128, 152 Tasca's "A Santa Lucia," 128, 153 Mascagni's history, 154 et seq. Composes Schiller's "Hymn to Joy," 154 "II Filanda," 154 "Ratcliff," 129, 154, 157 "L'Amico Fritz," 155 "I Rantzau," 157 "Silvano," 158 " Zanetto," 158, 160 "Iris," 159, 160, 162 Le Maschere," 159 " Vistillia," 159 "Arnica," 159 Mas- cagni's American visit, 159. CHAPTER XI "IRIS" The song of the sun, 162 Allegory and drama, 163, 166 Story of the opera, 163 et seq. The music, 167 et seq. Turbid orchestration, 167 Local color, 167 Borrowings from Meyer- beer, 168. CONTENTS AND INDEX ri CHAPTER XII "MADAMA BUTTERFLY" The opera's ancestry, 169 Loti's " Madame Chrysantheme," 169 John Luther Long's story, 169 David Belasco's play, 169 How the failure of " Naughty Anthony " suggested " Madame Butterfly," 169 William Furst and his music, 171, 189 Success of Mr. Belasco's play in New York, 171 The success repeated in London, 172 Brought to the attention of Signer Puccini, 172 Kicordi and Co. and their librettists, 172 "Madama Butterfly" fails in Milan, 173 The first casts in Milan, Brescia, and New York, 173 (footnote) Incidents of the fiasco, 174 Rossini and Puccini, 174 The opera revised, 175 Interruption of the vigil, 175 Story of the opera, 176 et seq. The hiring of wives in Japan, 176 Experiences of Pierre Loti, 176 Geishas and mous- m6s, 178 A changed denouement, 183 Messager's opera, "Ma- dame Chrysantheme," 183 The end of Loti's romance, 184 Japanese melodies in the score, 186 Puccini's method and Wag- ner's, 187 "The Star-Spangled Banner," 187 A tune from " The Mikado," 187 Some of the themes of Puccini and William Furst, 188, 189. CHAPTER XIII "DER ROSENKAVALIER" The opera's predecessors, " Guntram," " Feuersnot," " Salome," 190 Oscar Wilde makes a mistaken appeal to France, 190 His necrophilism welcomed by Richard Strauss and Berlin, 190 Conried's efforts to produce " Salome " at the Metropolitan Opera House suppressed, 191 Hammerstein produces the work, 191 * Elektra," 192 Hugo von Hoffmannsthal and Beaumarchais, 192 Strauss and Mozart, 193 Mozart's themes and Strauss's waltzes, 193 Dancing in Vienna at the time of Maria Theresa, 193 First performance of the opera at New York, 194 " Der Rosenkavalier " and " Le Nozze di Figaro," 195 Criticism of the play and its music, 195 et seq. Use of a melodic phrase from " Die Zauberflote," 198 The language of the libretto, 198 The music, 199 Cast of the first American performance, 200 (footnote). jrii CONTENTS AND INDEX CHAPTER XIV "KONIGSKINDER" Story of the play, 201 et seq. First production of Humper- dinck's opera and cast, 203 Earlier performance of the work as a melodrama, 204 Author and composer, 204 Opera and melo- drama in Germany, 205 Wagnerian symbolism and music, 206 "Die Meistersinger " recalled, 207, 208 Hero and Leander, 207 Humperdinck's music, 208. CHAPTER XV "BORIS GODOUNOFF" First performance of Moussorgsky's opera in New York, 209 Participation of the chorus in the tragedy, 210 Imported French enthusiasm, 211 Vocal melody, textual accents and rhythms, 212 Slavicism expressed in an Italian translation, 212 Moussorgsky and Debussy, 213 Political reasons for French enthusiasm, 213 Rimsky-Korsakoff's revision of the score, 214 Russian operas in America, 214 " Nero," " Pique Dame," " Eugene Onegin," Verstoffsky's " Askold's Tomb," 214, 215 The nationalism of Boris Godounoff," 216 The Kolyada song "Slava" and Bee- thoven, 217 Lack of the feminine element in the drama, 218 The opera's lack of coherency, 219 Cast of the first American performance, 219. CHAPTER XVI "MADAME SANS-G^NE" AND OTHER OPERAS BY GIORDANO First performance of "Madame Sans-Gene," 221 A singing Napoleon, 221 Royalties in opera, 221 Henry the Fowler, King Mark, Verdi's Pharaoh, Herod, Boris Godounoff, Macbeth, Gustavus and some mythical kings and dukes, 222 et seq. Mat- theson's "Boris," 223 Peter the Great, 223 Sardou's play and Giordano's opera, 224 Verdi on an operatic Bonaparte, 224 CONTENTS AND INDEX xiii Sardou's characters, 225 " Andrea Chenier," 226, 227, 228 French Rhythms, 226 " Fedora," 227, 228 " Siberia," 227, 229 The historic Chenier, 228 Russian local color, 229 "Schdne Minka," 229 " Slava," 229 " Ay ouchnem," 229 French revolutionary airs, 230 " La Marseillaise," 230 "La Carma- gnole," 230 ga ira," 231. CHAPTER XVII TWO OPERAS BY WOLF-FERRARI The composer's operas first sung in their original tongue in America, 232 First performances of " Le Donne Curiose," u H Segreto di Susanna," " I Giojelli della Madonna," " L'Amore Medico," 232 Story and music of " Le Donne Curiose," 234 Methods and apparatus of Mozart's day, 235 Wolf -Ferrari's Teu- tonism, 235 Goldoni paraphrased, 235 Nicolai and Verdi, 236 The German version of " Donne Curiose," 237 Musical motivi in the opera, 237 Rameau's "La Poule," 237 Cast of the first performance in New York, 238 (footnote) Naples and opera, 239 "I Giojelli della Madonna," 239 et seq. Erlanger's " Aph- rodite," 240 Neapolitan folksongs, 241 Wolf -Ferrari's Individ- uality, 242 His " Vita Nuova," 242 First performance in America of " I Giojelli," 243. A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS CHAPTER I BIBLICAL OPERAS WHETHER or not the English owe a grudge to their Lord Chamberlain for depriving them of the pleas- ure of seeing operas based on Biblical stories I do not know. If they do, the grudge cannot be a deep one, for it is a long time since Biblical operas were in vogue, and in the case of the very few survivals it has been easy to solve the difficulty and salve the conscience of the public censor by the simple device of changing the names of the characters and the scene of action if the works are to be presented on the stage, or omitting scenery, costumes and action and performing them as oratorios. In either case, when- ever this has been done, however, it has been the habit of critics to make merry at the expense of my Lord Chamberlain and the puritanicalness of the popular spirit of which he is supposed to be the official embod- iment, and to discourse lugubriously and mayhap profoundly on the perversion of composers' purposes and the loss of things essential to the lyric drama. 2 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS It may be heretical to say so, but is it not possible that Lord Chamberlain and Critic have both taken too serious a view of the matter? There is a vast amount of admirable material in the Bible (historical, legendary or mythical, as one happens to regard it), which would not necessarily be degraded by dramatic treatment, and which might be made entertaining as well as edifying, as it has been made in the past, by stage representation. Reverence for this material is neither inculcated nor preserved by shifting the scene and throwing a veil over names too transparent to effect a disguise. Moreover, when this is done, there is always danger that the process may involve a sacrifice of the respect to which a work of art is entitled on its merits as such. Gounod, in collab- oration with Barbier and Carre*, wrote an opera entitled "La Reine de Saba." The plot had nothing to do with the Bible beyond the name of Sheba's Queen and King Solomon. Mr. Farnie, who used to make comic operetta books in London, adapted the French libretto for performance in English and called the opera "Irene." What a title for a grand opera ! Why not "Blanche" or "Arabella"? No doubt such a thought flitted through many a careless mind unconscious that an Irene was a Byzantine Empress of the eighth century, who, by her devotion to its tenets, won beatification after death from the Greek Church. The opera failed on the Continent as well as in London, but if it had not been given a comic operetta flavor by its title and association with the BIBLICAL OPERAS 3 name of the excellent Mr. Farnie, would the change in supposed time, place and people have harmed it ? A few years ago I read (with amusement, of course) of the metamorphosis to which Massenet's "He>odi- ade " was subjected so that it might masquerade for a brief space on the London stage; but when I saw the opera in New York "in the original package" (to speak commercially), I could well believe that the music sounded the same in London, though John the Baptist sang under an alias and the painted scenes were supposed to delineate Ethiopia instead of Palestine. There is a good deal of nonsensical affectation in the talk about the intimate association in the minds of composers of music, text, incident, and original purpose. " Un Ballo in Maschera," as we see it most often nowadays, plays in Nomansland ; but I fancy that its music would sound pretty much the same if the theatre of action were transplanted back to Sweden, whence it came originally, or left in Naples, whither it emigrated, or in Boston, to which highly inappropriate place it was banished to oblige the Neapolitan censor. So long as composers have the habit of plucking feathers out of their dead birds to make wings for their new, we are likely to remain in happy and contented ignorance of mesalliances between music and score, until they are pointed out by too curious critics or confessed by the author. What is present habit was former custom to which no kind or degree of stigma attached. Bach did 4 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS it ; Handel did it ; nor was either of these worthies always scrupulous in distinguishing between meum and tuum when it came to appropriating existing thematic material. In their day the merit of in- dividuality and the right of property lay more in the manner in which ideas were presented than in the ideas themselves. In 1886 I spent a delightful day with Dr. Chry- sander at his home in Bergedorf, near Hamburg, and he told me the story of how on one occasion, when Reiser was incapacitated by the vice to which he was habitually prone, Handel, who sat in his orchestra, was asked by him to write the necessary opera. Handel complied, and his success was too great to leave Reiser's mind in peace. So he reset the book. Before Reiser's setting was ready for production Handel had gone to Italy. Hearing of Reiser's act, he secured a copy of the new setting from a member of the orchestra and sent back to Hamburg a composition based on Reiser's melodies "to show how such themes ought to be treated." Dr. Chrysander, also, when he gave me a copy of Bertati's "Don Giovanni" libretto, for which Gazza- niga composed the music, told me that Mozart had been only a little less free than the poet in appro- priating ideas from the older work. One of the best pieces in the final scene of " Fidelio " was taken from a cantata on the death of the emperor of Austria, composed by Beethoven before he left Bonn. The melody originally conceived for the BIBLICAL OPERAS 3 last movement of the Symphony in D minor was developed into the finale of one of the last string quartets. In fact the instances in which composers have put their pieces to widely divergent purposes are innumerable and sometimes amusing, in view of the fantastic belief that they are guided by plenary inspiration. The overture which Rossini wrote for his "Barber of Seville" was lost soon after the first production of the opera. The com- poser did not take the trouble to write another, but appropriated one which had served its purpose- in an earlier work. Persons ignorant of that fact, but with lively imaginations, as I have said in one of my books, 1 have rhapsodized on its appositeness, and professed to hear in it the whispered plottings of the lovers and the merry raillery of Rosina con- trasted with the futile ragings of her grouty guardian ; but when Rossini composed this piece of music its mission was to introduce an adventure of the Em- peror Aurelianus in Palmyra in the third century of the Christian era. Having served that purpose it became the prelude to another opera which dealt with Queen Elizabeth of England, a monarch who reigned some twelve hundred years after Aurelianus. Again, before the melody now known as that of Almaviva's cavatina had burst into the efflorescence which now distinguishes it, it came as a chorus from the mouths of Cyrus and his Persians in ancient Babylon. i "A Book of Operas," p. 9. 6 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS When Mr. Lumley desired to produce Verdi's "Nabucodonosor" (called "Nabucco" for short) in London in 1846 he deferred to English tradition and brought out the opera as "Nino, R d'Assyria." I confess that I cannot conceive how changing a king of Babylon to a king of Assyria could possibly have brought about a change one way or the other in the effectiveness of Verdi's Italian music, but Mr. Lumley professed to have found in the trans- formation reason for the English failure. At any rate, he commented, in his "Reminiscences of the Opera," "That the opera thus lost much of its original character, especially in the scene where the captive Israelites became very uninteresting Babylonians, and was thereby shorn of one element of success present on the Continent, is undeniable." There is another case even more to the purpose of this present discussion. In 1818 Rossini pro- duced his opera "Mose" in Egitto" in Naples. The strength of the work lay in its choruses; yet two of them were borrowed from the composer's "Ar- mida." In 1822 Bochsa performed it as an oratorio at Covent Garden, but, says John Ebers in his "Seven Years of the King's Theatre," published in 1828, "the audience accustomed to the weighty metal and pearls of price of Handel's compositions found the 'Moses' as dust in the balance in com- parison." "The oratorio having failed as com- pletely as erst did Pharaoh's host," Ebers con- tinues, "the ashes of 'Mose: in Egitto' revived in BIBLICAL OPERAS 7 the form of an opera entitled 'Pietro 1'Eremita.' Moses was transformed into Peter. In this form the opera was as successful as it had been unfor- tunate as an oratorio. . . . 'Mose in Egitto' was condemned as cold, dull, and heavy. 'Pietro 1'Eremita,' Lord Sefton, one of the most compe- tent judges of the day, pronounced to be the most effective opera produced within his recollection; and the public confirmed the justice of the remark, for no opera during my management had such un- equivocal success." * This was not the end of the opera's vicissitudes, to some of which I shall recur presently ; let this suffice now : Rossini rewrote it in 1827, adding some new music for the Academic Royal in Paris, and called it "Moise"; when it was revived for the Covent Garden oratorios, London, in 1833, it was not only performed with scenery and dresses, but recruited with music from Handel's oratorio and renamed "The Israelites in Egypt; or the Passage of the Red Sea"; when the French "Moise" reached the Royal Italian Opera, Covent Garden, in April, 1850, it had still another name, "Zora," though Chorley does not mention the fact in his "Thirty Years' Musical Recollections," probably because the failure of the opera which he loved grieved him too deeply. For a long time "Moses" oc- cupied a prominent place among oratorios. The " Seven Years of the Bang's Theatre," by John Ebers, pp. 157, 158. 8 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS Handel and Haydn Society of Boston adopted it in 1845, and between then and 1878 performed it forty-five times. In all the years of my intimate association with the lyric drama (considerably more than the num- ber of which Mr. Chorley has left us a record) I have seen -but one opera in which the plot adheres to the Biblical story indicated by its title. That opera is Saint-Saens's "Samson et Dalila." I have seen others whose titles and dramatis personce sug- gested narratives found in Holy Writ, but in nearly all these cases it would be a profanation of the Book to call them Biblical operas. Those which come to mind are Goldmark's "Konigin von Saba," Massenet's "Herodiade" and Richard Strauss's "Salome." I have heard, in whole or part, but not seen, three of the works which Rubinstein would fain have us believe are opeias, but which are not "Das verlorene Paradies," "Der Thurm- bau zu Babel" and "Moses" ; and I have a study acquaintance with the books and scores of his "Maccabaer," which is an opera; his "Sulamith," which tries to be one, and his "Christus," which marks the culmination of the vainest effort that a contemporary composer made to parallel Wagner's achievement on a different line. There are other works which are sufficiently known to me through library communion or concert-room contact to enable me to claim enough acquaintanceship to justify converse about them and which must per- BIBLICAL OPERAS 9 force occupy attention in this study. Chiefest and noblest of these are Rossini's "Moses" and Mehul's "Joseph." Finally, there are a few with which I have only a passing or speaking acquaintance; whose faces I can recognize, fragments of whose speech I know, and whose repute is such that I can contrive to guess at their hearts such as Verdi's " Nabucodonosor " and Gounod's "Reine de Saba." Rossini's "Moses" was the last of the Italian operas (the last by a significant composer, at least) which used to be composed to ease the Lenten conscience in pleasure-loving Italy. Though written to be played with the adjuncts of scenery and cos- tumes, it has less of action than might easily be infused into a performance of Mendelssohn's "Eli- jah," and the epical element which finds its ex- position in the choruses is far greater than that in any opera of its time with which I am acquainted. In both its aspects, as oratorio and as opera, it harks back to a time when the two forms were essentially the same save in respect of subject matter. It is a convenient working hypothesis to take the classic tragedy of Hellas as the progenitor of the opera. It can also be taken as the prototype of the Festival of the Ass, which was celebrated as long ago as the twelfth century in France; of the miracle plays which were performed in England at the same time; the Commedia spirituale of thir- teenth-century Italy and the Geistliche Schauspide 10 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS of fourteenth-century Germany. These mummeries, with their admixture of church song, pointed the way as media of edification to the dramatic repre- sentations of Biblical scenes which Saint Philip Neri used to attract audiences to hear his sermons in the Church of St. Mary in Vallicella, in Rome, and the sacred musical dramas came to be called oratorios. While the camerata were seeking to re- vive the classic drama in Florence, Carissimi was experimenting with sacred material in Rome, and his epoch-making allegory, "La Rappresentazione dell' Anima e del Corpo," was brought out, almost simultaneously with Peri's "Euridice," in 1600. Putting off the fetters of plainsong, music became beautiful for its own sake, and as an agent of dramatic expression. His excursions into Biblical story were followed for a century or more by the authors of sacra azione, written to take the place of secular operas in Lent. The stories of Jephtha and his daughter, Hezekiah, Belshazzar, Abraham and Isaac, Jonah, Job, the Judgment of Solomon, and the Last Judgment became the staple of opera composers in Italy and Germany for more than a century. Alessandro Scarlatti, whose name looms large in the history of opera, also composed oratorios ; and Mr. E. J. Dent, his biographer, has pointed out that "except that the operas are in three acts and the oratorios in two, the only difference is in the absence of professedly comic characters and of the formal statement in which the author protests BIBLICAL OPERAS 11 that the words fato, dio, dieta, etc., are only scherzi poetici and imply nothing contrary to the Catholic faith." Zeno and Metastasio wrote texts for sacred operas as well as profane, with Tobias, Absalom, Joseph, David, Daniel, and Sisera as subjects. Presently I shall attempt a discussion of the gigantic attempt made by Rubinstein to enrich the stage with an art-form to which he gave a dis- tinctive name, but which was little else than an inflated type of the old sacra azione, employing the larger apparatus which modern invention and enterprise have placed at the command of the playwright, stage manager, and composer. I am compelled to see in his project chiefly a jealous ambition to rival the great and triumphant accom- plishment of Richard Wagner, but it is possible that he had a prescient eye on a coming time. The desire to combine pictures with oratorio has sur- vived the practice which prevailed down to the beginning of the nineteenth century. Handel used scenes and costumes when he produced his "Esther," as well as his "Acis and Galatea," in London. Dit- tersdorf has left for us a description of the stage decorations prepared for his oratorios when they were performed in the palace of the Bishop of Groswardein. Of late years there have been a number of theatrical representations of Mendels- sohn's "Elijah." I have witnessed as well as heard a performance of "Acis and Galatea" and been entertained with the spectacle of Polyphemus crush- 12 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS ing the head of presumptuous Ads with a stave like another Fafner while singing "Fly, thou massy ruin, fly" to the bludgeon which was playing under- study for the fatal rock. This diverting incident brings me to a considera- tion of one of the difficulties which stand in the way of effective stage pictures combined with action in the case of some of the most admired of the subjects for oratorios or sacred opera. It was not the Lord Chamberlain who stood in the way of Saint-Saens's "Samson et Dalila" in the United States for many years, but the worldly wisdom of opera managers who shrank from attempt- ing to stage the spectacle of the falling Temple of Dagon, and found in the work itself a plentiful lack of that dramatic movement which is to-day considered more essential to success than beautiful and inspiriting music. "Samson et Dalila" was well known in its concert form when the manage- ment of the Metropolitan Opera House first at- tempted to introduce it as an opera. It had a single performance in the season of 1894-1895 and then sought seclusion from the stage lamps for twenty years. It was, perhaps, fortunate for the work that no attempt was made to repeat it, for, though well sung and satisfactorily acted, the top- pling of the pillars of the temple, discreetly sup- ported by too visible wires, at the conclusion made a, stronger appeal to the popular sense of the ridic- ulous than even Saint-Saens's music could with- BIBLICAL OPERAS 13 stand. It is easy to inveigh against the notion that frivolous fribbles and trumpery trappings should receive more attention than the fine music which ought to be recognized as the soul of the work, the vital spark which irradiates an inconse- quential material body; but human nature has not yet freed itself sufficiently from gross clogs to attain so ideal an attitude. It is to a danger similar to that which threatened the original New York "Samson" that the world owes the most popular melody in Rossini's " Mose." The story is old and familiar to the students of operatic history, but will bear retelling. The plague of darkness opens the opera, the passage of the Red Sea concludes it. Rossini's stage manager had no difficulty with the former, which demanded nothing more than the lowering of the stage lights. But he could evolve no device which could save the final miracle from laughter. A hilarious ending to so solemn a work disturbed the management and the librettist, Totola, who, just before a projected revival in Naples, a year or two after the first production, came to the composer with a project for saving the third act. Rossini was in bed, as usual, and the poet showed him the text of the prayer, " Dal tuo stellato," which he said he had written in an hour. "I will get up and write the music," said Rossini ; "you shall have it in a quarter of an hour." And he kept his word, whether liter- ally or not in respect of time does not matter. When 14 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS the opera was again performed it contained the chorus with its melody which provided Paganini with material for one of his sensational performances on the G-string. Andante Carpani tells the story and describes the effect upon the audience which heard it for the first time. Laughter was just beginning in the pit when the public was surprised to note that Moses was about to sing. The people stopped laughing and pre- pared to listen. They were awed by the beauty of the minor strain which was echoed by Aaron and then by the chorus of Israelites. The host marched across the mimic sea and fell on its knees, and the music burst forth again, but now in the major mode. And now the audience joined in the jubilation. The people in the boxes, says Carpani, stood up ; they leaned over the railings ; applauded ; they shouted : "Bello ! bello ! che bello !" Car- pani adds : "I am almost in tears when I think of this prayer." An impressionable folk, those Italians of less than a century ago. "Among other things that can be said in praise of our hero," remarked a BIBLICAL OPERAS 15 physician to Carpani, amidst the enthusiasm caused by the revamped opera, "do not forget that he is an assassin. I can cite to you more than forty attacks of nervous fever or violent convulsions on the part of young women, fond to excess of music, which have no other origin than the prayer of the He- brews in the third act with its superb change of key ! " Thus music saved the scene in Naples. When the opera was rewritten for London and made to tell a story about Peter the Hermit, the correspond- ing scene had to be elided after the first performance. Ebers tells the story : " A body of troops was sup- posed to pass over a bridge which, breaking, was to precipitate them into the water. The troops being made of basketwork and pulled over the bridge by ropes, unfortunately became refractory on their passage, and very sensibly refused, when the bridge was about to give way, to proceed any further; consequently when the downfall of the arches took place the basket men remained very quietly on that part of the bridge which was left standing, and instead of being consigned to the waves had nearly been set on fire. The audience, not giving the troops due credit for their prudence, found no little fault with their compliance with the law of self-preservation. In the following represen- tations of the opera the bridge and basket men which, en passant (or en restant rather), had cost fifty pounds, were omitted." 1 When "Molse" was 1 Op. cit., p. 160. 16 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS prepared in Paris 45,000 francs were sunk in the Red Sea. I shall recur in a moment to the famous preghiera but, having Ebers' book before me, I see an anec- dote so delightfully illustrative of the proverbial spirit of the lyric theatre that I cannot resist the temptation to repeat it. In the revised "Moses" made for Paris there occurs a quartet beginning "Mi manca la voce" ("I lack voice") which Chorley describes as "a delicious round." Camporese had to utter the words first and no sooner had she done so than Ronzi di Begnis, in a whisper, loud enough to be heard by her companion, made the comment "E vero!" ("True!") "a remark," says Mr. Ebers, "which produced a retort courteous some- what more than verging on the limit of decorum, though not proceeding to the extremity asserted by rumor, which would have been as inconsistent with propriety as with the habitual dignity and self- possession of Camporese's demeanor." Somebody, I cannot recall who, has said that the success of "Dal tuo stellato" set the fashion of introducing prayers into operas. Whether this be true or not, it is a fact that a prayer occurs in four of the operas which Rossini composed for the Paris Grand Opera and that the formula is become so common that it may be set down as an operatic convention, a convention, moreover, which even the iconoclast Wagner left undisturbed. One might think that the propriety of prayer in a religious BIBLICAL OPERAS 17 drama would have been enforced upon the mind of a classicist like Goethe by his admiration for the antique, but it was the fact that Rossini's opera showed the Israelites upon their knees in supplica- tion to God that set the great German poet against "Mose." In a conversation recorded by Ecker- mann as taking place in 1828, we hear him uttering his objection to the work: "I do not understand how you can separate and enjoy separately the subject and the music. You pretend here that the subject is worthless, but you are consoled for it by a feast of excellent music. I wonder that your nature is thus organized that your ear can listen to charming sounds while your sight, the most per- fect of your senses, is tormented by absurd objects. You will not deny that your 'Moses' is in effect very absurd. The curtain is raised and people are praying. This is all wrong. The Bible says that when you pray you should go into your chamber and close the door. Therefore, there should be no praying in the theatre. As for me, I should have arranged a wholly different ' Moses.' At first I should have shown the children of Israel bowed down by countless odious burdens and suffering from the tyranny of the Egyptian rulers. Then you would have appreciated more easily what Moses deserved from his race, which he had de- livered from a shameful oppression." "Then," says Mr. Philip Hale, who directed my attention to this interesting passage, "Goethe went on to 18 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS reconstruct the whole opera. He introduced, for instance, a dance of the Egyptians after the plague of darkness was dispelled." May not one criticise Goethe? If he so greatly reverenced prayer, according to its institution under the New Dispensation, why did he not show regard also for the Old and respect the verities of history sufficiently to reserve his ballet till after the passage of the Red Sea, when Moses celebrated the miracle with a song and " Miriam, the prophetess, the sister of Aaron, took a timbrel in her hand ; and all the women went out after her with timbrels and with dances"? CHAPTER H BIBLE STORIES IN OPERA AND ORATORIO IT was the fond belief of Dr. Chrysander, born of his deep devotion to Handel, in whose works he lived and moved and had his being, that the heroic histories of the Jews offered no fit material for dramatic representation. In his view the Jews never created dramatic poetry, partly because of the Mosaic prohibition against plastic delineation of their Deity, partly because the tragic element, which was so potent an influence in the development of the Greek drama, was wanting in their heroes. The theory that the Song of Songs, that canticle of canticles of love, was a pastoral play had no lodgment in his mind ; the poem seemed less dramatic to him than the Book of Job. The former sprang from the idyllic life of the northern tribes and re- flected that life; the latter, much more profound in conception, proved by its form that the road to a real stage-play was insurmountably barred to the Hebrew poet. What poetic field was open to him then? Only the hymning of a Deity, invisible, omnipresent and omnipotent, the swelling call to combat for the glory of God against an inimical world, and the celebration of an ideal consisting in 19 20 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS a peaceful, happy existence in the Land of Promise under God's protecting care. This God presented Himself occasionally as a militant, all-powerful warrior, but only in moments when the fortunes of His people were critically at issue. These mo- ments, however, were exceptional and few; as a rule, God manifested Himself in prophecy, through words and music. The laws were promulgated in song ; so were the prophetic promises, denunciations, and calls to repentance ; and there grew up a mag- nificent liturgical service in the temple. Hebrew poetry, epic and lyrical, was thus an- tagonistic to the drama. So, also, Dr. Chrysander contends, was the Hebrew himself. Not only had he no predilection for plastic creation, his life was not dramatic in the sense illustrated in Greek tragedy. He lived a care-free, sensuous existence, and either fell under righteous condemnation for his transgressions or walked in the way prescribed of the Lord and found rest at last in Abraham's bosom. His life was simple ; so were his strivings, his long' ings, his hopes. Yet when it came to the defence or celebration of his spiritual possessions his soul was filled with such a spirit of heroic daring, such a glow of enthusiasm, as are not to be paralleled among another of the peoples of antiquity. He thus be- came a fit subject for only one of the arts music ; in this art for only one of its spheres, the sublime, the most appropriate and efficient vehicle of which is the oratorio. BIBLE STORIES IN OPERA AND ORATORIO 21 One part of this argument seems to me irrelevant ; the other not firmly founded in fact. It does not follow that because the Greek conscience evolved the conceptions of rebellious pride and punitive Fate while the Hebrew conscience did not, therefore the Greeks were the predestined creators of the art-form out of which grew the opera and the He- brews of the form which grew into the oratorio. Neither is it true that because a people are not disposed toward dramatic creation themselves they can not, or may not, be the cause of dramatic creativeness in others. Dr. Chrysander's argument, made in a lecture at the Johanneum in Hamburg in 1896, preceded an analysis of Handel's Biblical oratorios in their relation to Hebrew history, and his exposition of that history as he unfolded it chronologically from the Exodus down to the Maccabsean period was in it&elf sufficient to furnish many more fit operatic plots than have yet been written. Nor are there lacking in these stories some of the elements of Greek legend and mythology which were the mainsprings of the tragedies of Athens. The parallels are striking: Jephtha's daughter and Iphigenia ; Samson and his slavery and the servitude of Hercules and Perseus; the fate of Ajax and other heroes made mad by pride, and the lycanthropy of Nebuchadnezzar, of whose vanity Dr. Hanslick once reminded Wagner, warn- ing him against the fate of the Babylonian king who became like unto an ox, "ate grass and was 22 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS composed by Verdi"; think reverently of Alcestis and the Christian doctrine of atonement ! The writers of the first Biblical operas sought their subjects as far back in history, or legend, as the written page permitted. Theile composed an "Adam and Eve" in 1678; but our first parents never became popular on the serious stage. Per- haps the fearful soul of the theatrical costumer was frightened and perplexed by the problem which the subject put up to him. Haydn introduced them into his oratorio "The Creation," but, as the custom goes now, the third part of the work, in which they appear, is frequently, if not generally omitted in performance. Adam, to judge by the record in Holy Writ, made an uneventful end : "And all the days that Adam lived were nine hundred and thirty years: and he died"; but this did not prevent Lesueur from writing an opera on his death ten years after Haydn's oratorio had its first perform- ance. He called it "La Mort d'Adam et son Apo- th6ose," and it involved him in a disastrous quarrel with the directors of the Conservatoire and the Academic. Pursuing the search chronologically, the librettists next came upon Cain and Abel, who offered a more fruitful subject for dramatic and musical invention. We know very little about the sacred operas whieh shared the list with works based on classical fables and Roman history in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries; inasmuch, however, as they were an outgrowth of the pious BIBLE STORIES IN OPERA AND ORATORIO 23 plays of the Middle Ages and designed for edifying consumption in Lent, it is likely that they adhered in their plots pretty close to the Biblical accounts. I doubt if the sentimental element which was in vogue when Rossini wrote "Mos in Egitto" played much of a r61e in such an opera as Johann PhiHpp Fortsch's "Kain und Abel; oder der verzweifelnde Brudermorder," which was performed in Hamburg in 1689, or even in "Abel's Tod," which came along in 1771. The first fratricidal murder seems to have had an early and an enduring fascination for dramatic poets and composers. Metastasio's "La Morte d'Abele," set by both Caldara and Leo in 1732, remained a stalking-horse for composers down to Morlacchi in 1820. One of the latest of Biblical operas is the "Kain" of Heinrich Bulthaupt and Eugen d' Albert. This opera and a later lyric drama by the same composer, "Tote Augen" (under which title a casual reader would never suspect that a Biblical subject was lurking), call for a little atten- tion because of their indication of a possible drift which future dramatists may follow in treating sacred story. Wicked envy and jealousy were not sufficient motives in the eyes of Bulthaupt and d'Albert for the first fratricide; there must be an infusion of psychology and modern philosophy. Abel is an optimist, an idealist, a contented dreamer, joying in the loveliness of life and nature ; Cain, a pessimist, a morose brooder, for whom life contained no beau- 24 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS tiful illusions. He gets up from his couch in the night to question the right of God to create man for suffering. He is answered by Lucifer, who pro- claims himself the benefactor of the family in having rescued them from the slothful existence of Eden and given them a Redeemer. The devil discourses on the delightful ministrations of that Redeemer, whose name is Death. In the morning Abel arises and as he offers his sacrifice he hymns the sacred mystery of life and turns a deaf ear to the new- found gospel of his brother. An inspiring thought comes to Cain; by killing Abel and destroying him- self he will save future generations from the suffer- ings to which they are doomed. With this be- nevolent purpose in mind he commits the murder. The blow has scarcely been struck before a mul- titude of spirit-voices call his name and God thunders the question: "Where is Abel, thy brother?" Adam comes from his cave and looka upon the scene with horror. Now Cain realizes that his work is less than half done : he is himself still alive and so is his son Enoch. He rushes for- ward to kill his child, but the mother throws herself between, and Cain discovers that he is not strong- willed enough to carry out his design. God's curse condemns him to eternal unrest, and while the ele- ments rage around him Cain goes forth into the mountain wilderness. Herr Bulthaupt did not permit chronology to stand in the way of his action, but it can at least BIBLE STORIES IN OPERA AND ORATORIO 25 be said for him that he did not profane the Book as Herr Ewers, Mr. d'Albert's latest collaborator, did when he turned a story of Christ's miraculous heal- ing of a blind woman into a sensational melodrama. In the precious opera, "Tote Augen" ("Dead Eyes' 7 ); brought out in March, 1916, in Dresden, Myrocle, the blind woman, is the wife of Arcesius, a Roman ambassador in Jerusalem. Never having seen him, Myrocle believes her husband to be a paragon of beauty, but he is, in fact, hideous of features, crook-backed, and lame ; deformed in mind and heart, too, for he has concealed the truth from her. Christ is entering Jerusalem, and Mary of Magdala leads Myrocle to him, having heard of the miracles which he performs, and he opens the woman's eyes at the moment that the multitude is shouting its hosannahs. The first man who fills the vision of Myrocle is Galba, handsome, noble, chivalrous, who had renounced the love he bore her because she was the wife of his friend. In Galba the woman believes she sees the husband whom in her fond imagination she had fitted out with the charms of mind and person which his friend possesses. She throws herself into his arms, and he does not repel her mistaken embraces ; but the misshapen villain throws himself upon the pair and strangles his friend to death. A slave en- lightens the mystified woman ; the murderer, not the dead hero at his feet, is her husband. Singularly enough, she does not turn from him with hatred 26 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS and loathing, but looks upon him with a great pity. Then she turns her eyes upon the sun, which Christ had said should not set until she had cursed him, and gazes into its searing glow until her sight is again dead. Moral: it is sinful to love the loveliness of outward things ; from the soul must come sal- vation. As if she had never learned the truth, she returns to her wifely love for Arcesius. The story is as false to nature as it is sacrilegious ; its trumpery theatricalism is as great a hindrance to a possible return of Biblical opera as the disgusting celebra- tion of necrophilism in Richard Strauss's "Salome." In our historical excursion we are still among the patriarchs, and the whole earth is of one language and of one speech. Noah, the ark, and the deluge seem now too prodigious to be essayed by opera makers, but, apparently, they did not awe the Englishman Edward Eccleston (or Eggleston), who is said to have produced an opera, "Noah's Flood, or the Destruction of the World," in London in 1679, nor Seyfried, whose "Libera me" was sung at Beethoven's funeral, and who, besides Biblical operas entitled "Saul," "Abraham," "The Macca- bees," and "The Israelites in the Desert," brought out a "Noah" in Vienna in 1818. Halevy left an unfinished opera, "Noe," which Bizet, who was his son-in-law, completed. Of oratorios dealing with the deluge I do not wish to speak further than to ex- press my admiration for the manner in which Saint- Saens opened the musical floodgates in "Le Deluge." BIBLE STORIES IN OPERA AND ORATORIO 27 On the plain in the Land of Shinar the families of the sons of Noah builded them a city and a tower whose top they arrogantly hoped might reach unto heaven. But the tower fell, the tongues of the people were confounded, and the people were scat- tered abroad on the face of the earth. Rubinstein attempted to give dramatic representation to the tremendous incident, and to his effort and vain dream I shall revert in the next chapter of this book. Now I must on with the history of the patriarchs. The story of Abraham and his at- tempted offering of Isaac has been much used as oratorio material, and Joseph Eisner, Chopin's teacher, brought out a Polish opera, "Ofiara Abrama," at Warsaw in 1827. A significant milestone in the history of the Hebrews as well as Biblical operas has now been reached. The sojourn of the Jews in Egypt and their final departure under the guidance of Moses have already occupied considerable attention in this study. They provided material for the two operas which seem to me the noblest of their kind MeTmTs "Joseph" and Rossini's "Mose in Egitto." Mhul's opera, more than a decade older than Rossini's, still holds a place on the stages of France and Germany, and this despite the fact that it foregoes two factors which are popularly sup- posed to be essential to operatic success a love episode and woman's presence and participation in the action. The opera, which is in three acts, waa 38 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS brought forward at the Theatre Feydeau in Paris on February 17, 1807. It owed its origin to a Biblical tragedy entitled "Omasis," by Baour Lor- mian. The subject the sale of Joseph by his brothers into Egyptian slavery, his rise to power, his forgiveness of the wrong attempted against him, and his provision of a home for the people of Israel in the land of Goshen had long been popular with composers of oratorios. The list of these works begins with Caldara's "Giuseppe" in 1722. Metastasio's "Giuseppe riconosciuto " was set by half a dozen composers between 1733 and 1788. Handel wrote his English oratorio in 1743 ; G. A. Macfarren's was performed at the Leeds festival of 1877. Lormian thought it necessary to introduce a love episode into his tragedy, but Alexander Duval, who wrote the book for Mehul's opera, was of the opinion that the diversion only enfeebled the beautiful if austere picture of patriarchal do- mestic life delineated in the Bible. He therefore adhered to tradition and created a series of scenes full of beauty, dignity, and pathos, simple and strong in spite of the bombast prevalent in the literary style of the period. MeliuTs music is marked by grandeur, simplicity, lofty sentiment, and consistent severity of manner. The composer's predilection for ecclesiastical music, created, no doubt, by the blind organist who taught him in his childhood and nourished by his studies and labors at the monastery under the gifted Hauser, found BIBLE STORIES IN OPERA AND ORATORIO 29 opportunity for expression in the religious senti- ments of the drama, and his knowledge of plain chant is exhibited in the score "the simplicity, grandeur, and dramatic truth of which will always command the admiration of impartial musicians/* remarks Gustave Choquet. The enthusiasm of M. Tiersot goes further still, for he says that the music of "Joseph" is more conspicuous for the qualities of dignity and sonority than that of Handel's oratorio. The German Hanslick, to whom the ab- sence from the action of the "salt of the earth, women" seemed disastrous, nevertheless does not hesitate to institute a comparison between "Joseph" and one of Mozart's latest operas. "In its mild, passionless benevolence the entire r61e of Joseph in Mehul's opera," he says, "reminds one strikingly of Mozart's 'Titus/ and not to the advantage of the latter. The opera 'Titus' is the work of an incomparably greater genius, but it belongs to a partly untruthful, wholly modish, tendency (that of the old opera seria), while the genre of 'Joseph* is thoroughly noble, true, and eminently dramatic. 'Joseph' has outlived 'Titus.'" 1 Carl Maria von Weber admired MeliuTs opera greatly, and within recent years Felix Weingartner has edited a German edition for which he composed recitatives to take the place of the spoken dialogue of the original book. There is no story of passion in "Joseph." The love portrayed there is domestic and filial; its "Die Moderne Opera," p. 92. 30 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS objects are the hero's father, brothers, and country "Champs eternels, Hebron, douce valise." It was not until our own day that an author with a perverted sense which had already found gratification in the stench of mental, moral, and physical decay exhaled by "Salome" and "Elektra" nosed the piquant, pungent odor of the episode of Potiphar's wife and blew it into the theatre. Joseph's temptress did not tempt even the prurient taste which gave us the Parisian operatic versions of the stories of Phryne, Thais and Messalina. Richard Strauss's "Josephslegende" stands alone in musical litera- ture. There is, indeed, only one reference in the records of oratorio or opera to the woman whose grovelling carnality is made the foil of Joseph's virtue in the story as told in the Book. That ref- erence is found in a singular trilogy, which was obviously written more to disclose the possibilities of counterpoint than to set forth the story even if it does that, which I cannot say ; the suggestion comes only from a title. In August, 1852, Pietro Raimondi produced an oratorio in three parts en- titled, respectively, "Putifar," "Giuseppe giusto" and "Giacobbe," at the Teatro Argentina, in Rome. The music of the three works was so written that after each had been performed separately, with in- dividual principal singers, choristers, and orchestras, they were united in a simultaneous performance. The success of the stupendous experiment in contra- puntal writing was so great that the composer fell BIBLE STORIES IN OPERA AND ORATORIO 31 in a faint amidst the applause of the audience and died less than three months afterward. In the course of this study I have mentioned nearly all of the Biblical characters who have been turned into operatic heroes. Nebuchadnezzar ap- peared on the stage at Hamburg in an opera of Keiser's in 1704; Ariosti put him through his bovine strides in Vienna in 1706. He was put into a ballet by a Portuguese composer and made the butt of a French ope"ra bouffe writer, J. J. Debille- ment, in 1871. He recurs to my mind now in con- nection with a witty fling at "Nabucco" made by a French rhymester when Verdi's opera was produced at Paris in 1845. The noisy brass in the orches- tration offended the ears of a critic, and he wrote : Vraiment 1'affiche est dans son tort ; En faux, ou devrait la poursuivre. Pourquoi nous annoncer Nabuchodonos or Quand c'est Nabuchodonos cuivre? Judas Maccabaeus is one of the few heroes of ancient Israel who have survived in opera, Rubin- stein's "Makkabaer" still having a hold, though not a strong one, on the German stage. The libretto is an adaptation by Mosenthal (author also of Goldmark's "Queen of Sheba") of a drama by Otto Ludwig. In the drama as well as some of its predecessors some liberties have been taken with the story as told in Maccabees II, chapter 7. The tale of the Israelitish champion of freedom and 32 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS his brothers Jonathan and Simon, who lost their lives in the struggle against the tyranny of the kings of Syria, is intensely dramatic. For stage purposes the dramatists have associated the massacre of a mother and her seven sons and the martyrdom of the aged Eleazar, who caused the uprising of the Jews, with the family history of Judas himself. J. W. Franck produced "Die Maccabaische Mutter" in Hamburg in 1679, Ariosti composed "La Madre dei Maccabei" in 1704, Ignaz von Seyfried brought out "Die Makkabaer, oder Salmonaa" in 1818, and Rubinstein his opera in Berlin on April 17, 1875. The romantic career of Jephtha, a natural son, banished from home, chief of a band of roving marauders, mighty captain and ninth judge of Israel, might have fitted out many an opera text, irrespective of the pathetic story of the sacrifice of his daughter in obedience to a vow, though this episode springs first to mind when his name is men- tioned, and has been the special subject of the Jephtha operas. An Italian composer named Pol- larolo wrote a "Jefte" for Vienna in 1692; other operas dealing with the history are Rolle's "Mehala, die Tochter Jephthas" (1784), Meyerbeer's "Jeph- tha's Tochter" (Munich, 1813), Generali, "II voto di Jefte" (1827), Sanpieri, "La Figlia di Jefte" (1872). Luis Cepeda produced a Spanish opera in Madrid in 1845, and a French opera, in five acts and a prologue, by Monteclaire, was prohibited, after one performance, by Cardinal de Noailles in 1832. BIBLE STORIES IN OPERA AND ORATORIO 33 Judith, the widow of Manasseh, who delivered her native city of Bethulia from the Assyrian Holofernes, lulling him to sleep with her charms and then striking off his drunken head with a falchion, though an Apocryphal personage, is the most popular of Israelitish heroines. The record shows the operas "Judith und Holofernes" by Leopold Kotzeluch (1799), "Giuditta" by S. Levi (1844), Achille Peri (1860), Righi (1871), and Sarri (1875). Naumann wrote a "Judith" in 1858, Doppler another in 1870, and Alexander Seroff a Russian opera under the same title in 1863. Martin Roder, who used to live in Boston, com- posed a "Judith," but it was never performed, while George W. Chadwick's "Judith," half can- tata, half opera, which might easily be fitted for the stage, has had to rest content with a concert performance at a Worcester (Mass.) festival. The memory of Esther, the queen of Ahasuerus, who saved her people from massacre, is preserved and her deed celebrated by the Jews in their gracious festival of Purim. A gorgeous figure for the stage, she has been relegated to the oratorio platform since the end of the eighteenth century. Racine's tragedy "Athalie" has called out music from Abbe" Vogler, Gossec, Bo'ieldieu, Mendelssohn, and others, and a few oratorios, one by Handel, have been based on the story of the woman through whom idolatry was introduced into Judah ; but I have no record of any Athalia opera. CHAPTER III BUBINSTEIN'S "GEISTLICHE OPER" I HAVE a strong belief in the essential excellence of Biblical subjects for the purposes of the lyric drama at least from an historical point of view. I can see no reason against but many reasons in favor of a return to the stage of the patriarchal and heroic figures of the people who are a more potent power in the world to-day, despite their diBpersal and loss of national unity, than they were in the days of their political grandeur and glory. Throughout the greater part of his creative career Anton Rubinstein was the champion of a similar idea. Of the twenty works which he wrote for the theatre, including ballets, six were on Biblical subjects, and to promote a propaganda which began with the composition of "Der Thurmbau zu Babel," in 1870, he not only entered the literary field, but made personal appeal for practical assist- ance in both the Old World and the New. His, however, was a religious point of view, not the his- torical or political. It is very likely that a racial predilection had much to do with his attitude on the subject, but in his effort to bring religion into 34 RUBINSTEIN'S "GEISTLICHE OPEE" 35 the service of the lyric stage he was no more Jew than Christian : the stories to which he applied his greatest energies were those of Moses and Christ. Much against my inclination (for Rubinstein came into my intellectual life under circumstances and conditions which made him the strongest per- sonal influence in music that I have ever felt) I have been compelled to believe that there were other reasons besides those which he gave for his championship of Biblical opera. Smaller men than he, since Wagner's death, have written trilogies and dreamed of theatres and festivals devoted to performances of then: works. Little wonder if Rubinstein believed that he had created, or could create, a kind of art-work which should take place by the side of " Der Ring des Nibelungen," and have its special home like Bayreuth; and it may have been a belief that his project would excite the sym- pathetic zeal of the devout Jew and pious Christian alike, as much as his lack of the capacity for self- criticism, which led him like a will-o'-the-wisp along the path which led into the bogs of failure and disappointment. While I was engaged in writing the programme book for the music festival given in New York in 1881, at which "The Tower of Babel" was per- formed in a truly magnificent manner, Dr. Leopold Damrosch, the conductor of the festival, told me that Rubinstein had told him that the impulse to use Biblical subjects in lyrical dramas had come to 36 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS him while witnessing a ballet based on a Bible story many years before in Paris. He said that he had seldom been moved so profoundly by any spec- tacle as by this ballet, and it suggested to him the propriety of treating sacred subjects in a manner worthy of them, yet different from the conven- tional oratorio. The explanation has not gotten into the books, but is not inconsistent with the genesis of his Biblical operas, as related by Rubin- stein in his essay on the subject printed by Joseph Lewinsky in his book "Vor den Coulissen," pub- lished in 1882 after at least three of the operas had been written. The composer's defence of his works and his story of the effort which he made to bring about a realization of his ideals deserve to be re- hearsed in justice to his character as man and artist, as well as in the interest of the works them- selves and the subjects, which, I believe, will in the near future occupy the minds of composers again. "The oratorio," said Rubinstein, "is an art-form which I have always been disposed to protest against. The best-known masterpieces of this form have, not during the study of them but when hearing them performed, always left me cold; in- deed, often positively pained me. The stiffness of the musical and still more of the poetical form always seemed to me absolutely incongruous with the high dramatic feeling of the subject. To see and hear gentlemen in dress coats, white cravats, yellow gloves, holding music books before them, 37 or ladies in modern, often extravagant, toilets sing- ing the parts of the grand, imposing figures of the Old and New Testaments has always disturbed me to such a degree that I could never attain to pure enjoyment. Involuntarily I felt and thought how much grander, more impressive, vivid, and true would be all that I had experienced in the concert-room if represented on the stage with cos- tumes, decorations, and full action." The contention, said Rubinstein in effect, that Biblical subjects are ill adapted to the stage be- cause of their sacred character is a testimony of poverty for the theatre, which should be an agency in the service of the highest purposes of culture. The people have always wanted to see stage repre- sentations of Bible incidents ; witness the mystery plays of the Middle Ages and the Passion Play at Oberammergau to-day. But yielding to a preva- lent feeling that such representations are a prof- anation of sacred history, he had conceived an appropriate type of art-work which was to be pro- duced in theatres to be specially built for the purpose and by companies of artists to be specially trained to that end. This art-work was to be called Sacred Opera (geistliche Oper), to distinguish it from secular opera, but its purpose was to be purely artistic and wholly separate from the interests of the Church. He developed ways and means for raising the neces- sary funds, enlisting artists, overcoming the diffi- culties presented by the mise en scene and the 38 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS polyphonic character of the choral music, and set forth his aim in respect of the subject-matter of the dramas to be a representation in chronological order of the chief incidents described in the Old and New Testaments. He would be willing to include in his scheme Biblical operas already exist- ing, if they were not all, with the exception of M&iuTs "Joseph," made unfit by their treatment of sacred matters, especially by their inclusion of love episodes which brought them into the domain of secular opera. For years, while on his concert tours in various countries, Rubinstein labored to put his plan into operation. Wherever he found a public accus- tomed to oratorio performances he inquired into the possibility of establishing his sacred theatre there. He laid the project before the Grand Duke of Weimar, who told him that it was feasible only in large cities. The advice sent him to Berlin, where he opened his mind to the Minister of Edu- cation, von Muhler. The official had his doubts; sacred operas might do for Old Testament stories, but not for New ; moreover, such a theatre should be a private, not a governmental, undertaking. He sought the opinion of Stanley, Dean of West- minster Abbey, who said that he could only con- ceive a realization of the idea in the oldtime popular manner, upon a rude stage at a country fair. For a space it looked as if the leaders of the Jewish congregations in Paris would provide funds RUBINSTEIN'S "GEISTLICHE OPER" 39 for the enterprise so far as it concerned itself with subjects taken from the Old Dispensation; but at the last they backed out, fearing to take the initiative in a matter likely to cause popular clamor. "I even thought of America," says Rubinstein, "of the daring transatlantic impresarios, with their lust of enterprise, who might be inclined to specu- late on a gigantic scale with my idea. I had indeed almost succeeded, but the lack of artists brought it to pass that the plans, already in a considerable degree of forwardness, had to be abandoned. I considered the possibility of forming an association of composers and performing artists to work to- gether to carry on the enterprise materially, in- tellectually, and administratively; but the great difficulty of enlisting any considerable number of artists for the furtherance of a new idea in art frightened me back from this purpose also." In these schemes there are evidences of Rubinstein's willingness to follow examples set by Handel as well as Wagner. The former composed "Judas Maccabaeus" and "Alexander Bams" to please the Jews who had come to his help when he made financial shipwreck with his opera; the latter created the Richard Wagner Verein to put the Bayreuth enterprise on its feet. Of the six sacred operas composed by Rubin- stein three may be said to be practicable for stage representation. They are "Die Makkabaer," "Su- lamith" (based on Solomon's Song of Songs) and 40 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS "Christus." The first has had many performances in Germany; the second had a few performances in Hamburg in 1883 ; the last, first performed as an oratorio in Berlin in 1885, was staged in Bremen in 1895. It has had, I believe, about fourteen repre- sentations in all. As for the other three works, "Der Thurmbau zu Babel" (first performance in Konigsberg in 1870), "Das verlorene Paradies" (Diisseldorf, 1875), and "Moses" (still awaiting theatrical representation, I believe), it may be said of them that they are hybrid creations which com- bine the oratorio and opera styles by utilizing the powers of the oldtime oratorio chorus and the modern orchestra, with the descriptive capacity of both raised to the highest power, to illustrate an action which is beyond the capabilities of the ordi- nary stage machinery. In the character of the forms employed in the works there is no startling inno- vation; we meet the same alternation of chorus, recitative, aria, and ensemble that we have known since the oratorio style was perfected. A change, however, has come over the spirit of the expres- sion and the forms have all relaxed some of their rigidity. In the oratorios of Handel and Haydn there are instances not a few of musical delineation in the instrumental as well as the vocal parts ; but nothing in them can be thought of, so far at least as the ambition of the design extends, as a companion piece to the scene in the opera which pictures the destruction of the tower of Babel. This is as far RUBINSTEIN'S "GEISTLICHE OPER" 41 beyond the horizon of the fancy of the old masters as it is beyond the instrumental forces which they controlled. "Paradise Lost/' the text paraphrased from portions of Milton's epic, is an oratorio pure and simple. It deals with the creation of the world according to the Mosaic (or as Huxley would have said, Miltonic) theory and the medium of expres- sion is an alternation of recitatives and choruses, the latter having some dramatic life and a char- acteristic accompaniment. It is wholly contem- plative; there is nothing like action in it. "The Tower of Babel" has action in the restricted sense in which it enters into Mendelssohn's oratorios, and scenic effects which would tax the utmost powers of the modern stage-machinist who might attempt to carry them out. A mimic tower of Babel is more preposterous than a mimic temple of Dagon ; yet, unless Rubinstein's stage directions are to be taken in a Pickwickian sense, we ought to listen to this music while looking at a stage-setting more colossal than any ever contemplated by dram- atist before. We should see a wide stretch of the plain of Shinar; in the foreground a tower so tall as to give color of plausibility to a speech which prates of an early piercing of heaven and so large as to provide room for a sleeping multitude on its scaffoldings. Brick kilns, derricks, and all the ap- paratus and machinery of building should be on all hands, and from the summit of a mound should 42 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS grow a giant tree, against whose trunk should hang a brazen shield to be used as a signal gong. We should see in the progress of the opera the bus- tling activity of the workmen, the roaring flames and rolling smoke of the brick kilns, and witness the miraculous spectacle of a man thrown into the fire and walking thence unharmed. We should see (in dissolving views) the dispersion of the races and behold the unfolding of a rainbow in the sky. And, finally, we should get a glimpse of an open heaven and the Almighty on His throne, and a yawning hell, with Satan and his angels exercising their dread dominion. Can such scenes be mim- icked successfully enough to preserve a serious frame of mind in the observer? Hardly. Yet the music seems obviously to have been written in the expectation that sight shall aid hearing to quicken the fancy and emotion and excite the faculties to an appreciation of the work. "The Tower of Babel" has been performed upon the stage ; how I cannot even guess. Knowing, probably, that the work would be given in concert form oftener than in dramatic, Rubinstein tries to stimulate the fancy of those who must be only listeners by profuse stage directions which are printed in the score as well as the book of words. "Moses" is in the same case. By the time that Rubinstein had completed it he evidently realized that its hybrid character as well as its stupendous scope would stand in the way of performances of RUBINSTEIN'S "GEISTLICHE OPER" 4$ any kind. Before even a portion of its music had been heard in public, he wrote in a letter to a friend: "It is too theatrical for the concert-room and too much like an oratorio for the theatre. It is, in fact, the perfect type of the sacred opera that I have dreamed of for years. What will come of it I do not know ; I do not think it can be performed entire. As it contains eight distinct parts, one or two may from time to time be given either in a concert or on the stage." America was the first country to act on the sug- gestion of a fragmentary performance. The first scene was brought forward in New York by Walter Damrosch at a public rehearsal and concert of the Symphony Society (the Oratorio Society assisting) on January 18 and 19, 1889. The third scene was performed by the German Liederkranz, under Reinhold L. Herman, on January 27 of the same year. The third and fourth scenes were in the scheme of the Cincinnati Music Festival, Theodore Thomas, conductor, on May 25, 1894. Each of the eight scenes into which the work is divided deals with an episode in the life of Israel's lawgiver. In the first scene we have the incident of the finding of the child in the bulrushes ; in the second occurs the oppression of the Israelites by the Egyptian taskmasters, the slaying of one of the overseers by Moses, who, till then regarded as the king's son, now proclaims himself one of the op- pressed race. The third scene discloses Moses 44 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS protecting Zipporah, daughter of Jethro, a Midianit- ish priest, from a band of marauding Edomites, his acceptance of Jethro's hospitality and the scene of the burning bush and the proclamation of his mission. Scene IV deals with the plagues, those of blood, hail, locusts, frogs, and vermin being delineated in the instrumental introduction to the part, the action beginning while the land is shrouded in the "thick darkness that might be felt." The Egyp- tians call upon Osiris to dispel the darkness, but are forced at last to appeal to Moses. He demands the liberation of his people as the price to be paid for the removal of the plague ; receiving a promise from Pharaoh, he utters a prayer ending with "Let there be light." The result is celebrated in a bril- liant choral acclamation of the returning sun. The scene has a parallel in Rossini's opera. Pharaoh now equivocates ; he will free the sons of Jacob, but not the women, children, or chattels. Moses threatens punishment in the death of ah 1 of Egypt's first- born, and immediately solo and chorus voices be- wail the new affliction. When the king hears that his son is dead he gives his consent, and the Israelites depart with an ejaculation of thanks to Jehovah. The passage of the Red Sea, Miriam's celebration of that miracle, the backsliding of the Israelites and their worship of the golden calf, the reception of the Tables of the Law, the battle between the Israelites and Moabites on the threshold of the Promised Land, and the evanishment and apotheosis RUBINSTEIN'S "GEISTLICHE OPER" 45 of Moses are the contents of the remainder of the work. It is scarcely to be wondered at that the subjects which opera composers have found adaptable to their uses in the New Testament are very few com- pared with those offered by the Old. The books written by the evangelists around the most stu- pendous tragical story of all time set forth little or nothing (outside of the birth, childhood, teachings, miracles, death, and resurrection of Jesus of Nazareth) which could by any literary ingenuity be turned into a stage play except the parables with which Christ enforced and illustrated His sermons. The sublime language and imagery of the Apocalypse have fur- nished forth the textual body of many oratorios, but it still transcends the capacity of mortal dramatist. In the parable of the Prodigal Son there is no personage whose presentation in dramatic garb could be looked upon as a profanation of the Scrip- tures. It is this fact, probably, coupled with its profoundly beautiful reflection of human nature, which has made it a popular subject with opera writers. There was an Italian "Figliuolo Pro- digo" as early as 1704, composed by one Biffi; a French melodrama, "L'Enfant Prodigue," by Mo- range about 1810 ; a German piece of similar char- acter by Joseph Drechsler in Vienna in 1820. Pierre Gaveaux, who composed "Le*onore, ou F Amour 46 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS Conjugal," which provided Beethoven with his "FideHo," brought out a comic opera on the sub- ject of the Prodigal Son in 1811, and Berton, who had also dipped into Old Testament story in an oratorio, entitled "Absalon," illustrated the para- ble in a ballet. The most recent settings of the theme are also the most significant : Auber's five- act opera "L' Enfant Prodigue," brought out in Paris in 1850, and Ponchielli's " II Figliuolo Prodigo," in four acts, which had its first representation at La Scala in 1880. The mediaeval mysteries were frequently inter- spersed with choral songs, for which the liturgy of the Church provided material. If we choose to look upon them as incipient operas or precursors of that art-form we must yet observe that their monkish authors, willing enough to trick out the story of the Nativity with legendary matter drawn from the Apocryphal New Testament, which dis- closes anything but a reverential attitude toward the sublime tragedy, nevertheless stood in such awe before the spectacle of Calvary that they deemed it wise to leave its dramatic treatment to the church service in the Passion Tide. In that service there was something approaching to char- acterization in the manner of the reading by the three deacons appointed to deliver, respectively, the narrative, the words of Christ, and the utterances of the Apostles and people ; and it may be that this and the liturgical solemnities of Holy Week were RUBINSTEIN'S "GEISTLICHE OPER" 4T reverently thought sufficient by them and the authors of the first sacred operas. Nevertheless, we have Reiser's "Der Blutige und Sterbende Jesus/' performed at Hamburg, and Metastasio's "La Passione di Gesu Christi/' composed first by Caldara, which probably was an oratorio. Earlier than these was Theile's "Die Geburt Christi," performed in Hamburg in 1681. The birth of Christ and His childhood (there was an operatic representation of His presentation in the Temple) were subjects which appealed more to the writers of the rude plays which catered to the popu- lar love for dramatic mummery than did His cru- cifixion. I am speaking now more specifically of lyric dramas, but it is worthy of note that in the Coventry mysteries, as Hone points out in the preface to his book, "Ancient Mysteries Described," l there are eight plays, or pageants, which deal with the Nativity as related in the canon and the pseudo- gospels. In them much stress was laid upon the suspicions of the Virgin Mother's chastity, for here was material that was good for rude diversion as well as instruction in righteousness. That Rubinstein dared to compose a Christ drama must be looked upon as proof of the pro- 1 "Ancient Mysteries Described, especially the English Miracle Plays Founded on Apocryphal New Testament Story,'* London, 1823. 48 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS found sincerity of his belief in the art-form which he fondly hoped he had created ; also, perhaps, as evidence of his artistic ingenuousness. Only a brave or naive mind could have calmly contemplated a labor from which great dramatists, men as great as Hebbel, shrank back in alarm. After the com- pletion of "Lohengrin" Wagner applied himself to the creation of a tragedy which he called "Jesus of Nazareth." We know his plan in detail, but he abandoned it after he had offered his sketches to a French poet as the basis of a lyric drama which he hoped to write for Paris. He confesses that he was curious to know what the Frenchman would do with a work the stage production of which would "provoke a thousand frights." He himself was unwilling to stir up such a tempest in Germany; instead, he put his sketches aside and used some of their material in his "Parsifal." Wagner ignored the religious, or, let us say, the ecclesiastical, point of view entirely in "Jesus of Nazareth." His hero was to have been, as I have described him elsewhere, 2 "a human philosopher who preached the saving grace of Love and sought to redeem his time and people from the domina- tion of conventional law the offspring of selfish- ness. His philosophy was socialism imbued by love." Rubinstein proceeded along the lines of history, or orthodox belief, as unreservedly in his "Christus" as he had done in his "Moses." The work may be said to have brought his creative activ- 1 "A Book of Operas," p. 288. RUBINSTEIN'S "GEISTLICHE OPER" 49 ities to a close, although two compositions (a set of six pianoforte pieces and an orchestral suite) appear in his list of numbered works after the sacred opera. He died on November 20, 1894, without having seen a stage representation of it. Nor did he live to see a public theatrical performance of his "Moses," though he was privileged to witness a private performance arranged at the German Na- tional Theatre in Prague so that he might form an opinion of its effectiveness. The public has never been permitted to learn anything about the impres- sion which the work made. On May 25, 1895, a series of representations of "Christus" was begun in Bremen, largely through the instrumentality of Professor Bulthaupt, a potent and pervasive personage in the old Hanseatic town. He was not only a poet and the author of the book of this opera and of some of Bruch's works, but also a painter, and his mural decorations in the Bremen Chamber of Commerce are proudly displayed by the citizens of the town. It was under the super- vision of the painter-poet that the Bremen repre- sentations were given and, unless I am mistaken, he painted the scenery or much of it. One of the provisions of the performances was that applause was prohibited out of .reverence for the sacred character of the scenes, which were as frankly set forth as at Oberammergau. The contents of the tragedy in some scenes and an epilogue briefly out- lined are these : The first scene shows the temptation 50 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS of Christ in the wilderness, where the devil "shewed unto him all the kingdoms of the world in a moment of time." This disclosure is made by a series of scenes, each opening for a short time in the back- ground castles, palaces, gardens, mountains of gold, and massive heaps of earth's treasures. In the second scene John the Baptist is seen and heard preaching on the banks of the Jordan, in whose waters he baptizes Jesus. This scene at the Bremen representations was painted from sketches made by Herr Handrich in Palestine, as was also that of the "Sermon on the Mount" and "The Miracle of the Loaves and Fishes," which form the subject of the next part. The fourth tableau shows the expulsion of the money changers from the Temple ; the fifth the Last Supper, with the garden of Geth- semane as a background; the sixth the trial and the last the crucifixion. Here, as if harking back to his "Tower of Babel," Rubinstein brings in pictures of heaven and hell, with angels and devils contemplating the catastrophe. The proclamation of the Gospel to the Gentiles by St. Paul is the sub- ject of the epilogue. CHAPTER IV "SAMSON ET DALIIA" THERE are but two musical works based on the story of Samson on the current list to-day, Han- del's oratorio and Saint-Saens's opera; but lyric drama was still in its infancy when the subject first took hold of the fancy of composers and it has held it ever since. The earliest works were of the kind called sacred operas in the books and are spoken of as oratorios now, though they were doubtless performed with scenery and costumes and with action of a sort. Such were "II Sansone" by Giovanni Paola Colonna (Bologna, 1677), "San- sone accecato da Filistri" by Francesco Antonio Uri (Venice, about 1700), "Simson" by Christoph Graupner (Hamburg, 1709), "Simson" by Georg von Pasterwitz (about 1770), "Samson" by J. N. Lefroid Mereaux (Paris, 1774), "Simson" by Johann Heinrich Rolle (about 1790), "Simson" by Franz Tuczek (Vienna, 1804), and "H Sansone" by Francesco Basili (Naples, 1824). Two French operas are associated with great names and have interesting histories. Voltaire wrote a dramatic text on the subject at the request of La Popeliniere, 51 62 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS the farmer-general, who, as poet, musician, and artist, exercised a tremendous influence in his day. Ra- meau was in his service as household clavecinist and set Voltaire's poem. The authors looked forward to a production on the stage of the Grand Opera, where at least two Biblical operas, an Old Testa- ment "Jephte" and a New Testament "Enfant prodigue" were current; but Rameau had powerful enemies, and the opera was prohibited on the eve of the day on which it was to have been performed. The composer had to stomach his mortification as best he could; he put some of his Hebrew music into the service of his Persian "Zoroastre." The other French Samson to whom I have re- ferred had also to undergo a sea-change like unto Rameau's, Rossini's Moses, and Verdi's Nebuchad- nezzar. Duprez, who was ambitious to shine as a composer as well as a singer (he wrote no less than eight operas and also an oratorio, "The Last Judg- ment"), tried his hand on a Samson opera and suc- ceeded in enlisting the help of Dumas the elder in writing the libretto. When he was ready to present it at the door of the Grand Ope*ra the Minister of Fine Arts told him that it was impracticable, as the stage-setting of the last act alone would cost more than 100,000 francs. Duprez then followed the example set with Rossini's "Mose" in London and changed the book to make it tell a story of the crusades which he called "Zephora." Neverthe- less the original form was restored in German and "SAMSON ET DALILA" 53 Italian translations of the work, and it had concert performances in 1857. To Joachim Raff was denied even this poor comfort. He wrote a German "Simson" between 1851 and 1857. The conductor at Darmstadt to whom it was first submitted re- jected it on the ground that it was too difficult for his singers. Raff then gave it to Liszt, with whom he was sojourning at Weimar, and who had taken pity on his "Konig Alfred"; but the tenor singer at the Weimar opera said the music was too high for the voice. Long afterward Wagner's friend, Schnorr von Carolsf eld, saw the score in the hands of the composer. The heroic stature of the hero delighted him, and his praise moved Raff to revise the opera; but before this had been done Schnorr died of the cold contracted while creating the r61e of Wagner's Tristan at Munich in 1865. Thus mournfully ended the third episode. As late as 1882 Raff spoke of taking the opera in hand again, but though he may have done so his death found the work unperformed and it has not yet seen the light of the stage-lamps. Saint-Saens's opera has also passed through many vicissitudes, but has succumbed to none and is probably possessed of more vigorous life now than it ever had. It is the recognized operatic master- piece of the most resourceful and fecund French musician since Berlioz. Saint-Saens began the composition of "Samson et Dalila" in 1869. The author of the book, Ferdinand Lemaire, was a cousin 54 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS of the composer. Before the breaking out of the Franco-Prussian War the score was so far on the way to completion that it was possible to give its second act a private trial. This was done, an in- cident of the occasion which afterward intro- duced one element of pathos in its history being the singing of the part of Samson by the painter Henri Regnault, who soon after lost his life hi the service of his country. A memorial to him and the friendship which existed between him and the composer is the "Marche He*roique," which bears the dead man's name on its title-page. Toward the end of 1872 the opera was finished. For two years the score rested in the composer's desk. Then the second act was again brought forth for trial, this time at the country home of Mme. Viardot, at Croissy, the illustrious hostess singing the part of Dalila. In 1875 the first act was performed in concert style by M. Edouard Colonne in Paris. Liszt interested himself in the opera and secured its acceptance at the Grand Ducal Opera House of Weimar, where Eduard Lassen brought it out on December 2, 1877. Brussels heard it in 1878 ; but it did not reach one of the theatres of France until March 3, 1890, when Rouen produced it at its The"- atre des Arts under the direction of M. Henri Verd- hurt. It took nearly seven months more to reach Paris, where the first representation was at the Eden Theatre on October 31 of the same year. Two years later, after it had been heard in a number "SAMSON ET DALILA" 55 of French and Italian provincial theatres, it was given at the Academic Nationale de Musique under the direction of M. Colonne. The part of Dalila was taken by Mme. Deschamps-Jehin, that of Samson by M. Vergnet, that of the High Priest by M. Lassalle. Eight months before this it had been performed as an oratorio by the Oratorio Society of New York. There were two perform- ances, on March 25 and 26, 1892, the conductor being Mr. Walter Damrosch and the principal singers being Frau Marie Ritter-Goetze, Sebastian Montariol, H. E. Distelhurst, Homer Moore, Emil Fischer, and Purdon Robinson. London had heard the work twice as an oratorio before it had a stage representation there on April 26, 1909, but this performance was fourteen years later than the first at the Metropolitan Opera House on February 8, 1895. The New York performance was scenically inadequate, but the integrity of the record demands that the cast be given here : Samson, Signor Ta- magno ; Dalila, Mme. Mantelli ; High Priest, Signor Campanari; Abimelech and An Old Hebrew, M. Plangon ; First Philistine, Signor Rinaldini ; Second Philistine, Signor de Vachetti; conductor, Signor Mancinelli. The Metropolitan management did not venture upon a repetition until the opening night of the season 1915-1916, when its success was such that it became an active factor in the repertory of the establishment ; but by that time it had been made fairly familiar to the New York public by 56 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS performances at the Manhattan Opera House under the management of Mr. Oscar Hammerstein, the first of which took place on November 13, 1908. Signor Campanini conducted and the cast embraced Mme. Gerville-Re*ache as Dalila, Charles Dai- mores as Samson, and M. Dufranne as High Priest. The cast at the Metropolitan Opera House's revival of the opera on November 15, 1915, was as follows : Dalila, Mme. Margarete Matzenauer; Samson, Signor Enrico Caruso; High Priest, Signor Pas- quale Amato; Abimelech, Herr Carl Schlegel; An Old Hebrew, M. Le*on Rothier; A Philistine Messenger, Herr Max Bloch ; First Philistine, Pietro Audisio; Second Philistine, Vincenzo Reschiglian; conductor, Signor Polacco. It would be a curious inquiry to try to determine the source of the fascination which the story of Manoah's son has exerted upon mankind for centu- ries. It bears a likeness to the story of the son of Zeus and Alcmene, and there are few books on mythology which do not draw a parallel between the two heroes. Samson's story is singularly brief. For twenty years he " judged Israel," but the Bib- lical history which deals with him consists only of an account of his birth, a recital of the incidents in which he displayed his prodigious strength and valor, the tale of his amours, and, at the end, the "SAMSON ET DALILA" 57 account of his tragical destruction, brought ab ^Cy C > -P i* f ' s f-^r p * x P P h -2^*- 9 f j Praise ye Je - ho - vah 1 Tell all tlie wondroua ^Y -i*^ " . gt 1 f-^-=- - f ^ ^r -^'b i r ' sto - ry ! Psalms of praise loud - ly swell I " Hyrane de joie, hymne de deliverance Montez vers PEternel ! " It is a fine piece of dramatic characterization, which is followed by one whose serene beauty is heightened* by contrast. Dalila and a company of singing and dancing Philistine women come in bearing garlands of flowers. Not only Samson's senses, our own as well, are ravished by the delightful music : Voici le printemps, nous portant des fleurs Pour orner le front des guerriers vainquers ! Melons nos accents aux parfums des roses A peine ecloses ! Avec 1'oiseau chantons, mes soeurs ! SOPRANO n u dolciss. r Pu.ff K srr~i | J ^ frr-4 fs , yK^tf' ~ | \ -f- d i 1 f :f- ~ ~m =T~ (fo ^ * J E a ? r r r r f c r * r-^-r-p Now Spring's generous hand,Brings flowers to the land. CONTRALTO dolciss. r\ U> n '^ , 1 J F> M r\ i 1 9 A <5-' *^ - r Now Spring's generous hand,Brings flowers to the land. "SAMSON ET DALILA" 69 Dalila is here and it is become necessary to say something of her, having said so much about the man whose destruction she accomplished. Let the ingenious and erudite Philip Hale introduce her: "Was Delilah a patriotic woman, to be ranked with Jael and Judith, or was she merely a courtesan, as certain opera singers who impersonate her in the opera seem to think ? E. Meier says that the word ' Delilah' means 'the faithless one.' Ewald trans- lates it 'traitress/ and so does Ranke. Knobel characterizes her as die Zarte, which means tender, delicate, but also subtle. Lange is sure that she was a weaver woman, if not an out-and-out 'zonah.' There are other Germans who think the word is akin to the verb einlullen, to lull asleep. Some liken it to the Arabic dalildh, a woman who mis- guides, a bawd. See in 'The Thousand Nights and a Night ' the speech of the damsel to Aziz : ' If thou marry me thou wilt at least be safe from the daughter of Dalilah, the Wily One.' Also 'The Rogueries of Dalilah, the Crafty, and her daughter, Zayrah, the Coney Catcher." We are directly concerned here with the Dalila of the opera, but Mr. Hale invites us to an excursion which offers a pleasant occupation for a brief while, and we cheerfully go with him. The Biblical Delilah is a vague figure, except in two respects : She is a woman of such charms that she wins the love of Samson, and such guile and cupidity that she plays upon his passion and betrays him to the 70 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS lords of the Philistines for pay. The Bible knows nothing of her patriotism, nor does the sacred his- torian give her the title of Samson's wife, though it has long been the custom of Biblical commentators to speak of her in this relation. St. Chrysostom set the fashion and Milton followed it : But who is this ? What thing of sea or land Female of sex it seems That, so bedeck'd, ornate and gay Comes this way sailing Like a stately ship Of Tarsus, bound for the isles Of Javan or Gadire, With all her bravery on, and tackle trim, Sails fill'd and streamers waving, Courted by all the winds that hold them play ; An amber scent of odorous perfume Her harbinger, a damsel train behind ? Some rich Philistian matron she may seem ; And now, at nearer view, no other certain Than Dalila, thy wife. It cannot be without significance that the author of the story in the Book of Judges speaks in a dif- ferent way of each of the three women who play a part in the tragedy of Samson's life. The woman who lived among the vineyards of Timnath, whose murder Samson avenged, was his wife. She was a Philistine, but Samson married her according to the conventional manner of the time and, also according to the manner of the time, she kept her home with her parents after her marriage. Where- "SAMSON ET DALILA'Y 71 fore she has gotten her name in the good books of the sociological philosophers who uphold the mat- ronymic theory touching early society. The woman of Gaza whom Samson visited what time he con- founded his would-be captors by carrying off the doors of the gates of the city was curtly "an harlot." Of the third woman it is said only that it came to> pass that Samson "loved a woman in the Valley of Sorek, whose name was Delilah." Thereupon follows the story of her bribery by the lords of the Philistines and her betrayal of her lover. Evi- dently a licentious woman who could not aspire even to the merit of the heroine of Dekker's play. Milton not only accepted the theory of her wife- hood, but also attributed patriotic motives to her. She knew that her name would be defamed "is Dan, in Judah and the bordering tribes." But in my country, where I most desire, In Eeron, Gaza, Asdod and in Gath, I shall be nam'd among the famousest Of women, sung at solemn festivals, Living and dead recorded, who to save Her country from a fierce destroyer, chose Above the faith of wedlock bands ; my tomb With odours visited and annual flowers ; Not less renown'd than in Mount Ephraim Jael, who, with inhospitable guile, Smote Sisera sleeping. In the scene before us Dalila is wholly and simply ajsiren, a seductress who plays upon the known love 72 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS of Samson from motives which are not disclosed. As yet one may imagine her moved by a genuine passion. She turns her lustrous black eyes upon him as she hails him a double victor over his foes and her heart, and invites him to rest from his arms in her embraces in the fair valley of Sorek. Temp- tation seizes upon the soul of Samson. He prays God to make him steadfast ; but she winds her toils the tighter: It is for him that she has bound a coronet of purple grapes upon her forehead and entwined the rose of Sharon in her ebon tresses/ An Old Hebrew warns against the temptress and Samson agonizingly invokes a veil over the beauty that has enchained him. "Extinguish the fires of those eyes which enslave me." thus he. "Sweet is the lily of the valley, pleasant the juices of mandragora, but sweeter and more pleasant are my kisses ! " thus she. The Old Hebrew warns again : "If thou give ear to her honeyed phrases, my son, curses will alight on thee which no tears that thou may'st weep will ever efface." But still the siren song rings in his ears. The maidens who had come upon the scene with Dalila (are they priestesses of Dagon?) dance, swinging then- floral garlands seductively before the eyes of Samson and his followers. The hero tries to avoid the glances which Dalila, joining in the dance, throws upon him. It is in vain; his eyes follow "SAMSON ET DALILA" 73 her through all the voluptuous postures and move* ments of the dance. Allegretto (J = 103) And Dalila sings "Printemps qui commence" a song often heard in concert-rooms, but not so often as the air with which the love-duet in the second act reaches its culmination, which is popu- larly held also to mark the climax of the opera. That song is wondrously insinuating in its charm; it pulsates with passion, so much so, indeed, that it is difficult to conceive that its sentiments are feigned, but this is lovelier in its fresh, suave, grace- ful, and healthy beauty : doke i^ The Spring with her dow - er of bird and of flow - er, brings hope in her train. 74 As Dalila leaves the scene her voice and eyes repeat their lure, while Samson's looks and acts betray the trouble of his soul. It is not until we see and hear Dalila in the second act that she is revealed to us in her true character. Not till now does she disclose the motives of her conduct toward her lover. Night is falling in the valley of Sorek, the vale which lies between the hill country which the Israelites entered from the East, and the coast land which the Philistines, supposedly an island people, invaded from the West. Dalila , gorgeously apparelled, is sitting on a rock near the portico of her house. The strings of the orchestra murmur and the chromatic figure which we shall hear again in her love-song coos in the wood-winds : She awaits him whom passion has made her slave in full confidence of her hold upon him. Samson, recherchant ma presence, Ce soir doit venir en ces Lieux. Voici Theure de la vengeance Qui doit satisfaire nos dieux ! Amour ! viens aider ma faiblesse ! "SAMSON ET DALILA" 75 The vengeance of her gods shall be glutted; it is to that end she invokes the power of love to strengthen her weakness. A passion like his will not down that she knows. To her comes the High Priest: Samson's strength, he says, is super- natural and flows from a vow with which he was consecrated to effect the glory of Israel. Once while he lay in her arms that strength had deserted him, but now, it is said, he flouts her love and doubts his own passion. There is no need to try to awaken F3R == jealousy in the heart of Dalila; she hates Samson more bitterly than the leader of his enemies. She is not mercenary, like the Biblical woman; she scorns the promise of riches which the High Priest offers so she obtain the secret of the Hebrew's strength. Thrice had she essayed to learn that secret and thrice had he set her spell at naught. Now she will assail him with tears a woman's weapon. The rumblings of thunder are heard ; the scene is lit up by flashes of lightning. Running before 76 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS the storm, which is only a precursor and a symbol of the tempest which is soon to rend his soul, Sam- son comes. Dalila upbraids her lover, rebukes his fears, protests her grief. Samson cannot with- stand her tears. He confesses his love, but he must obey the will of a higher power. " What god is mightier than Love?" Let him but doubt her constancy and she will die. And she plays her trump card: "Mon coeur s'ouvre & ta voix," while the fluttering strings and cooing wood-winds insinu- ate themselves into the crevices of Samson's moral harness and loosen the rivets that hold it together : dolciss. e cantdbile assai Herein lies the strength and the weakness of music: it must fain be truthful. Dalila' 's words may be hypocritical, but the music speaks the speech of genuine passion. Not until we hear the refrain echoed mockingly in the last scene of "SAMSON ET DALILA" 77 the drama can we believe that the passion hymned in this song is feigned. And we almost deplore that the composer put it to such disgraceful use. Samson hears the voice of his God in the growing Btorm and again hesitates. The storm bursts as Dalila shrieks out the hate that fills her and runs toward her dwelling. Beethoven sought to suggest external as well as internal peace in the "Dona nobis" of his Mass in D by mingling the sounds of war with the prayer for peace ; Saint-Saens pictures the storm in nature and in Samson's soul by the music which accom- panies the hero as he raises his hands mutely in prayer; then follows the temptress with faltering steps and enters her dwelling. The tempest reaches its climax; Dalila appears at the window with a shout to the waiting Philistine soldiery below. The Voice of Samson cuts through the stormy night: "Tiahison!" Act III. First scene : A prison in Gaza. Dam- son, shorn of his flowing locks, which as a Nazarite he had vowed should never be touched by shears, labors at the mill. He has been robbed of his eyes and darkness has settled down upon him ; dark- ness, too, upon the people whom his momentary weakness had given back into slavery. "Total eclipse!" Saint-Saens has won our ad- miration for the solemn dignity with which he has invested the penitent confession of the blind hero. But who shall hymn the blindness of Manoah's 78 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS son after Milton and Handel? From a crowd of captive Hebrews outside the prison walls come taunting accusations, mingled with supplications to God. We recognize again the national mood of the psalmody of the first act. The entire scene is finely conceived. It is dramatic in a lofty sense, for its action plays on the stage of the heart. Sam- son, contrite, humble, broken in spirit, with a prayer for his people's deliverance, is led away to be made sport of in the temple of Dagon. There, before the statue of the god, grouped among the col- umns and before the altar the High Priest and the lords of the Philistines. Dalila, too, with maid- ens clad for the lascivious dance, and the multi- tude of Philistia. The women's choral song to spring which charmed us in the first act is echoed by mixed voices. The ballet which follows is a pret- tily exotic one, with an introductory cadence marked by the Oriental scale, out of which the second dance melody is constructed a scale which has the pecul- iarity of an interval composed of three semitones, and which we know from the song of the priestesses in Verdi's "Aida": con malinconia 'SAMSON ET DALILA." 79 The High Priest makes mock of the Judge of Israel : Let him empty the wine cup and sing the praise of his vanquisher ! Dalila, in the pride of her triumph, tauntingly tells him how simulated love had been made to serve her gods, her hate, and her nation. /Samson answers only in contrite prayer. Together in canonic imitation (the erudite form does not offend, but only gives dignity to the scene) priest and siren offer a libation on the altar of the Fish god. 231 i i f=^ Da - gem, be ev-er prais'd ! Da - gem, be ev - er prais'd ! mf v 1 - P ^ Da - gou, be ev - er prais'd 1 Da - gon be The flames flash upward from the altar. Now a supreme act of insolent impiety; Samson, too, shall sacrifice to Dagon. A boy is told to lead him where all can witness his humiliation. Samson feels that the time for retribution upon his enemies 80 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS is come. He asks to be led between the marble pillars that support the roof of the temple. Priests and people, the traitress and her dancing women, the lords of the Philistines, the rout of banqueters and worshippers all hymn the praise of Dagon. A brief supplication to Israel's God "And Samson took hold. of the two middle pillars upon which the house stood and on which it was borne up, of the one with his right hand and of the other with his left. "And Samson said, 'Let me die with the Philistines/ And he bowed himself with all his might : and the house fell upon the lords and upon all the people that were therein. So the dead which he slew at his death were more than they which he slew in his life." CHAPTER V "DIE KONIGIN VON SABA" THE most obvious reason why Goldmark's "K5- nigin von Saba" should be seen and heard with pleasure lies in its book and scenic investiture. Thoughtfully considered the book is not one of great worth, but in the handling of things which give pleasure to the superficial observer it is admirable. In the first place it presents a dramatic story which is rational; which strongly enlists the interest if not the sympathies of the observer; which is un- hackneyed ; which abounds with imposing spectacles with which the imagination of childhood already had made play, that are not only intrinsically brilliant and fascinating but occur as necessary adjuncts of the story. Viewed from its ethical side and considered with reference to the sources whence its elements sprang, it falls under a considerable measure of con- demnation, as will more plainly appear after its incidents have been rehearsed. The title of the opera indicates that the Biblical story of the visit of the Queen of Sheba to Solomon had been drawn on for the plot. This is true, but only in a slight degree. Sheba's Queen comes to G 81 82 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS Solomon in the opera, but that is the end of the draft on the Scriptural legend so far as she is con- cerned. Sulamith, who figures in the drama, owes her name to the Canticles, from which it was bor- rowed by the librettist, but no element of her char- acter nor any of the incidents in which she is involved. The "Song of Songs, which is Solomon's" contributes a few lines of poetry to the book, and a ritualistic service which is celebrated in the temple finds its original text in the opening verses of Psalms Ixvii and cxvii, but with this I have enumerated all that the opera owes to the Bible. It is not a Biblical opera, in the degree that Me*huTs "Joseph," Ros- sini's "Moses," or Rubinstein's "Maccabees" is Biblical, to say nothing of Saint-Saens's " Samson et Dalila." Solomon's magnificent reign and marvel- lous wisdom, which contribute a few factors to the sum of the production, belong to profane as well as to sacred history and it will be found most agreeable to deeply rooted preconceptions to think of some other than the Scriptural Solomon as the prototype of the Solomon of Mosenthal and Goldmark, who, at the best, is a sorry sort of sentimentalist. The local color has been borrowed from the old story ; the dramatic motive comes plainly from Wagner's "Tannhauser." Assad, a favorite courtier, is sent by Solomon to extend greetings and a welcome to the Queen of Sheba, who is on the way to visit the king, whose fame for wealth and wisdom has reached her ears "DIE KONIGIN VON SABA" 88 in far Arabia. Assad is the type (though a milk-and- watery one, it must be confessed) of manhood struggling between the things that are of the earth and the things which are of heaven between a gross, sensual passion and a pure, exalting love. He is betrothed to Sulamith, the daughter of the High Priest of the temple, who awaits his return from Solomon's palace and leads her companions in songs of gladness. Assad meets the Queen at Gath, per- forms his mission, and sets out to return, but, ex- hausted by the heat of the day, enters the forest on Mount Lebanon and lies down on a bank of moss to rest. There the sound of plashing waters arrests his ear. He seeks the cause of the grateful noise and comes upon a transportingly beautiful woman bath- ing. The nymph, finding herself observed, does not, like another Diana, cause the death of her admirer, but discloses herself to be a veritable Wagnerian Venus. She clips him in her arms and he falls at her feet ; but a reed rustles and the charmer flees. These incidents we do not see. They precede the opening of the opera, and we learn of them from Assad's narration. Assad returns to Jerusalem, where, conscience stricken, he seeks to avoid his chaste bride. To Solomon, however, he confesses his adventure, and the king sets the morrow as his wedding day with Sulamith. The Queen of Sheba arrives, and when she raises her veil, ostensibly to show unto Solomon the first view of her features that mortal man has ever had 84 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS vouchsafed him, Assad recognizes the heroine of his adventure in the woods on Lebanon. His mind is in a maze; bewilderingly he addresses her, and haughtily he is repulsed. But the woman has felt the dart no less than Assad; she seeks him at night in the palace garden, whither she had gone to brood over her love and the loss which threatens her on the morrow, and the luring song of her slave draws him again into her arms. Before the altar in the temple, just as Assad is about to pronounce the words which are to bind him to Sulamith, she confronts him again, on the specious pretext that she brings gifts for the bride. Assad again addresses her. Again he is denied. Delirium seizes upon his brain ; he loudly proclaims the Queen as the goddess of his devotion. The people are panic-stricken at the sacrilege and rush from the temple ; the priests cry anathema ; Sulamith be- moans her fate ; Solomon essays words of comfort ,; the High Priest intercedes with heaven ; the soldiery, led by Baal-Hanan, overseer of the palace, enter to lead the profaner to death. Now Solomon claims the right to fix his punishment. The Queen, fearful that her prey may escape her, begs his life as a boon, but Solomon rejects her appeal ; Assad must work out his salvation by overcoming temptation and master- ing his wicked passion. Sulamith approaches amid the wailings of her companions. She is about to enter a retreat on the edge of the Syrian desert, but she, too, prays for the life of Assad. Solomon, in a "DIE KONIGIN VON SABA" 85 prophetic ecstasy, foretells Assad's deliverance from sin and in a vision sees a meeting between him and his pure love under a palm tree in the desert. Assad is banished to the sandy waste; there a simoom sweeps down upon him; he falls at the foot of a lonely palm to die, after calling on Sulamith with his fleeting breath. She comes with her wailing maidens, sees the fulfilment of Solomon's prophecy, and Assad dies in her arms. "Thy beloved is thine, in love's eternal realm," sing the maidens, while a mirage shows the wicked Queen, with her caravan of camels and elephants, returning to her home. The parallel between this story and the immeasur- ably more poetical and beautiful one of "Tann- hauser" is apparent to half an eye. Sulamith is Elizabeth, the Queen is Venus, Assad is Tannhduser, Solomon is Wolfram von Eschenbach. The ethical force of the drama it has some, though very little was weakened at the performances at the Metro- politan Opera House * in New York by the excision 1 Goldmark's opera was presented for the first time in Amer- ica at the Metropolitan Opera House on December 2, 1885. Cast : Sulamith, Fraulein Lilli Lehmann ; die Konigin von Saba, Frau Kramer- Wiedl ; Astaroth, Fraulein Marianne Brandt; Solomon, Herr Adolph Robinson; Assad, Herr Stritt; Der Hohe Priester, Herr Emil Fischer; Baal-Hanan, Herr-Alexi. Anton Seidl conducted, and the opera had fifteen representations in the season. These performances were in the original Ger- man. On April 3, 1888, an English version was presented at the Academy of Music by the National Opera Company, then in its death throes. The opera was revived at the Metropoli- tan Opera House by Mr. Conried in the season 1905-1906 and had fire performances. 86 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS from the last act of a scene in which the Queen attempts to persuade Assad to go with her to Arabia. Now Assad rises superior to his grosser nature and drives the temptress away, thus performing the saving act demanded by Solomon. Herr Mosenthal, who made the libretto of "Die Konigin von Saba," treated this material, not with great poetic skill, but with a cunning appreciation of the opportunities which it offers for dramatic effect. The opera opens with a gorgeous picture of the interior of Solomon's palace, decked in honor of the coming guest. There is an air of joyous expectancy over everything. Sulamith's entrance introduces the element of female charm to brighten the bril- liancy of the picture, and her bridal song in which the refrain is an excerpt from the Canticles, "Thy beloved is thine, who feeds among the roses" enables the composer to indulge his strong pre- dilection and fecund gift for Oriental melody. The action hurries to a thrilling climax. One glittering pageant treads on the heels of another, each more gorgeous and resplendent than the last, until the stage, set to represent a fantastical hall with a be- wildering vista of carved columns, golden lions, and rich draperies, is filled with such a kaleidoscopic mass of colors and groupings as only an Oriental mind could conceive. Finally all the preceding strokes are eclipsed by the coming of the Queen. But no time is lost ; the spectacle does not make the action halt for a moment. Sheba makes her gifts and "DIE KONIGIN VON SABA" 87 uncovers her face, and at once we are confronted by the tragical element, and the action rushes on toward its legitimate and mournful end. In this ingenious blending of play and spectacle one rare opportunity after another is presented to the composer. Sulamith's epithalamium, Assad's narrative, the choral greeting to the Queen, the fate- ful recognition all these things are made for music of the inspiring, swelling, passionate kind. In the second act, the Queen's monologue, her duet with Assad, and, most striking of all, the unaccompanied bit of singing with which Astaroth lures Assad into the presence of the Queen, who is hiding in the shadow of broad-leaved palms behind a running fountain a melodic phrase saturated with the mys- tical color of the East these are gifts of the rarest kind to the composer, which he has enriched to give them in turn to the public. That relief from their stress of passion is necessary is not forgotten, but is provided in the ballet music and the solemn cere- monial in the temple, which takes place amid sur- roundings that call into active operation one's child- hood fancies touching the sacred fane on Mount Moriah and the pompous liturgical functions of which it was the theatre. Goldmark's music is highly spiced. He was an eclectic, and his first aim seems to have been to give the drama a tonal investiture which should be in keeping with its character, external as well as in- ternal. At times his music rushes along like a 88 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS lava stream of passion, every measure pulsating with eager, excited, and exciting life. He revels in instrumental color. The language of his orchestra is as glowing as the poetry attributed to the royal poet whom his operatic story celebrates. Many composers before him made use of Oriental ca- dences, rhythms, and idioms, but to none do they seem to have come so like native language as to Goldmark. It is romantic music, against which the strongest objection that can be urged is that it is so unvaryingly stimulated that it wearies the mind and makes the listener long for a change to a fresher and healthier musical atmosphere. CHAPTER VI . "HERODIADE" IN the ballet scene of Gounod's most popular opera Mephistopheles conjures up visions of Phryne, Lais, Aspasia, Cleopatra, and Helen of Troy to be- guile the jaded interest of Faust. The list reads almost like a catalogue of the operas of Massenet whose fine talent was largely given to the celebra- tion of the famous courtesans of the ancient world. With the addition of a few more names from the roster of antiquity (Thais, Dalila, and Aphrodite), and some less ancient but no less immoral creatures of modern fancy, like Violetta, Manon Lescaut, Zaza, and Louise, we might make a pretty complete list of representatives of the female type in which modern dramatists and composers seem to think the interest of humanity centres. When Massenet's "Herodiade" was announced as the first opera to be given at the Manhattan Opera House in New York for the season of 1909-1910 it looked to some observers as if the dominant note of the year was to be sounded by the Scarlet Woman ; but the representation brought a revelation and a surprise. The names of the principal characters 89 90 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS were those which for a few years had been filling the lyric theatres of Germany with a moral stench ; but their bearers in Massenet's opera did little or nothing that was especially shocking to good taste or proper morals. Herod was a love-sick man of lust, who gazed with longing eyes upon the physical charms of Salome and pleaded for her smiles like any sentimental milksop; but he did not offer her Capernaum for a dance. Salome may have known how, but she did not dance for either half a kingdom or the whole of a man's head. Instead, though there were intimations that her reputation was not all that a good maiden's ought to be, she sang pious hosannahs and waved a palm branch conspicuously in honor of the prophet at whose head she had bowled herself in the desert, the public streets, and king's palaces. At the end she killed herself when she found that the vengeful passion of Herodias and the jealous hatred of Herod had compassed the death of the saintly man whom she had loved. Herodias was a wicked woman, no doubt, for John the Baptist denounced her publicly as a Jezebel, but her jealousy of Salome had reached a point beyond her control before she learned that her rival was her own daugh- ter whom she had deserted for love of the Tetrarch. As for John the Baptist the camel's hair with which he was clothed must have cost as pretty a penny as any of the modern kind, and if he wore a girdle of skins about his loins it was concealed under a really regal cloak. He was a voice; but not one crying "HERODIADE" 91 in the wilderness. He was in fact an operatic tenor comme il faut, who needed only to be shut up in a subterranean jail with the young woman who had pursued him up hill and down dale, in and out of season to make love to her in the most approved fashion of the Paris Grand Ope*ra. What shall we think of the morals of this French opera, after we have seen and heard that com- pounded by the Englishman Oscar Wilde and the German Richard Strauss? No wonder that Eng- land's Lord Chamberlain asked nothing more than an elimination of the Biblical names when he licensed a performance of "Herodiade" at Covent Garden. There was no loss of dramatic qualitiy in calling Herod, Moriame, and Herodias, Hesotade, and chang- ing the scene from Jerusalem to Azoum in Ethiopia ; though it must have been a trifle diverting to hear fair-skinned Ethiopians singing $c/ima Yisroel, Adonai Elohenu in a temple which could only be that of Jerusalem. John the Baptist was only Jean in the original and needed not to be changed, and Salome is not in the Bible, though Salome, a very different woman is a fact which the Lord Chamberlain seems to have overlooked when he changed the title of the opera from "He*rodiade" to "Salome*." Where does Salome come from, anyway? And where did she get her chameleonlike nature? Was she an innocent child, as Flaubert represents her, who could but lisp the name of the prophet when her mother told her to ask for his head ? Had she 92 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS taken dancing lessons from one of the women of Cadiz to learn to dance as she must have danced to excite such lust in Herod? Was she a monster, a worse than vampire as she is represented by Wilde and Strauss? Was she an "Israelitish grisette" as Pougin called the heroine of the opera which it took one Italian (Zanardini) and three Frenchmen (Milliet, Gre*mont, and Massenet) to concoct? No wonder that the brain of Saint-Saens reeled when he went to hear "He"rodiade" at its first performance in Brussels and found that the woman whom he had looked upon as a type of lasciviousness and mop- strous cruelty had become metamorphosed into a penitent Magdalen. Read the plot of the opera and wonder ! Salome is a maiden in search of her mother whom John the Baptist finds in his wanderings and be- friends. She clings to him when he becomes a po- litical as well as a religious power among the Jews, though he preaches unctuously to her touching the vanity of earthly love. Herodias demands his death of her husband for that he had publicly in- sulted her, but Herod schemes to use his influence over the Jews to further his plan to become a real monarch instead of a Roman Tetrarch. But when the pro-consul Vitellius wins the support of the people and Herod learns that the maiden who has spurned him is in love with the prophet, he decrees his decapitation. Salome, baffled in her effort to save her lover, attempts to kill Herodias; but the "H3RODIADE" 93 wicked woman discloses herself as the maiden's mother and Salome turns the dagger against her own breast. This is all of the story one needs to know. It is richly garnished with incident, made gorgeous with pageantry, and clothed with much charming music. Melodies which may be echoes of synagogal hymns of great antiquity resound in the walls of the temple at Jerusalem, in which respect the opera recalls Goldmark's "Queen of Sheba." Curved Roman trumpets mix their loud clangors with the instru- ments of the modern brass band and compel us to think of "Alda." There are dances of Egyptians, Babylonians, and Phoenicians, and if the movements of the women make us deplore the decay of the choreographic art, the music warms us almost as much as the Spanish measures in "Le Cid." Eyes and ears are deluged with Oriental color until at the last there comes a longing for the graciously insinuat- ing sentimentalities of which the earlier Massenet was a master. Two of the opera's airs had long been familiar to the public from performance in the concert- room Salome's "H est doux" and Herod's "Vision fugitive" and they stand out as the brightest jewels in the opera's musical crown; but there is much else which woos the ear delightfully, for Mas- senet was ever a gracious if not a profound melodist and a master of construction and theatrical orches- tration. When he strives for massive effects, how- ever, he sometimes becomes futile, banal where he $4 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS would be imposing; but he commands a charm which is insinuating in its moments of intimacy. 1 1 "Herodiade" had its first performance in New York (it had previously been given in New Orleans by the French Opera Company) on November 8, 1909. The cast was as follows: Salome, Lina Cavalieri ; Herodias, Gerville-Reache ; John, Charles Dalmores ; fferod, Maurice Renaud ; Vitellius, Crabb6 ; Phanuel, M. Vallier ; High Priest, M. Nicolay. Musical director, Henriques de la Fuente. CHAPTER VH "LAKME" Lakme is the daughter of Nilakantha, a fanatical Brahmin priest, who has withdrawn to a ruined temple deep in an Indian forest. In his retreat the old man nurses his wrath against the British invader, prays assiduously to Brahma (thus contributing a fascinating Oriental mood to the opening of the opera), and waits for the time to come when he shall be able to wreak his revenge on the despoilers of his country. Lakme sings Oriental duets with her slave, Mallika: Sous le dome e"pais ou le blanc jasmin A la rose s'assemble, Sur la rive en fleurs, riant au matin Viens, descendons ensemble a dreamy, sense-ensnaring, hypnotic barcarole. The opera opens well; by this time the composer has carried us deep into the jungle. The Occident is rude: Gerald, an English officer, breaks through a bamboo fence and makes love to Lakme, who, though widely separated from her operatic colleagues from an ethnological point of view like Elsa and Senta, 95 96 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS < to expedite the action requites the passion instanter. After the Englishman is gone the father returns and, with an Oriental's cunning which does him credit, deduces from the broken fence that an Englishman has profaned the sacred spot. This is the business of Act I. In Act II the father, disguised as a beggar who holds a dagger ever in readiness, and his daughter, disguised as a street singer, visit a town market in search of the profaner. The business is not to Lakme's taste, but it is not for the like of her to neglect the opportunity offered to win ap- plause with the legend of the pariah's daughter, with its tintinnabulatory charm : Ou va la jeune Hindoue Fille des parias ; Quand la June se joue Dans les grand mimosas? It is the "Bell song," which has tinkled so often in our concert-rooms. Gerald recognizes the singer despite her disguise; and Nilakantha recognizes him as the despoiler of the hallowed spot in which he worships and incidentally conceals his daughter. The bloodthirsty fanatic observes sententiously that Brahma has smiled and cuts short Gerald's soliloquizing with a dagger thrust. Lakme, with the help of a male slave, removes him to a hut con- cealed in the forest. While he is convalescing the pair sing duets and exchange vows of undying affection. But the military Briton, who has invaded the country at large, must needs now invade also "LAKMfi" 97 this cosey abode of love. Frederick, a brother officer, discovers Gerald and informs him that duty calls (Britain always expects every man to do his duty, no matter what the consequences to him) and he must march with his regiment. Frederick has hap- pened in just as Lakme is gone for some sacred water in which she and Gerald were to pledge eternal love for each other, to each other. But, spurred on by Frederick and the memory that "England expects, etc.," Gerald finds the call of the fife and drum more potent than the voice of love. Lakme, psychologist as well as botanist, understands the struggle which now takes place in Gerald's soul, and relieves him of his dilemma by crushing a poisonous flower (to be exact, \he Datura stramonium) between her teeth, dying, it would seem, to the pious delight of her father, who "ecstatically" beholds her dwelling with Brahma. The story, borrowed by Gondinet and Gille from the little romance "Le Mariage de Loti," is worthless except to furnish motives for tropical scenery, Hindu dresses, and Oriental music. Three English ladies, Ellen, Rose, and Mrs. Bentson, figure in the play, but without dramatic purpose except to take part in some concerted music. They are, indeed, so insignificant in all other respects that when the opera was given by Miss Van Zandt and a French company in London for the first time in 1885 they were omitted, and the excision was commended by the critics, who knew that it had been made. The con- versation of the women is all of the veriest stopgap 98 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS character. The maidens, Rose and Ellen, are Eng- lish ladies visiting in the East; Mrs. Bentson is their chaperon. All that they have to say is highly unimportant, even when true. "What do you see, Frederick?" "A garden." "And you, Gerald?" "Big, beautiful trees." "Anybody about?" " Don't know." " Look again." " That's not easy ; the fence shuts out the view within." "Can't you make a peephole through the bamboo?" "Girls, girls, be careful." And so on and so on for quantity. But we must fill three acts, and ensemble makes its demands; besides, we want pretty blondes of the English type to put in contrast with the dark-skinned Lakme and her slave. At the first representation in New York by the American Opera Company, at the Academy of Music, on March 1, 1886, the three women were permitted to interfere with what there is of poetical spirit in the play, and their conversation, like that of the other principals, was uttered in the recitatives composed by Delibes to take the place of the spoken dialogue used at the Paris Ope*ra Comique, where spoken dialogue is traditional. Theodore Thomas conducted the Academy performance, at which the cast was as follows: Lakme, Pauline L'Allemand; Nilakantha, Alonzo E. Stoddard; Gerald, William Candidus; Frederick, William H. Lee ; Ellen, Charlotte Walker ; Rose, Helen Dudley Campbell; Mrs. Bentson, May Fielding; Mattika, Jessie Bartlett Davis ; Hadji, William H. Fessenden. Few operas have had a more variegated American "LAKMfi" 99 history than "Lakme*." It was quite new when it was first heard in New York, but it had. already given rise to considerable theatrical gossip, not to say scandal. The first representation took place at the Opera Comique in April, 1883, with Miss Marie Van Zandt, an American girl, the daughter of a singer who had been actively successful in English opera in New York and London, as creator of the part of the heroine. The opera won a pretty tri- umph and so did the singer. At once there was talk of a New York performance. Mme. Etelka Gerster studied the titular r6le with M. Delibes and, as a member of Colonel Mapleson's company at the Academy of Music, confidently expected to produce the work there in the season of 1883-1884, the first season of the rivalry between the Academy and the Metropolitan Opera House, which had just opened its doors ; but though she went so far as to offer to buy the American performing rights from Heugel, the publisher, nothing came of it. The reason was easily guessed by those who knew that there has been, or was pending, a quarrel between Colonel Mapleson and M. Heugel concerning the unauthorized use by the impresario of other scores owned by the publisher. During the same season, however, Miss Emma Abbott carried a version (or rather a perversion) of the opera, for which the orchestral parts had been arranged from the pianoforte score, into the cities of the West, and brought down a deal of unmerited criticism on the innocent head of M. Delibes. In 100 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS the season of 1884-1885 Colonel Mapleson came back to the Academy with vouchers of various sorts to back up a promise to give the opera. There was a human voucher in the person of Miss Emma Nevada, who had also enjoyed the instruction of the composer and who had trunkfuls and trunkfuls and trunkfuls of Oriental dresses, though Lakme needs but few. There were gorgeous uniforms for the British soldiers, the real article, each scarlet coat and every top boot having a piece of history attached, and models of the scenery which any doubting Thomas of a newspaper reporter might inspect if he felt so disposed. When the redoubtable colonel came it was to be only a matter of a week or so before the opera would be put on the stage in the finest of styles; it was still a matter of a week or so when the Academy season came to an end. When Delibes's exquisite and exotic music reached a hearing in the American metropolis, it was sung to English words, and the most emphatic success achieved in performance was the acrobatic one of Mme. L'Allemand as she rolled down some uncalled-for pagoda steps in the death scene. Mme. Adelina Patti was the second Lakme heard in New York. After the fifth season of German opera at the Metropolitan Opera House had come to an end in the spring of 1890, Messrs. Abbey and Grau took the theatre for a short season of Italian opera by a troupe headed by Mme. Patti. In that season "Lakme"" was sung once on April 2, 1890. Now came an opportunity for the original representative "LAKMfi" 101 of the heroine. Abbey and Grau resumed the man- agement of the theatre in 1891, and in their company was Miss Van Zandt, for whom the opera was "re- vived" on February 22. Mr. Abbey had great expectations, but they were disappointed. For the public there was metal more attractive than Miss Van Zandt and the Hindu opera in other members of the company and other operas. It was the year of Emma Eames's coming and also of Jean de Reszke's (they sang together in Gounod's "Romeo et Juliette") and "Cavalleria rusticana" was new. Then Delibes's opera hibernated in New York for fifteen years, after which the presence in the Metro- politan company of Mme. Marcella Sembrich led to another "revival." (Operas which are unperformed for a term of two or three years after having been once included in the repertory are "revived" in New York.) It was sung three times in the season of 1906-1907. It also afforded one of Mr. Hammer- stein's many surprises at the Manhattan Opera House. Five days before the close of his last season, on March 21, 1910, it was precipitated on the stage ("pitchforked" is the popular and professional term) to give Mme. Tetrazzini a chance to sing the bell song. Altogether I know of no more singular history than that of "Lakme" in New York. Lakme is a child of the theatrical boards, who inherited traits from several predecessors, the strong- 102 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS est being those deriving from Aida and Selika. Like the former, she loves a man whom her father believes to be the arch enemy of his native land, and, like her, she is the means of betraying him into the hands of the avenger. Like the heroine of Meyerbeer's post- humous opera, she has a fatal acquaintance with tropical botany and uses her knowledge to her own destruction. Her scientific attainments are on about the same plane as her amiability, her abnormal sense of filial duty, and her musical accomplishments. She loves a man whom her father wishes her to lure to his death by her singing, and she sings entrancingly enough to bring about the meeting between her lover's back and her father's knife. That she does not warble herself into the position of particeps criminis in a murder she owes only to the bungling of the old man. Having done this, however, she turns physician and nurse and brings the wounded man back to health, thus sacrificing her love to the duty which her lover thinks he owes to the invaders of her country and oppressors of her people. After this she makes the fatal application of her botanical knowledge. Such things come about when one goes to India for an operatic heroine. The feature of the libretto which Delibes has used to the best purpose is its local color. His music is saturated with the languorous spirit of the East. Half a dozen of the melodies are lovely inventions, of marked originality in both matter and treatment, and the first half hour of the opera is apt to take one's "LAKMfi" 103 fancy completely captive. The drawback lies in the oppressive weariness which succeeds the first trance, and is brought on by the monotonous char- acter of the music. After an hour of "Lakme"" one yearns for a few crashing chords of C major as a person enduring suffocation longs for a gush of fresh air. The music first grows monotonous, then wearies. Delibes's lyrical moments show the most numerous indications of beauty ; dramatic life and energy are absent from the score. In the second act he moves his listeners only once with the attempted repetition of the bell song after Lakme has recognized her lover. The odor of the poppy invites to drowsy enjoyment in the beginning, and the first act is far and away the most gratifying in the opera, musically as well as scenically. It would be so if it contained only Lakm&'s song "Pourquoi dans les grands bois," the exquisite barcarole a veritable treasure trove for the composer, who used its melody dramatically throughout the work and Gerald's air, "Fantaisie aux divins mensonges." Real depth will be looked for in vain in this opera ; superficial loveliness is apparent on at least half its pages. CHAPTER VIII "PAGLIACCl" FOR a quarter of a century "Cavalleria rusticana" and "Pagliacci" have been the Castor and Pollux of the operatic theatres of Europe and America. Together they have joined the hunt of venturesome impresarios for that Calydonian boar, success; together they have lighted the way through seasons of tempestuous stress and storm. Of recent years at the Metropolitan Opera House in New York efforts have been made to divorce them and to find associates for one or the other, since neither is suffi- cient in time for an evening's entertainment; but they refuse to be put asunder as steadfastly as did the twin brothers of Helen and Clytemnestra. There has been no operatic Zeus powerful enough to sep- arate and alternate their existences even for a day ; and though blase" critics will continue to rail at the "double bill" as they have done for two decades or more, the two fierce little dramas will "sit shining on the sails" of many a managerial ship and bring it safe to haven for many a year to come. Twins the operas are in spirit; twins in their capacity as supreme representatives of verismo; 104 "PAGLIACCI" 10* twins in the fitness of their association ; but twins they are not in respect of parentage or age. " Caval- leria rusticana" is two years older than "Pagliacci" and as truly its progenitor as Weber's operas were the progenitors of Wagner's. They are the offspring of the same artistic movement, and it was the phe- nomenal success of Mascagni's opera which was the spur that drove Leoncavallo to write his. When "Cavalleria rusticana" appeared on the scene, two generations of opera-goers had passed away without experiencing anything like the sensation caused by this opera. They had witnessed the production, indeed, of great masterpieces, which it would be 106 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS almost sacrilegious to mention in the same breath with Mascagni's turbulent and torrential tragedy, but these works were the productions of mature masters, from whom things monumental and lasting were expected as a matter of course ; men like Wag- ner and Verdi. The generations had also seen the coming of "Carmen" and gradually opened their minds to an appreciation of its meaning and beauty, while the youthful genius who had created it sank almost unnoticed into his grave ; but they had not seen the advent of a work which almost in a day set the world on fire and raised an unknown musician from penury and obscurity to affluence and fame. In the face of such an experience it was scarcely to be wondered at that judgment was flung to the winds and that the most volatile of musical nations and the staidest alike hailed the young composer as the successor of Verdi, the regenerator of operatic Italy, and the pioneer of a new school which should revitalize opera and make unnecessary the hopeless task of trying to work along the lines laid down by Wagner. And this opera was the outcome of a competition based on the frankest kind of commercialism one of those "occasional" from which we have been taught to believe we ought never to expect anything of ideal and lasting merit. "Pagliacci" was, in a way, a fruit of the same competition. Three years before "Cavalleria rusticana" had started the universal conflagration Ruggiero Leoncavallo, who "PAGLIACCI" 107 at sixteen years of age had won his diploma at the Naples Conservatory and received the degree of Doctor of Letters from the University of Bologna at twenty, had read his dramatic poem "I Medici" to the publisher Ricordi and been commissioned to set it to music. For this work he was to receive 2400 francs. He completed the composition within a year, but there was no contract that the opera should be performed, and this hoped-for consumma- tion did not follow. Then came Mascagni's triumph, and Leoncavallo, who had been obliged meanwhile to return to the routine work of an operatic repetiteur, lost patience. Satisfied that Ricordi would never do anything more for him, and become desperate, he shut himself in his room to attempt "one more work" as he said in an autobiographical sketch which appeared in "La Reforme," a journal pub- lished in Alexandria. In five months he had written the book and music of "Pagliacci," which was accepted for publication and production by Sonzogno, Ricordi's business rival, after a single reading of the poem. Maurel, whose friendship Leoncavallo had made while coaching opera singers in Paris, used his influence in favor of the opera, offered to create the part of Tonio, and did so at the first per- formance of the opera at the Teatro dal Verme, Milan, on May 17, 1892. Leoncavallo's opera turns on a tragical ending to a comedy which is incorporated in the play. The comedy is a familiar one among the strolling playera 10S A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS who perform at village fairs in Italy, in which Colom- bina, Pagliaccio, and Arlecchino (respectively the Columbine, Clown, and Harlequin of our panto- mime) take part. Pagliaccio is husband to Colom- bina and Arlecchino is her lover, who hoodwinks Pagliaccio. There is a fourth character, Taddeo, a servant, who makes foolish love to Columbina and, mingling imbecile stupidity with maliciousness, de- lights in the domestic discord which he helps to foment. The first act of the opera may be looked upon as an induction to the conventional comedy which comes to an unconventional and tragic end through the fact that the Clown (Canio) is in real life the husband of Columbine (Nedda) and is murder- ously jealous of her; wherefore, forgetting himself in a mad rage, he kills her and her lover in the midst of the mimic scene. The lover, however, is not the Harlequin of the comedy, but one of the spectators whom Canio had vainly sought to identify, but who is unconsciously betrayed by his mistress in her death agony. The Taddeo of the comedy is the clown of the company, who in real life entertains a passion for Nedda, which is repulsed, whereupon he also carries his part into actuality and betrays Nedda's secret to Canio. It is in the ingenious in- terweaving of these threads the weft of reality with the warp of simulation that the chief dra- matic value of Leoncavallo's opera lies. Actual murder by a man while apparently playing a part in a drama is older as a dramatic motif than "PAGLIACCI" 109 "Pagliacci," and Leoncavallo's employment of it gave rise to an interesting controversy and a still more interesting revelation in the early days of the opera. Old theatre-goers in England and America remember the device as it was employed in Dennery's "Pail- laisse," known on the English stage as "Belphegor, the Mountebank." In 1874 Paul Ferrier produced a play entitled "Tabarin," in which Coquelin ap- peared at the Theatre Franc.ais. Thirteen years later Catulle Mendes brought out another play called "La Femme de Tabarin," for which Chabrier wrote the incidental music. The critics were prompt in charging Mendes with having plagiarized Ferrier, and the former defended himself on the ground that the incident which he had employed, of actual murder in a dramatic performance, was historical and had often been used. This, however, did not prevent him from bringing an accusation of theft against Leoncavallo when "Pagliacci" was an- nounced for production in French at Brussels and of beginning legal proceedings against the composer and his publisher on that score. The controversy which followed showed very plainly that Mendes did not have a leg to stand upon either in law or equity, and he withdrew his suit and made a hand- some amende in a letter to the editor of "Le Figaro." Before this was done, however, Signer Leoncavallo wrote a letter to his publisher, which not only estab- lished that the incident in question was based upon fact but directed attention to a dramatic use of the 110 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS motif in a Spanish play written thirty-five years before the occurrence which was in the mind of Leoncavallo. The letter was as follows : Lugano, Sept. 3, 1894. Dear Signer Sonzogno. I have read Catulle Mendes's two letters. M. Mendes goes pretty far in declaring a priori that "Pagliacci" is an imitation of his "Femme de Tabarin." I had not known this book, and only know it now through the accounts given in the daily papers. You will remember that at the time of the first performance of "Pagliacci" at Milan in 1892 several critics accused me of having taken the subject of my opera from the "Drama Nuevo" of the well known Spanish writer, Estebanez. What would M. Mendes say if he were accused of having taken the plot of "La Femme de Tabarin" from the "Drama Nuevo," which dates back to 1830 or 1840? As a fact, a husband, a comedian, kills in the last scene the lover of his wife before her eyes while he only appears to play his part in the piece. It is absolutely true that I knew at that tune no more of the "Drama Nuevo" than I know now of "La Femme de Tabarin." I saw the first mentioned work in Rome represented by Novelli six months after " Pagliacci's " first production in Milan. In my childhood, while my father was judge at Montalto, in Calabria (the scene of the opera's plot), a jealous player killed his wife after the performance. This event made a deep and lasting im- pression on my childish mind, the more since my father was the judge at the criminal's trial ; and later, when I took up dramatic work, I used this episode for a drama. I left the frame of the piece as I saw it, and it can be seen now at the Festival of Madonna della Serra, at Montalto. The clowns arrive a week or ten days before the festival, "PAGLIACCI" 111 which takes place on August 15, to put up their tents and booths in the open space which reaches from the church toward the fields. I have not even invented the coming of the peasants from Santo Benedetto, a neighbor- ing village, during the chorale. What I write now I have mentioned so often in Ger- many and other parts that several opera houses, notably that of Berlin, had printed on their bills "Scene of the true event." After all this, M. Mendes insisted on his claim, which means that he does not believe my words. Had I used M. Mendes's ideas I would not have hesitated to open correspondence with him before the first represen- tation, as I have done now with a well known writer who has a subject that I wish to use for a future work. "Pag- liacci" is my own, entirely my own. If in this opera, a scene reminds one of M. Mendes's book, it only proves that we both had the same idea which Estebanez had before us. On my honor and conscience I assure you that I have read but two of M. Mendes's books in my life "Zo Hur" and "La Premiere Maftresse." When I read at Marienbad a little while ago the newspaper notices on the production of "La Femme de Tabarin" I even wrote to you, dear Signer Sonzogno, thinking this was an imitation of "Pagliacei." This assertion will suffice, coming from an honorable man, to prove my loyalty. If not, then I will place my undoubted rights under the protection of the law, and furnish incontestable proof of what I have stated here. I have the honor, etc., etc. At various times and in various manners, by letters and in newspaper interviews, Leoncavallo reiterated the statement that the incident which he had witnessed as a boy in his father's courtroom had suggested his drama. The chief actor in the inci- 112 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS dent, he said, was still living. After conviction he was asked if he felt penitent. The rough voice which rang through the room years before still echoed in Leoncavallo's ears: "I repent me of nothing ! On the contrary, if I had it to do over again I'd do it again !" (Non mi pento del delitto! Tutt altro. Se dovessi ricomintiare, ricomincerei !) He was sentenced to imprisonment and after the expiration of his term took service in a little Calabrian town with Baroness Sproniere. If Mendes had pros- ecuted his action, "poor Alessandro" was ready to appear as a witness and tell the story which Leon- cavallo had dramatized. I have never seen "La Femme de Tabarin" and must rely on Mr. Philip Hale, fecund fountain of informal information, for an outline of the play which "Pagliacci" called back into public notice : Francis- quine, the wife of Tabarin, irons her petticoats in the players' booth. A musketeer saunters along, stops and makes love to her. She listens greedily. Ta- barin enters just after she has made an appointment with the man. Tabarin is drunk drunker than usual. He adores his wife ; he falls at her feet ; he entreats her; he threatens her. Meanwhile the crowd gathers to see the "parade." Tabarin mounts the platform and tells openly of his jealousy. He calls his wife ; she does not answer. He opens the curtain behind him ; then he sees her in the arms of the musketeer. Tabarin snatches up a sword, stabs his wife in the breast and comes back to the stage "PAGLIACCI" 113 with starting eyes and hoarse voice. The crowd marvels at the passion of his play. Francisquine, bloody, drags herself along the boards. She chokes ; she cannot speak. Tabarin, mad with despair, gives her the sword, begs her to kill him. She seizes the sword, raises herself, hiccoughs, gasps out the word "Canaille," and dies before she can strike. Paul Ferrier and Emanuel Pessard produced a grand opera in two acts entitled "Tabarin" in Paris in 1885 ; Alboiz and Andr6 a comic opera with the same title, music by Georges Bousquet, in 1852. Gilles and Furpilles brought out an operetta called "Tabarin Duelliste," with music by Leon Pillaut, in 1866. The works seem to have had only the name of the hero in common. Their stories bear no likeness to those of "La Femme de Tabarin" or "Pagliacci." The Spanish play, "Drama Nuevo," by Estebanez, was adapted for performance in English by Mr. W. D. Howells under the title "Yorick's Love." The translation was made for Mr. Lawrence Barrett and was never published in book form. If it had the denouement suggested in Leoncavallo's letter to Sonzogno, the fact has escaped the memory of Mr. Howells, who, in answer to a letter of inquiry which I sent him, wrote : "So far as I can remember there was no likeness between 'Yorick's Love 7 and 'Pagliacci.' But when I made my version I had not seen or heard 'Pagliacci.'" :.. The title of Leoncavallo's opera is "Pagliacci," uot "I Pagliacci" as it frequently appears in books 114 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS and newspapers. When the opera was brought out in the vernacular, Mr. Frederick E. Weatherly, who made the English adaptation, called the play and the character assumed by Canio in the comedy "Punchinello." This evoked an interesting com- ment from Mr. Hale: "'Pagliacci' is the plural of Pagliaccio, which does not mean and never did mean Punchinello. What is a Pagliaccio? A type long known to the Italians, and familiar to the French as Paillasse. The Pagliaccio visited Paris first in 1570. He was clothed in white and wore big buttons. Later, he wore a suit of bedtick, with white and blue checks, the coarse mattress cloth of the period. Hence his name. The word that meant straw was afterward used for mattress which was stuffed with straw and then for the buffoon, who wore the mattress cloth suit. In France the Paillasse, as I have said, was the same as Pagliaccio. Sometimes he wore a red checked suit, but the genuine one was known by the colors, white and blue. He wore blue stockings, short breeches puffing out It la House, a belted blouse and a black, close-fitting cap. This buffoon was seen at shows of strolling mountebanks. He stood out- side the booth and by his jests and antics and grim- aces strove to attract the attention of the people, and he told them of the wonders performed by acrobats within, of the freaks exhibited. Many of his jests are preserved. They are often in dialogue with the proprietor and are generally of vile in- decency. The lowest of the strollers, he was abused "PAGLIACCI" 115 by them. The Italian Pagliaccio is a species of clown, and Punchinello was never a mere buffoon. The Punch of the puppet-show is a bastard descen- dant of the latter, but the original type is still seen in Naples, where he wears a white costume and a black mask. The original type was not necessarily humpbacked. Punchinello is a shrewd fellow, intel- lectual, yet in touch with the people, cynical ; not hesitating at murder if he can make by it ; at the same time a local satirist, a dealer in gags and quips. Pagliacci is perhaps best translated by 'clowns'; but the latter word must not be taken in its re- stricted circus sense. These strolling clowns are pantomimists, singers, comedians." At the first performance of "Pagliacci" in Milan the cast was as follows: Canio, Geraud; Tonio, Maurel; Silvio, Ancona; Peppe, Daddi; Nedda, Mme. Stehle. The first performance in America was by the Hinrichs Grand Opera Company, at the Grand Opera House, New York, on June 15, 1893 ; Selma Kronold was the Nedda, Montegriffo the Canio, and Campanari the Tonio. The opera was incorporated in the Metropolitan repertory in the season of 1893- 1894. Kinuccini's "Dafne," which was written 300 years ago and more, begins with a prologue which was spoken in the character of the poet Ovid. Leon- cavallo's "Pagliacci" also begins with a prologue, 116 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS but it is spoken by one of the people of the play ; whether in his character as Tonio of the tragedy or Pagliaccio of the comedy there is no telling. He speaks the sentiments of the one and wears the motley of the other. Text and music, however, are ingeniously contrived to serve as an index to the purposes of the poet and the method and material of the composer. In his speech the prologue tells us that the author of the play is fond of the ancient custom of such an introduction, but not of the old purpose. He does not employ it for the purpose of proclaiming that the tears and passions of the actors are but simulated and false. No ! He wishes to let us know that his play is drawn from life as it is that it is true. It welled up within him when memories of the past sang in his heart and was written down to show us that actors are human beings like unto ourselves. An unnecessary preachment, and if listened to with a critical disposition rather an impertinence, as calculated to rob us of the pleasure of illusion which it is the province of the drama to give. Closely analyzed, Tonio's speech is very much of a piece with the prologue which Bully Bottom wanted for the play of "Pyramus" in Shakespeare's comedy. We are asked to see a play. In this play there is another play. In this other play one of the actors plays at cross-purposes with the author forgets his lines and himself altogether and becomes in reality the man that he seems to be in the first play. "PAGLIACCI" 117 The prologue deliberately aims to deprive us of the thrill of surprise at the unexpected denouement, simply that he may tell us what we already know as well as he, that an actor is a human being. Plainly then, from a didactic point of view, this prologue is a gratuitous impertinence. Not so its music. Structurally, it is little more than a loose- jointed pot-pourri; but it serves the purpose of a thematic catalogue to the chief melodic incidents of the play which is to follow. In this it bears a faint resemblance to the introduction to Berlioz's "Romeo and Juliet" symphony. It begins with an energetic figure, deciso z: A. which is immediately followed by an upward scale- passage with a saucy flourish at the end not unlike the crack of a whiplash : - It helps admirably to picture the bustling activity of the festo into which we are soon to be precipitated. 118 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS The bits of melody which are now introduced might all be labelled in the Wolzogen- Wagner manner with reference to the play's peoples and their passions if it were worth while to do so, or if their beauty and eloquence were not sufficient unto themselves. First we have the phrase in which Canio will tell us how a clown's heart must seem merry and make laughter though it be breaking : dolorosamerte CORN i SOLI Next the phrase from the love music of Nedda and Silvio : > co n passtone ' ^ The bustling music returns, develops great energy, then pauses, hesitates, and makes way for Tonio, who, putting his head through the curtain, politely asks permission of the audience, steps forward and delivers his homily, which is alternately declamatory and broadly melodious. One of his melodies later becomes the theme of the between-acts music, which "PAGLIACCI" 119 separates the supposedly real life of the strolling players from the comedy which they present to the mimic audience : ^ -G> 1 1 ff =5j ^ frq -V%-9 J Ah think E - vo then, sweet peo jpittf - to - pie, when ye - ato che le f- f rr~~r *" J" f\* 1 U V J I", y h ix \J V * Z b Z__ y U U 1 look on no - stre us po clad in our mot - ley T>e - re gob -bet ne At last Tonio calls upon his fellow mountebanks to begin their play. The curtain rises. We are in the midst of a rural celebration of the Feast of the Assumption on the outskirts of a village in Calabria. A perambulant theatre has been set up among the trees and the strolling actors are arriving, accom- panied by a crowd of villagers, who shout greetings to Clown, Columbine, and Harlequin. Nedda ar- rives in a cart drawn by a donkey led by Beppe. Canio in character invites the crowd to come to the show at 7 o'clock (ventitre ore). There they shall be regaled with a sight of the domestic troubles of Pagliaccio and see the fat mischief-maker tremble. Tonio wants to help Nedda out of the cart, but Canio interferes and lifts her down himself ; whereupon the women and boys twit Tonio. Canio and Beppe 120 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS wet their whistles at the tavern, but Tonio remains behind on the plea that he must curry the donkey. The hospitable villager playfully suggests that it is Tonio's purpose to make love to Nedda. Canio, half in earnest, half in jest, points out the difference between real life and the stage. In the play, if he catches a lover with his wife, he flies into a mock passion, preaches a sermon, and takes a drubbing from the swain to the amusement of the audience. But there would be a different ending to the story were Nedda actually to deceive him. Let Tonio beware ! Does he doubt Nedda' s fidelity ? Not at all. He loves her and seals his assurance with a kiss. Then off to the tavern. Hark to the bagpipes ! Huzza, here come the zampognari ! Drone pipes droning and chaunters skirling as well as they can skirl in Italian ! Now we have people and pipers on the stage and there's a bell in the steeple ringing for vespers. Therefore a chorus. Not that we have anything to say that concerns the story in any way. "Din, don !" That would suffice, but if you must have more: "Let's to church. Din, don. All's right with love and the sunset. Din, don ! But mamma has her eye on the young folk and their inclination "PAGLIACCI" 121 for kissing. Din, don ! " Bells and pipes are echoed by the singers. Her husband is gone to the tavern for refreshment and Nedda is left alone. There is a little trouble in her mind caused by the fierceness of Canio's voice and looks. Does he suspect? But why yield to such fancies and fears? How beautiful the mid- August sun is ! Her hopes and longings find expres- sion in the Ballatella a waltz tune with twitter of birds and rustle of leaves for accompaniment. Pretty birds, where are you going? What is it you say ? Mother knew your song and used once to tell it to her babe. How your wings flash through the ether ! Heedless of cloud and tempest, on, on, past the stars, and still on ! Her wishes take flight with the feathered songsters, but Tonio brings her rudely to earth. He pleads for a return of the love which he says he bears her, but she bids him postpone his protestations till he can make them in the play. He grows desperately urgent and attempts to rape a kiss. She cuts him across the face with a donkey whip, and he goes away blaspheming and swearing vengeance. Then Silvio comes Silvio, the villager, who loves her and who has her heart. She fears he will be discovered, but he bids her be at peace ; he had left Canio drinking at the tavern. She tells him of the scene with Tonio and warns him, but he laughs at her fears. Then he pleads with her. She does not love her husband ; she is weary of the wandering 122 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS life which she is forced to lead ; if her love is true let her fly with him to happiness. No. 'Tis folly, madness ; her heart is his, but he must not tempt her to its destruction. Tonio slinks in and plays eavesdropper. He hears the mutual protestations of the lovers, hears Nedda yield to Silvio' s wild plead- ings, sees them locked in each other's arms, and hur- ries off to fetch Canio. Canio comes, but not in time to see the man who had climbed over the wall, yet in time to hear Nedda's word of parting : A stanotte e per sempre tua saro "To-night, and forever, I am yours!" He throws Nedda aside and gives chase after the fugitive, but is baffled. He demands to be told the name of her lover. Nedda refuses to answer. He rushes upon her with dagger drawn, but Beppe intercepts and disarms him. There is haste now; the villagers are already gathering for the play. Tonio insinuates his wicked advice : Let us dissemble ; the gallant may be caught at the play. The others go out to prepare for their labors. Canio staggers toward the theatre. He must act the merry fool, though his heart be torn ! Why not ? What is he ? A man ? No ; a clown ! On with the motley ! The public must be amused. What though Harlequin steals his Columbine? Laugh, Pagliaccio, though thy heart break ! The between-acts music is retrospective ; it com- ments on the tragic emotions, the pathos foretold in the prologue. Act II brings the comedy which is to have a realistic and bloody ending. The villagers "PAGLIACCI" 123 gather and struggle for places in front of the booth. Among them is Silvio, to whom Nedda speaks a word of warning as she passes him while collecting the admission fees. He reminds her of the assignation ; she will be there. The comedy begins to the music of a graceful minuet : Tempo di Minuetto J = 69 Columbine is waiting for Harlequin. Taddeo is at the market buying the supper for the mimic lovers. Harlequin sings his serenade under the window : "0, Colombina, il tenero fido Arlecchin" a pretty- measure ! Taddeo enters and pours out his admira- tion for Colombina in an exaggerated cadenza as he offers her his basket of purchases. The audience shows enjoyment of the sport. Taddeo makes love to Colombina and Harlequin, entering by the win- dow, lifts him up by the ears from the floor where he is kneeling and kicks him out of the room. What fun ! The mimic lovers sit at table and discuss the supper and their love. Taddeo enters in mock alarm to tell of the coming of Pagliaccio. Harlequin 124 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS decamps, but leaves a philtre in the hands of Colum- bine to be poured into her husband's wine. At the window Columbine calls after him: A stanotte e per sempre io saro tua! At this moment Canio enters in the character of Pagliaccio. He hears again the words which Nedda had called after the fleeing Silvio, and for a moment is startled out of his character. But he collects himself and begins to play his part. "A man has been here ! " " You've been drinking !" The dialogue of the comedy con- tinues, but ever and anon with difficulty on the part of Pagliaccio, who begins to put a sinister inflection into his words. Taddeo is dragged from the cup- board in which he had taken hiding. He, too, puts color of verity into his lines, especially when he prates about the purity of Columbine. Canio loses control of himself more and more. "Pagliaccio no more, but a man a man seeking vengeance. The name of your lover!" The audience is moved by his intensity. Silvio betrays anxiety. Canio rages on. "The name, the name!" The mimic audience shouts, " Bravo ! " Nedda : if he doubts her she will go. "No, by God ! You'll remain and tell me the name of your lover!" With a great effort Nedda forces herself to remain in character. The music, whose tripping dance measures have given way to sinister mutterings in keeping with Canio' s mad out- bursts, as the mimic play ever and anon threatens to leave its grooves and plunge into the tragic vortex of reality, changes to a gavotte : "PAGLIACCI" 125 Columbine explains : she had no idea her hus- band could put on so tragical a mask. It is only harmless Harlequin who has been her companion. "The name ! The name !! THE NAME ! ! !" Nedda sees catastrophe approaching and throws her char- acter to the winds. She shrieks out a defiant "No!" and attempts to escape from the mimic stage. Silvio starts up with dagger drawn. The spectators rise in confusion and cry "Stop him!" Canio seizes Nedda and plunges his knife into her: "Take that ! And that ! With thy dying gasps thou'lt tell me !" Woful intuition ! Dying, Nedda calls: "Help, Silvio!" Silvio rushes forward and receives Canto's knife in his heart. "Gesumaria !" shriek the women. Men throw themselves upon Canio. He stands for a moment in a stupor, drops his knife and speaks the words: "The comedy is ended." " Ridi Pagliaccio ! " shrieks the orchestra as the curtain falls. "Plaudite, amici," said Beethoven on his death bed, "la commedia finita est!" And there is a tradition that these, too, were the last words of the 126 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS arch-jester Rabelais. "When 'Pagliacci' was first sung here (in Boston), by the Tavary company," says Mr. Philip Hale, "Tonio pointed to the dead bodies and uttered the sentence in a mocking way. And there is a report that such was Leoncavallo's original intention. As the Tonio began the piece in explanation so he should end it. But the tenor (de Lucia) insisted that he should speak the line. I do not believe the story. (1) As Maurel was the original Tonio and the tenor was comparatively unknown, it is doubtful whether Maurel, of all men, would have allowed of the loss of a fat line. (2) As Canio is chief of the company it is eminently proper that he should make the announcement to the crowd. (3) The ghastly irony is accentuated by the speech when it comes from Canio' s mouth." CHAPTER IX "CAVALLERIA RUSTICANA" HAVING neither the patience nor the inclination to paraphrase a comment on Mascagni's " Cavalleria rusticana" which I wrote years ago when the opera was comparatively new, and as it appears to me to contain a just estimate and criticism of the work and the school of which it and "Pagliacci" remain the foremost exemplars, I quote from my book, "Chapters of Opera" 1 : "Seventeen years ago 'Ca- valleria rusticana ' had no perspective. Now, though but a small portion of its progeny has been brought to our notice, we nevertheless look at it through a vista which looks like a valley of moral and physical death through which there flows a sluggish stream thick with filth and red with blood. Strangely enough, in spite of the consequences which have fol- lowed it, the fierce little drama retains its old po- tency. It still speaks with a voice which sounds like the voice of truth. Its music still makes the nerves tingle, and carries our feelings unresistingly on its turbulent current. But the stage-picture is less sanguinary than it looked in the beginning. It 1 "Chapters of Opera," by H. E. Krehbiel, p. 223. 127 128 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS seems to have receded a millennium in time. It has the terrible fierceness of an Attic tragedy, but it also has the decorum which the Attic tragedy never violated. There is no slaughter in the presence of the audience, despite the humbleness of its person- ages. It does not keep us perpetually in sight of the shambles. It is, indeed, an exposition of chivalry; rustic, but chivalry nevertheless. It was thus Cly- temnestra slew her husband, and Orestes his mother. Note the contrast which the duel between A Ifio and Turiddu presents with the double murder to the piquant accompaniment of comedy in 'Pagliacci/ the opera which followed so hard upon its heels. Since then piquancy has been the cry ; the piquant contemplation of adultery, seduction, and murder amid the reek and stench of the Italian barnyard. Think of Cilea's 'Tilda/ Giordano's 'Mala Vita/ Spinelli's 'A Basso Porto/ and Tasca's 'A Santa Lucia' ! "The stories chosen for operatic treatment by the champions of verismo are all alike. It is their filth and blood which fructifies the music, which rasps the nerves even as the plays revolt the moral stomach. I repeat : Looking back over the time during which this so-called veritism has held its orgies, ' Cavalleria rusticana' seems almost classic. Its music is highly spiced and tastes 'hot i' th' mouth/ but its eloquence is, after all, in its eager, pulsating, passionate melody like the music which Verdi wrote more than half a century ago for the last act of 'II Trovatore.' If "CAVALLERIA RUSTICANA" 129 neither Mascagni himself nor his imitators have succeeded in equalling it since, it is because they have thought too much of the external devices of abrupt and uncouth change of modes and tonalities, of exotic scales and garish orchestration, and too little of the fundamental element of melody which once was the be-all and end-all of Italian music. Another fountain of gushing melody must be opened before 'Cavalleria rusticana' finds a successor in all things worthy of the succession. Ingenious artifice, reflection, and technical cleverness will not suffice even with the blood and mud of the slums as a fertilizer." How Mascagni came to write his opera he has himself told us in a bright sketch of the early part of his life-history which was printed in the "Fanfulla della Domenica" of Rome shortly after he became famous. Recounting the story of his struggle for existence after entering upon his career, he wrote : In 1888 only a few scenes (of "Ratcliff") remained to be composed ; but I let them lie and have not touched them since. The thought of "Cavalleria rusticana" had been in my head for several years. I wanted to introduce my- self with a work of small dimensions. I appealed to several librettists, but none was willing to undertake the work without a guarantee of recompense. Then came notice of the Sonzogno competition and I eagerly seized the opportunity to better my condition. But my salary of 100 lire, to which nothing was added, except the fees from a few pianoforte lessons in Cerignola and two lessons in the Philharmonic Society of Canosa (a little town a 130 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS few miles from Cerignola), did not permit the luxury of a libretto. At the solicitation of some friends Targioni, in Leghorn, decided to write a "Cavalleria rusticana" for me. My mind was long occupied with the finale. The words : Hanno ammazzato compare Turiddu ! (They have /killed Neighbor Turiddu!) were forever ringing in my / ears. I needed a few mighty orchestral chords to give characteristic form to the musical phrase and achieve an impressive close. How it happened I don't know, but one morning, as I was trudging along the road to give my lessons at Canosa, the idea came to me like a stroke of lightning, and I had found my chords. They were those seventh chords, which I conscientiously set down in my manuscript. Thus I began my opera at the end. When I received the first chorus of my libretto by post (I composed the Siciliano in the prelude later) I said in great good humor to my wife : "To-day we must make a large expenditure." "What for?" "An alarm clock." "Why?" "To wake me up before dawn so that I may begin to write on 'Cavalleria rusticana.' " The expenditure caused a dubious change in the monthly budget, but it was willingly allowed. We went out together, and after a good deal of bargaining spent nine lire. I am sure that I can find the clock, all safe and sound, in Cerignola. I wound it up the evening we bought it, but it was destined to be of no service to me, for in that night a son, the first of a row of them, was born to me. In spite of this I carried out my determina- tion, and in the morning began to write the first chorus of "Cavalleria." I came to Rome in February, 1890, in order to permit the jury to hear my opera ; they decided "CAVALLERIA RUSTICANA" 131 that it was worthy of performance. Returning to Ceri- gnola in a state of the greatest excitement, I noticed that I did not have a penny in my pocket for the return trip to Rome when my opera was to be rehearsed. Signer Sonzogno helped me out of my embarrassment with a few hundred francs. Those beautiful days of fear and hope, of discourage- ment and confidence, are as vividly before my eyes as if they were now. I see again the Constanzi Theatre, half filled ; I see how, after the last excited measures of the orchestra, they all raise their arms and gesticulate, as if they were threatening me; and in my soul there awakens an echo of that cry of approval which almost prostrated me. The effect made upon me was so power- ful that at the second representation I had to request them to turn down the footlights in case I should be called out; for the blinding light seemed a hell to me, like a fiery abyss that threatened to engulf me. It is a rude little tale which Giovanni Verga wrote and which supplied the librettists, G. Targioni- Tozzetti and G. Menasci, with the plot of Mas- cagni's opera. Sententious as the opera seems, it is yet puffed out, padded, and bedizened with unessen- : tial ornament compared with the story. This has the simplicity and directness of a folk-tale or folk- song, and much of its characteristic color and \ strength were lost in fitting it out for music. The - play, which Signora Duse presented to us with a power which no operatic singer can ever hope to match, was more to the purpose, quicker and stronger in movement, fiercer in its onrush of passion, and more pathetic in its silences than the opera with its 132 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS music, though the note of pathos sounded by Signer Mascagni is the most admirable element of the score. With half a dozen homely touches Verga conjures up the life of a Sicilian village and strikes out his characters in bold outline. Turiddu Macca, son of Nunzia, is a bersagliere returned from service. He struts about the village streets in his uniform, smok- ing a pipe carved with an image of the king on horse- back, which he lights with a match fired by a scratch on the seat of his trousers, "lifting his leg as if for a kick." Lola, daughter of Massaro Angelo, was his sweetheart when he was conscripted, but meanwhile she has promised to marry Alfio, a teamster from Licodia, who has four Sortino mules in his stable. Now Turiddu could do nothing better than sing spiteful songs under her window. Lola married the teamster, and on Sundays she would sit in the yard with her hands posed on her hips to show off the thick gold rings which her hus- band had given her. Opposite Alfio's house lived Massaro Cola, who was as rich as a hog, as they said, and who had an only daughter named Santa. Turiddu, to spite Lola, paid his addresses to Santa and whispered sweet words into her ear. "Why don't you go and say these nice things to Lola?" asked Santa one day. "Lola is a fine lady now ; she has married a crown prince. But you are worth a thousand Lolas ; she isn't worthy of wearing your old shoes. I could just eat you up with my eyes, Santa" thus Turiddu. "CAVALLERIA RUSTICANA" 133 "You may eat me with your eyes and welcome, for then there will be no leaving of crumbs." "If I were rich I would like to have a wife just like you." "I shall never marry a crown prince, but I shall have a dowry as well as Lola when the good Lord sends me a lover." The tassel on his cap had tickled the girl's fancy. Her father disapproved of the young soldier, and turned him from his door; but Santa opened her window to him until the village gossips got busy with her name and his. Lola listened to the talk of the lovers from behind a vase of flowers. One day she called after Turiddu : "Ah, Turiddu ! Old friends are no longer noticed, eh?" "He is a happy man who has the chance of seeing you, Lola." "You know where I live," answered Lola. And now Turiddu visited Lola so often that Santa shut her window in his face and the villagers began to smile knowingly when he passed by. Alfio was making a round of the fairs with his mules. " Next Sunday I must go to confession," said Lola one day, "for last night I dreamt that I saw black grapes." "Never mind the dream," pleaded Turiddu. "But Easter is coming, and my husband will want to know why I have not confessed." Santa was before the confessional waiting her turn when Lola was receiving absolution. "I wouldn't send you to Rome for absolution," she said. Alfio 134 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS came home with his mules, and money and a rich holiday dress for his wife. "You do well to bring presents to her," said Santa to him, "for when you are away your wife adorns your head for you." "Holy Devil!" screamed Alfio. "Be sure of what you are saying, or I'll not leave you an eye to ry with !" "I am not in the habit of crying. I haven't wept even when I have seen Turiddu going into your wife's house at night." " Enough ! " said Alfio. " I thank you very much." The cat having come back home, Turiddu kept off the streets by day, but in the evenings consoled him- self with his friends at the tavern. They were en- joying a dish of sausages there on Easter eve. When Alfio came in Turiddu understood what he wanted by the way he fixed his eyes on him. "You know what I want to speak to you about," said Alfio when Turiddu asked him if he had any commands to give him. He offered Alfio a glass of wine, but it was refused with a wave of the hand. "Here I am," said Turiddu. Alfio put his arms around his neck. "We'll talk this thing over if you will meet me to-morrow morning." "You may look for me on the highway at sunrise, and we will go on together." They exchanged the kiss of challenge, and Turiddu, as an earnest that he would be on hand, bit Alfio's ear. His companions left their sausages uneaten "CAVALLERIA RUSTICANA" 135 and went home with Turiddu. There his mother was sitting up for him. "Mamma," Turridu said to her, "do you remem- ber that when I went away to be a soldier you thought I would never come back ? Kiss me as you did then, mamma, for to-morrow I am going away again." Before daybreak he took his knife from the place in the haymow where he had hidden it when he went soldiering, and went out to meet Alfio. "Holy Mother of Jesus!" grumbled Lola when her husband prepared to go out; "where are you going in such a hurry?" "I am going far away," answered Alfio, "and it will be better for you if I never come back !" The two men met on the highway and for a while walked on in silence. Turiddu kept his cap pulled down over his face. " Neighbor Alfio," he said after a space, " as true as I live I know that I have wronged you, and I would let myself be killed if I had not seen my old mother when she got up on the pretext of looking after the hens. And now, as true as I live, I will kill you like a dog so that my dear old mother may not have cause to weep." "Good!" answered Alfio; "we will both strike hard !" And he took off his coat. Both were good with the knife. Turiddu received the first blow in his arm, and when he returned it struck for Alfio's heart. " Ah, Turiddu ! You really do intend to kill me ? " 136 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS "Yes, I told you so. Since I saw her in the hen- yard I have my old mother always in my eyes." "Keep those eyes wide open/' shouted Alfio, "for I am going to return you good measure !" Alfio crouched almost to the ground, keeping his left hand on the wound, which pained him. Suddenly he seized a handful of dust and threw it into Turiddu's eyes. "Ah !" howled Turiddu, blinded by the dust, "I'm a dead man !" He attempted to save himself by leaping backward, but Alfio struck him a second blow, this time in the belly, and a third in the throat. " That makes three the last for the head you have adorned for me !" Turiddu staggered back into the bushes and fell. He tried to say, "Ah, my dear mother !" but the blood gurgled up in his throat and he could not. Music lends itself incalculably better to the cele- bration of a mood accomplished or achieved by action, physical or psychological, than to an expres- sion of the action itself. It is in the nature of the lyric drama that this should be so, and there need be no wonder that wherever Verga offered an oppor- tunity for set lyricism it was embraced by Mascagni and his librettists. Verga tells us that Turiddu, having lost Lola, comforted himself by singing spite- "CAVALLERIA RUSTICANA" 137 ful songs under her window. This suggested the Siciliano, which, an afterthought, Mascagni put into his prelude as a serenade, not in disparagement, but in praise of Lola. It was at Easter that Alfio re- turned to discover the infidelity of his wife, and hence we have an Easter hymn, one of the musical high lights of the work, though of no dramatic value. Verga aims to awaken at least a tittle of extenua- tion and a spark of sympathy for Turiddu by show- ing us his filial love in conflict with his willingness to make reparation to Alfio ; Mascagni and his libret- tists do more by showing us the figure of the young soldier blending a request for a farewell kiss from his mother with a prayer for protection for the woman he has wronged. In its delineation of the tender emotions, indeed, the opera is more generous and kindly than the story. Santuzza does not betray her lover in cold blood as does Santa, but in the depth of her humiliation and at the climax of her jealous fury created by Turiddu's rejection of her when he follows Lola into church. Moreover, her love opens the gates to remorse the moment she realizes what the consequence of her act is to be. The opera sacrifices some of the virility of Turiddu's character as sketched by Verga, but by its classic treatment of the scene of the killing it saves us from the contemplation of Alfio 's dastardly trick which turns a duel into a cowardly assassination. The prelude to the opera set the form which Leon- cavallo followed, slavishly followed, in "Pagliacci." 138 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS The orchestral proclamation of the moving passions of the play is made by the use of fragments of melody which in the vocal score mark climaxes in the dia- logue. The first high point in the prelude is reached in the strain to which Santuzza begs for the love of Turiddu, even after she has disclosed to him her knowledge of his infidelity : Lffi una cor da *- Fed. * Ped. -*- =T ^7 PeA f Ped. "CAVALLERIA RUSTICANA" 139 4 Ped. Ped. BB 3 S2 o -- ~-^ ^- ~, - 3 . ^ = ^ . ^ ? JtfJ - ^ . ["v* ' 4 ^-'l - -^ b *i ~ * *i f "F the second is the broad melody in which she with him to return to her arms : Andante un poco di moio J . = 60 * pleads 140 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS Between these expositions falls the Siciliano, which interrupts the instrumental flood just as Lola's careless song, the Stornello, interrupts the passion- ate rush of Santuzza's protestations, prayers, and lamentations in the scene between her and her faith- less lover : -f -i/- O Lo - la, bian-ca co - me flor di ^ a tempo quau-do t'af-fac - ci te s'affaccio il so - le, These sharp contrasts, heightened by the device of surprise, form one of the marked characteristics of Mascagni's score and one of the most effective. We meet it also in the instrumentation the harp accompaniment to the serenade, the pauses which give piquancy to Lola's ditty, the unison violins, harp arpeggios, and sustained organ chords of the intermezzo. When the curtain rises it discloses the open square of a Sicilian village, flanked by a church and the inn of Lucia, Turiddu's mother. It is Easter morning and villagers and peasants are gathering for the Paschal mass. Church bells ring and the orchestra breaks into the eager melody which a little later we hear combined with the voices which are hymning the pleasant sights and sounds of nature : "CA^ALLEKIA RUSTIC ANA" 141 A charming conception is the regular beat and flux and reflux of the women's voices as they sing _J Gli a-ran-ci o-lez- za - no sui ver - di mar-gi - ni can-tan le al-lo do le tra i mir-ti in fior. Delightful and refreshing is the bustling strain of the men. The singers depart with soft exclamations of rapture called out by the contemplation of nature and thoughts of the Virgin Mother and Child in their hearts. Comes Santuzza, sore distressed, to Mamma Lucia, to inquire as to the whereabouts of her son Turiddu. Lucia thinks him at Francofonte; but Santuzza knows that he spent the night in the village. 142 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS In pity for the maiden's distress, Lucia asks her to enter her home, but Santuzza may not she is ex- communicate. Alfio enters with boisterous jollity, singing of his jovial carefree life as a teamster and his love of home and a faithful wife. It is a paltry measure, endurable only for its offering of contrast, and we will not tarry with it, though the villagers echo it merrily. Alfio, too, has seen Turiddu, and Lucia is about to express her surprise when Santuzza checks her. The hour of devotion is come, and the choir in the church intones the "Regina cceli," while the people without fall on their knees and sing the Resurrection Hymn. After the first outburst, to which the organ appends a brief postlude, San- tuzza leads in the canticle, "Innegiamo il Signer non e morte": i Let us sing of our Lord ris'n victorious ! Let us sing of our Lord ever glorious : SANTDZLA "CAVALLERIA RUSTICANA" 148 gno - re n - sor to, ft ^ to etc. etc. etc. The instrumental basses supply a foundation of Bachian granite, the chorus within the church inter- polates shouts of "Alleluia!" and the song swells until the gates of sound fly wide open and we forget the theatre in a fervor of religious devotion. Only the critic in his study ought here to think of the parallel scene which Leoncavallo sought to create in his opera. Thus far the little dramatic matter that has been 144 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS introduced is wholly expository ; yet we are already near the middle of the score. All the stage folk enter the church save Santuzza and Lucia, and to the mother of her betrayer the maiden tells the story of her wrongs. The romance which she sings is marked by the copious use of one of the distin- guishing devices of the veritist composers the melodic triplet, an efficient help for the pushing, pulsating declamation with which the dramatic dialogue of Mascagni, Leoncavallo, and their fellows is carried on. Lucia can do no more for the unfor- tunate than commend her to the care of the Virgin. She enters the church and Turiddu comes. He lies as to where he has been. Santuzza is quick with accusation and reproach, but at the first sign of his anger and a hint of the vengeance which Alfio will take she abases herself. Let him beat and insult her, she will love and pardon though her heart break. She is in the extremity of agony and anguish when Lola is heard trolling a careless song : i st Fior di giag - gio - lo. . . gli an-ge - li bel - li stan - no a mil - le in cie - lo. . . She is about to begin a second stanza when she enters and sees the pair. She stops with an exela- "CAVALLERIA RUSTICANA" 145 mation. She says she is seeking Alfio. Is Turiddu not going to mass? Santuzza, significantly : "It is Easter and the Lord sees all things ! None but the blameless should go to mass." But Lola will go, and so will Turiddu. Scorning Santuzza' 's pleadings and at last hurling her to the ground, he rushes into the church. She shouts after him a threat of Easter vengeance and fate sends the agent to her in the very moment. Alfio comes and Santuzza tells him that Turiddu has cuckolded him and Lola has robbed her of her lover : Turiddu mi tolse, mi tolse 1'onore, E vostra moglie lui rapiva a me ! Largo ~?iMR:T> fB - - Tu - rid - du mi tol - se mi, tol-se I'o -no -re I The oncoming waves of the drama's pathos have risen to a supreme height, their crests have broken, and the wind-blown spume drenches the soul of the listeners ; but the composer has not departed from the first principle of the master of whom, for a time, it was hoped he might be the legitimate successor. Melody remains the life-blood of his music as it is that of Verdi's from his first work to his last; as it will be so long as music endures. Terrible is the outbreak of Alfio 's rage : Infami lero, ad esse non perdono, Vendetta avro pria che tra monti il di. 146 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS ^r - *i I f- +- f do - no, ven-det - ta avro, etc. Upon this storm succeeds the calm of the inter- mezzo in its day the best abused and most hack- neyed piece of music that the world knew; yet a triumph of simple, straightforward tune. It echoes the Easter hymn, and in the midst of the tumult of earthly passion proclaims celestial peace. Its in- strumentation was doubtless borrowed from Hell- "CAVALLERIA RUSTICANA" 14? mesberger's arrangement of the air "Ombra mai fu" from "Serse," known the world over as Handel's "Largo" violins in unison, harp arpeggios, and organ harmonies. In nothing artistically distin- guished it makes an unexampled appeal to the mul- titude. Some years ago a burlesque on " Cavalleria rusticana" was staged at a theatre in Vienna. 14 was part of the witty conceit of the author to have the intermezzo played on a handorgan. Up to this point the audience had been hilarious in its enjoy- ment of the burlesque, but with the first wheezy tones from the grinder the people settled down to silent attention ; and when the end came applause for the music rolled out wave after wave. A burlesque performance could not rob that music of its charm. 148 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS lie missa est. Mass is over. The merry music of the first chorus returns. The worshippers are about to start homeward with pious reflections, when Turiddu detains Lola and invites his neighbors to a glass of Mamma Lucia's wine. We could spare the drinking song as easily as Alfio, entering, turns aside the cup which Turiddu proffers him. Turiddu understands. "I await your pleasure." Some of the women apprehend mischief and lead Lola away. The challenge is given and accepted, Sicilian fashion. Turiddu confesses his wrong-doing to Alfio, but, in- stead of proclaiming his purpose to kill his enemy, he asks protection for Santuzza in case of his death. Then, while the violins tremble and throb, he calls for his mother like an errant child : Con anima He has been too free with the winecup, he says, and must leave her. But first her blessing, as when he went away to be a soldier. Should he not return, Santa must be her care: "Voi dovrete fare; da "CAVALLERIA KUSTICANA" 149 madre a Santa ! " It is the cry of a child. "A kiss ! Another kiss, mamma ! Farewell ! " Lucia calls after him. He is gone, Santuzza comes in with her phrase of music descriptive of her unhappy love. It grows to a thunderous crash. Then a hush ! A fateful chord i A whispered roll of the drums ! A woman is heard to shriek: "They have killed Neighbor Turiddu!" A crowd of women rush in excitedly; Santuzza and Lucia fall in a swoon. "Hanno am- mazzato compare Turiddu ! " The tragedy is ended. CHAPTER X THE CAREER OF MASCAGNI IT would be foolish to question or attempt to deny the merits of the type of Italian opera estab- lished by Mascagni's lucky inspiration. The brev- ity of the realistic little tragedy, the swiftness of its movement, its adherence to the Italian ideal of melody first, its ingenious combination of song with an illuminative orchestral part these elements in union created a style which the composers of Italy, France, and Germany were quick to adopt. "Pagliacci" was the first fruit of the movement and has been the most enduring; indeed, so far as America and England are concerned, "Cavalleria rusticana" and "Pagliacci" are the only products of the school which have obtained a lasting footing. They were followed by a flood of Italian, French, and German works in which low life was realistically portrayed, but, though the manner of composition was as easily copied as the subjects were found in the slums, none of the imitators of Mascagni and Leoncavallo achieved even a tithe of their success. The men themselves were too shrewd and wise to attempt to repeat the experiment which had once been trium- phant. 150 THE CAREER OF MASCAGNI 151 In one respect the influence of the twin operas was deplorable. I have attempted to characterize that influence in general terms, but in order that the lesson may be more plainly presented it seems to me best to present a few examples in detail. The eagerness with which writers sought success in moral muck, regardless of all artistic elements, is strikingly illustrated in an attempt by a German writer, Edmund von Freihold, 1 to provide "Caval- leria rusticana" with a sequel. Von Freihold wrote the libretto for a "music drama" which he called "Santuzza," the story of which begins long enough after the close of Verga's story for both the women concerned in "Cavalleria rusticana" to have grown children. Santuzza has given birth to a son named Massimo, and Lola to a daughter, Anita. The youthful pair grow up side by side in the Sicilian village and fall in love with one another. They might have married and in a way expiated the sins of their parents had not Alfio overheard his wife, Lola, confess that Turiddu, not her husband, is the father of Anita. The lovers are thus discovered to be half brother and sister. This reminder of his betrayal by Lola infuriates Alfio anew. He rushes upon his wife to kill her, but Santuzza, who hates him as the slayer of her lover, throws herself between and plunges her dagger in Alfio's heart. Having thus taken revenge for Turiddu's death, Santuzza dies out of hand, Lola, as an inferior character, falls *I owe this illustration to Ferdinand Kohl's book "Die Moderne Oper." 152 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS in a faint, and Massimo makes an end of the delectable story by going away from there to parts unknown. In Cilea's "Tilda" a street singer seeks to avenge her wrongs upon a faithless lover. She bribes a jailor to connive at the escape of a robber whom he is leading to capital punishment. This robber she elects to be the instrument of her vengeance. Right merrily she lives with him and his companions in the greenwood until the band captures the renegade lover on his wedding journey. Tilda rushes upon the bride with drawn dagger, but melts with com- passion when she sees her victim in the attitude of prayer. She sinks to her knees beside her, only to receive the death-blow from her seducer. There are piquant contrasts in this picture and Ave Marias and tarantellas in the music. Take the story of Giordano's "Mala Vita." Here the hero is a young dyer whose dissolute habits have brought on tuberculosis of the lungs. The principal object of his amours is the wife of a friend. A violent hemorrhage warns him of ap- proaching death. Stricken with fear he rushes to the nearest statue of the Madonna and registers a vow ; he will marry a wanton, effect her redemption, thereby hoping to save his own miserable life. The heroine of the opera appears and she meets his requirements. He marries her and for a while she seems blest. But the siren, the Lola in the case, winds her toils about him as the disease stretches Mm on the floor at her feet. Piquancy again, 153 achieved now without that poor palliative, pun- ishment of the evil-doer. Tasca's "A Santa Lucia" has an appetizing story about an oysterman's son who deserts a woman by whom he has a child, in order to marry one to whom he had previously been affianced. The women meet. There is a dainty brawl, and the fiancee of Cicillo (he's the oysterman's son) strikes her rival's child to the ground. The mother tries to stab the fiancee with the operatic Italian woman's ever- ready dagger, and this act stirs up the embers of Cicillo's love. He takes the mother of his child back home to his father's house, that is. The child must be some four years old by this time, but the oysterman dear, unsuspecting old man ! knows nothing about the relation existing between his son and his housekeeper. He is thinking of marriage with his common law daughter-in-law when in comes the old fiancee with a tale for Cicillo's ears of his mistress's unfaithfulness. " It is not true ! " shrieks the poor woman, but the wretch, her seducer, closes his ears to her protestations ; and she throws herself into the sea, where the oysters come from. Cicillo rushes after her and bears her to the shore, where she dies in his arms, gasping in articulo mortis, "It is not true!" The romantic interest in Mascagni's life is con- fined to the period which preceded his sudden rise 154 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS to fame. His father was a baker in Leghorn, and there he was born on December 7, 1863. Of humble origin and occupation himself, the father, never- theless, had large ambitions for his son ; but not in the line of art. Pietro was to be shaped intellec- tually for the law. Like Handel, the boy studied the pianoforte by stealth in the attic. Grown in years, he began attending a music-school, when, it is said, his father confined him to his house; thence his uncle freed him and took over his care upon himself. Singularly enough, the man who at the height of his success posed as the most Italian of Italian masters had his inspiration first stirred by German poetry. Early in his career Beethoven resolved to set Schiller's "Hymn to Joy"; the purpose remained in his mind for forty years or so, and finally became a realization hi the finale of the Ninth Symphony. Pietro Mascagni resolved as a boy to compose music for the same ode ; and did it at once. Then he set to work upon a two-act opera, "II Filanda." His uncle died, and a Count Flores- tan (here is another Beethovenian echo !) sent him to the Conservatory at Milan, where, like nearly all of his native contemporaries, he imbibed knowl- edge (and musical ideas) from Ponchielli. After two years or so of academic study he yielded to a gypsy desire and set out on his wanderings, but not until he had chosen as a companion Maffei's translation of Heine's "Ratcliff" a gloomy ro- mance which seems to have eaught the fancy of THE CAREER OF MASCAGNI 155 many composers. There followed five years of as checkered a life as ever musician led. Over and over again he was engaged as conductor of an itiner- ant or stationary operetta and opera company, only to have the enterprise fail and leave him stranded. For six weeks in Naples his daily ration was a plate of macaroni. But he worked at his opera steadily, although, as he once remarked, his dreams of fame were frequently swallowed up in the growls of his stomach, which caused him more trouble than many a millionaire suffers from too little appetite or too much gout. Finally, convinced that he could do better as a teacher of the piano- forte, he ran away from an engagement which paid him two dollars a day, and, sending off the manu- script of "Rat cliff" in a portmanteau, settled down in Cerignola. There he became director of a school for orchestral players, though he had first to learn to play the instruments ; he also taught pianoforte and thoroughbass, and eked out a troublous exist- ence until his success in competition for the prize offered by Sonzogno, the Milanese publisher, made him famous in a day and started him on the road to wealth. It was but natural that, after "Cavalleria rusti- cana" had virulently affected the whole world with what the enemies of Signor Mascagni called "Mascagnitis," his next opera should be looked forward to with feverish anxiety. There was but a year to wait, for "L'Amico Fritz" was brought 156 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS forward in Rome on the last day of October, 1891. Within ten weeks its title found a place on the pro- gramme of one of Mr. Walter Damrosch's Sunday night concerts in New York ; but the music was a disappointment. Five numbers were sung by Mme. Tavary and Signer Campanini, and Mr. Damrosch, not having the orchestral parts, played the accom- paniments upon a pianoforte. As usual, Mr. Gustav Hinrichs was to the fore with a performance in Philadelphia (on June 8, 1892), the principal singers being Mme. Koert-Kronold, Clara Poole, M. Guille, and Signor Del Puente. On January 31, 1893, the Philadelphia singers, aided by the New York Sym- phony Society, gave a performance of the opera, under the auspices of the Young Men's Hebrew Association, for the benefit of its charities, at the Carnegie Music Hall, New York. Mr. Walter Damrosch was to have conducted, but was de- tained in Washington by the funeral of Mr. Elaine, and Mr. Hinrichs took his place. Another year elapsed, and then, on January 10, 1894, the opera reached the Metropolitan Opera House. In spite of the fact that Madame Calve" sang the part of Suzel, only two performances were given to the work. The failure of this opera did not dampen the industry of Mascagni nor the zeal of his enterprising publishers. For his next opera the composer went again to the French authors, Erckmann-Chatrian, who had supplied him with the story of "L'Amico THE CAREER OF MASCAGNI 157 Fritz." This time he chose "Les deux Freres," which they had themselves turned into a drama with the title of "Rantzau." Mascagni's librettist retained the title. The opera came out in Florence in 1892. The tremendous personal popularity of the composer, who was now as much a favorite in Vienna and Berlin as he was in the town of his birth which had struck a medal in his honor, or the town of his residence which had created him an honorary citizen, could not save the work. Now he turned to the opera which he had laid aside to take up his "Cavalleria," and in 1895 " Guglielmo Ratcliff," based upon the gloomy Scotch story told by Heine, was brought forward at La Scala, in Milan. It was in a sense the child of his penury and suffering, but he had taken it up in- spired by tremendous enthusiasm for the subject, and inasmuch as most of its music had been written before success had turned his head, or desire for notoriety had begun to itch him, there was reason to hope to find in it some of the hot blood which surges through the score of "Cavalleria." As a matter of fact, critics who have seen the score or heard the work have pointed out that portions of "I Rantzau" and "Cavalleria" are as alike as two peas. It would not be a violent assumption that the composer in his eagerness to get his score be- fore the Sonzogno jury had plucked his early work of its best feathers and found it difficult to restore 158 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS plumage of equal brilliancy when he attempted to make restitution. In the same year, 1895, his next opera, "Silvano," made a fiasco in Milan. A year later there appeared "Zanetto," which seems like an effort to contract the frame of the lyric drama still further than is done in "Cavalleria." It is a bozzetto, a sketch, based on CoppeVs duologue "Le Passant," a scene between a strumpet who is weary of the world and a young minstrel. Its orchestra- tion is unique there are but strings and a harp. It was brought out at Pesaro, where, in 1895, Mascagni had been appointed director of the Liceo Musicale Rossini. As director of the music-school in Rossini's native town Mascagni's days were full of trouble from the outset. He was opposed, said his friends, in reformatory efforts by some of the professors and pupils, whose enmity grew so virulent that in 1897 they spread the story that he had killed himself. He was deposed from his position by the adminis- tration, but reinstated by the Minister of Fine Arts. The criticism followed him for years that he had neglected his duties to travel about Europe, giving concerts and conducting his operas for the greater glory of himself and the profit of his publisher. At the tune of the suicide story it was also said that he was in financial straits ; to which his friends replied that he received a salary of 60 lire ($12) a day as director, 1000 lire ($200) a month from Sonzogno, and lived in a princely dwelling. THE CAREER OF MASCAGNI 15S After "Zanetto" came "Iris," to which, as the one opera besides "Cavalleria rusticana" which has remained in the American repertory, I shall devote the next chapter in this book. "Iris" was followed by "Le Maschere," which was brought out on January 17, 1901, simultaneously in six cities Rome, Milan, Venice, Genoa, Turin, and Naples. It made an immediate failure in all of these places except Rome, where it endured but a short time. Mascagni's next operatic work was a lyric drama, entitled "Vistilia," the libretto of which, based upon an historical novel by Racco de Zerbi, was written by Menasci and Targioni-Tozzetti, who collaborated on the book of "Cavalleria rusticana." The action goes back to the time of Tiberius and deals with the loves of Vistilia and Helius. Then came another failure in the shape of "Arnica," which lived out its life in Monte Carlo, where it was produced in March, 1905. In the winter of 1902-1903 Signer Mascagni was in the United States for the purpose of conducting performances of some of his operas and giving con- certs. The company of singers and instrumental- ists which his American agents had assembled for his purpose was, with a few exceptions, composed of the usual operatic flotsam and jetsam which can be picked up at any time in New York. The enter- prise began in failure and ended in scandal. There had been no adequate preparation for the operas announced, and one of them was not attempted. 160 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS This was "Ratcliff." "Cavalleria rusticana," "Za- netto," and "Iris" were poorly performed at the Metropolitan Opera House in October, and an attempt at Sunday night concerts was made. Signor Mascagni's countrymen labored hard to create enthusiasm for his cause, but the general public remained indifferent. Having failed miser- ably in New York, Mascagni, heavily burdened with debt, went to Boston. There he was arrested for breach of contract. He retaliated with a suit for damages against his American managers. The usual amount of crimination and recrimination fol- lowed, but eventually the difficulties were com- pounded and Mascagni went back to his home a sadly disillusionized man. 1 "Zanetto" was produced along with "Cavalleria rusticana" at the Metropolitan Opera House on October 8, 1902, and "Iris" on October 16. Signor Mascagni conducted and the parts were distributed as follows among the singers of the company: Iris, Marie Farneti ; Osaka, Pietro Schiavazzi ; Kyoto, Virgilio Bollati ; II Cieco, Francesco Navarrim; Una Guecha, Dora de Filippe; Un Mercianola, Pasquale Blasio ; Un Cencianola, Ber- nardino Landino. . The opera was not heard of again until the season of 1907-1908, when, just be- 1 The story of this visit is told in greater detail in my " Chap- ters of Opera," as is also the story of the rivalry among Ameri- can managers to be first in the field with " Cavalleria rusti- cana." THE CAREER OF MASCAGNI 161 fore the end of the administration of Heinrich Con- ned, it was incorporated into the repertory of the Metropolitan Opera House apparently for the pur- pose of giving Mme. Emma Eames an opportunity to vie with Miss Geraldine Farrar in Japanese opera. QHAPTER XI "LIGHT is the language of the eternal ones hear it!" proclaims the librettist of "Iris" in that portion of his book which is neither said nor sung nor played. And it is the sun that sings with divers voices after the curtain has risen on a noc- turnal scene, and the orchestra has sought to depict the departure of the night, the break of day, the revivification of the flowers and the sunrise. As Byron sang of him, so Phcebus Apollo celebrates himself as "the god of life and poetry and light," but does not stop there. He is also Infinite Beauty, Cause, Reason, Poetry, and Love. The music be- gins with an all but inaudible descending passage in the basses, answered by sweet concordant harmonies. A calm song tells of the first streaks of light ; wood- wind and harp add their voices ; a mellifluous hymn chants the stirring flowers, and leads into a rhyth- mically, more incisive, but still sustained, orchestral song, which bears upon its surface the choral procla- mation of the sun : " I am ! I am life ! I am Beauty infinite !" The flux and reflux of the instrumental surge grows in intensity, the music begins to glow 162 "IRIS" 163 with color and pulsate with eager life, and reaches a mighty sonority, gorged with the crash of a multitude of tamtams, cymbals, drums, and bells, at the climacteric reiteration of " Galore! Luce! Amor!" The piece is thriUingly effective, but as little operatic as the tintinnabulatory chant of the cherubim in the prologue of Boito's "Mefistofele." And now allegory makes room for the drama. To the door of her cottage, embowered on the banks of a quiet stream, comes 7ns. The peak of Fuji- yama glows in the sunlight. 7ns is fair and youth- ful and innocent. A dream has disturbed her. "Gorgons and Hydras and Chimseras dire" had filled her garden and threatened her doll, which she had put to sleep under a rose-bush. But the sun's rays burst forth and the monsters flee. She lifts her doll and moves its arms in mimic salutation to the sun. Osaka, a wealthy rake, and Kyoto, a pander, play spy on her actions, gloat on her love- liness and plot to steal her and carry her to the Yoshiwara. To this end they go to bring on a puppet show, that its diversion may enable them to steal her away without discovery. Women come down to the banks of the river and sing pretty meta- phors as they wash their basketloads of muslins. Gradually the music of samisens, gongs, and drums approaches. Osaka and Kyoto have disguised themselves as travelling players, gathered together some geishas and musicians, and now set up a marionette theatre. Iris comforts her blind father, 1.64 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS the only object of her love, besides her doll, and promises to remain at his side. The puppet play tells the story of a maiden who suffers abuse from a cruel father, who threatens to sell her to a mer- chant. Iris is much affected by the sorrows of the puppet. The voice of Jor, the son of the sun, is heard it is Osaka, singing without. The melody is the melody of Turridu's Siciliano, but the words are a promise of a blissful, kissful death and there- after life everlasting. The puppet dies and with Jor dances off into Nirvana. Now three geishas, representing Beauty, Death, and the Vampire, be- gin a dance. Kyoto distracts the attention of the spectators while the dancers flaunt their skirts higher and wider until their folds conceal Iris, and Osaka's hirelings seize her and bear her off toward the city. Kyoto places a letter and money at the cottage door for the blind father. Through a ped- ler and the woman he learns that his daughter is gone to be an inmate of the Yoshiwara. He im- plores the people who had been jeering him to lead him thither, that he may spit in her face and curse her. Iris is asleep upon a bed in the "Green House" of the district, which needs no description. A song, accompanied by the twanging of a samisen and the clanging of tamtams, is sung by three geishas. Kyoto brings in Osaka to admire her beauty, and sets a high price upon it. Osaka sends for jewels. Iris awakes and speculates in philosophical vein touch- "IRIS" 165 ing the question of her existence. She cannot be dead, for death brings knowledge and paradise joy ; but she weeps. Osaka appears. He praises her rapturously her form, her hair, her eyes, her mouth, her smile. Iris thinks him veritably Jor, but he says his name is " Pleasure/' The maiden recoils in terror. A priest had taught her in an allegory that Pleasure and Death were one ! Osaka loads her with jewels, fondles her, draws her to his breast, kisses her passionately. Iris weeps. She knows nothing of passion, and longs only for her father, her cottage, and her garden. Osaka wearies of his guest, but Kyoto plans to play still further upon his lust. He clothes her in richer robes, but more transparent, places her upon a balcony, and, withdrawing a curtain, exhibits her beauty to the multitude in the street. Amazed cries greet the revelation. Osaka returns and pleads for her love. "Iris!" It is the cry of the blind man hunting the child whom he thinks has sold herself into dis- graceful slavery. The crowd falls back before him, while Iris rushes forward to the edge of the veranda and cries out to him, that he may know her presence. He gathers a handful of mud from the street and hurls it in the direction of her voice. " There ! In your face ! In your forehead ! In your mouth ! In your eyes! Fango!" Under the imprecations of her father the mind of Ms gives way. She rushes along a corridor and hurls herself out of a window. 166 The third act is reached, and drama merges again into allegory. In the wan light of the moon rag- pickers, men and women, are dragging their hooks through the slimy muck that flows through the open sewer beneath the fatal window. They sing mockingly to the moon. A flash of light from Fujiyama awakens a glimmer in the filth. Again. They rush forward and pull forth the body of Iris and begin to strip it of its adornments. She moves and they fly in superstitious fear. She recovers consciousness, and voices from invisible singers tell her of the selfish inspirations of Osaka, Kyoto^ and her blind father; Osaka's desire baffled by fate such is life ! Kyoto's slavery to pleasure and a hangman's reward ; such is life ! The blind man's dependence on his child for creature com- forts ; such is life ! Iris bemoans her fate as death comes gently to her. The sky grows rosy and the light brings momentary life. She stretches out her arms to the sun and acclaims the growing orb. As once upon Ida Glad earth perceives and from her bosom pours Unbidden herbs and voluntary fiow'rs ! A field of blossoms spreads around her, into which she sinks, while the sun, again many-voiced and articulate, chants his glory as in the beginning. The story is perhaps prettier in the telling than in the performance. What there is in its symbolism and its poetical suggestion that is ingratiating is "IRIS" 167 more effective in the fancy than in the experience. There are fewer clogs, fewer stagnant pools, fewer eddies which whirl to no purpose. In the modern school, with its distemper music put on in splotches, there must be more merit and action. Psychologi- cal delineation in music which stimulates action, or makes one forget the want of outward movement, demands a different order of genius than that which Signer Mascagni possesses. Mere talent for artful device will not suffice. There are many effective bits of expressive writing in the score of "Iris," but most of them are fugitive and aim at coloring a word, a phrase, or at best a temporary situation. There is little flow of natural, fervent melody. What the composer accomplished with tune, char- acteristic but fluent, eloquent yet sustained, in "Cavalleria rusticana," he tries to achieve in "Iris" with violent, disjointed shifting of keys and splashes of instrumental color. In this he is sel- dom successful, for he is not a master of orchestral writing that technical facility which nearly all the young musicians have in the same degree that all pianists have finger technic. His orchestral stream is muddy; his effects generally crass and empty of euphony. He throws the din of outlandish instruments of percussion, a battery of gongs, big and little, drums, and cymbals into his score without achieving local color. Once only does he utilize it so as to catch the ears and stir the fancy of his listeners in the beginning of the second act, 168 A SECOND BOOK, OF OPERAS where there is a murmur of real Japanese melody. As a rule, however, Signor Mascagni seems to have been careless in the matter of local color, properly so, perhaps, for, strictly speaking, local color in the lyric drama is for comedy with its petty limitations, not for tragedy with its appeal to large and univer- sal passions. Yet it is in the lighter scenes, the scenes of comedy, like the marionette show, the scenes of mild pathos, like the monologues of 7ns, and the scenes of mere accessory decoration, like that of the laundresses, the mousmts in the first act, with its purling figure borrowed from "Les Huguenots" and its unnecessarily uncanny col legnc effect conveyed from " I/ Af ricaine " that it is most effective. CHAPTER XII "MADAMA BUTTERFLY" THIS is the book of the generation of "Madama Butterfly" : An adventure in Japan begat Pierre Loti's "Madame Chrysantheme " ; "Madame Chry- santheme" begat John Luther Long's "Madame Butterfly," a story; "Madame Butterfly," the story, begat "Madame Butterfly," a play by David Belasco; "Madame Butterfly," the play, begat "Madama Butterfly," the opera by Giacomo Puc- cini. The heroine of the roving French romanticist is therefore seen in her third incarnation in the heroine of the opera book which L. Illica and G. Giacosa made for Puccini. But in operatic essence she is still older, for, as Dr. Korngold, a Viennese critic, pointed out, Selica is her grandmother and Lakme her cousin. Even this does not exhaust her family history; there is something like a bar sinister in her escutch- eon. Mr. Belasco's play was not so much be- gotten, conceived, or born of admiration for Mr. Long's book as it was of despair wrought by the failure of another play written by Mr. Belasco. This play was a farce entitled "Naughty Anthony," created by Mr. Belasco in a moment of aesthetic aberration 169 170 for production at the Herald Square Theatre, in New York, in the spring of 1900. Mr. Belasco doesn't think so now, but at the time he had a notion that the public would find something humor- ous and attractive in the spectacle of a popular actress's leg swathed in several layers of stocking. So he made a show of Blanche Bates. The public refused to be amused at the farcical study in com- parative anatomy, and when Mr. Belasco's friends began to fault him for having pandered to a low taste, and he felt the smart of failure in addition, he grew heartily ashamed of himself. His affairs, moreover, began to take on a desperate aspect; the season threatened to be a ruinous failure, and he had no play ready to substitute for "Naughty Anthony." Some time before a friend had sent him Mr. Long's book, but he had carelessly tossed it aside. In his straits it came under his eyes again, and this time he saw a play in it a play and a promise of financial salvation. It was late at night when he read the story, but he had come to a resolve by morning and in his mind's eye had al- ready seen his actors in Japanese dress. The drama lay in the book snugly enough ; it was only neces- sary to dig it out and materialize it to the vision. That occupation is one in which Mr. Belasco is at home. The dialogue went to his actors a few pages at a time, and the pictures rose rapidly in his mind. Something different from a stockinged leg now ! Glimpses of Nippon its mountains, waters, "MADAMA BUTTERFLY" 17T bridges, flowers, gardens, geishas ; as a foil to their grace and color the prosaic figures of a naval officer and an American Consul. All things tinged with the bright light of day, the glories of sunset or the super-glories of sunrise. We must saturate the fancy of the audience with the atmosphere of Japan, mused Mr. Belasco. Therefore, Japanese scenes, my painter ! Electrician, your plot shall be worked out as carefully as the dialogue and action of the play's people. "First drop discovered; house-lights down ; white foots with blue full work change of color at back of drop ; white lens on top of mountain ; open light with white, straw, amber, and red on lower part of drop ; when full on lower footlights to blue," and so on. Mr. Belasco's emotions, we know, find eloquent expression in stage lights. But the ear must be carried off to the land of enchantment as well as the eye. "Come, William Furst, recall your experiences on the West- ern coast. For my first curtain I want a quaint, soft Japanese melody, pp you know how !" And so "Madame Butterfly," the play, was made. In two weeks all was ready, and a day after the first performance at the Herald Square Theatre, on March 5, 1900, the city began to hum with eager comment on the dramatic intensity of the scene of a Japanese woman's vigil, of the enthralling elo- quence of a motionless, voiceless figure, looking steadily through a hole torn through a paper par- tition, with a sleeping child and a nodding maid 172 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS at her feet, while a mimic night wore on, the lanterns on the floor flickered out one by one and the soft- violins crooned a melody to the arpeggios of a harp. The season at the Herald Square Theatre was saved. Some time later, when Mr. Belasco accom- panied Mr. Charles Frohman to London to put on "Zaza" at the Garrick Theatre, he took "Madame Butterfly" with him and staged it at the Duke of York's Theatre, hard by. On the first night of "Madame Butterfly" Mr. Frohman was at the latter playhouse, Mr. Belasco at the former. The fall of the curtain on the little Japanese play was* followed by a scene of enthusiasm which endured so long that Mr. Frohman had time to summon his colleague to take a curtain call. At a stroke the pathetic play had made its fortune in London, and, as it turned out, paved the way for a new and larger triumph for Mr. Long's story. The musical critics of the London newspapers came to the house and saw operatic possibilities in the drama. So did Mr. Francis Nielson, at the time Covent Garden's stage manager, who sent word of the discovery to Signer Puccini. The composer came from Milan, and realized on the spot that the successor of "Tosca" had been found. Signori Illica and Giacosa, librettists in ordinary to Ricordi & Co., took the work of making the opera book in hand. Signer Illica's fancy had roamed in the Land of Flowers before ; he had written the libretto for Mascagni's "Iris." The ephemeral life of "MADAMA BUTTERFLY" 173 Cho-Cho-San was over in a few months, but by that time "Madama Butterfly," glorified by music, had lifted her wings for a new flight in Milan. It is an old story that many operas which are recognized as masterpieces later, fail to find ap- preciation or approval when they are first pro- duced. "Madama Butterfly" made a fiasco when brought forward at La Scala on February 17, 1904. 1 So complete was the fiasco that in his anxiety to withdraw the work Signer Puccini is said to have offered to reimburse the management of the theatre for the expenditures entailed by the production. 1 At this premiere Campanini was the conductor and the cast was as follows : Butterfly, Storchio ; Suzuki, Giaconia ; Pinkerton, Zenatello ; Sharpless, De Luca ; Goro, Pini-Corsi ; Bonzo, Venturini ; Yakuside, Wulmann. At the first perform- ance in London, on July 10, 1905, at Covent Garden, the cast was : Butterfly, Destinn ; Suzuki, Lejeune ; Pinkerton, Caruso ; Sharpless, Scotti ; Goro, Dufriche ; Bonzo, Cotreuil ; Yakuside, Rossi. Conductor, Campanini. After the revision it was pro- duced at Brescia on May 28, 1904, with Zenatello, of the origi- nal cast, Krusceniski as Butterfly, and Bellati as Sharpless. The first American performances were in the English version, made by Mrs. R. H. Elkin, by the Savage Opera Company, which came to the Garden Theatre, New York, after a trial season in Washington, on November 12, 1906. It had a run of nearly three months before it reached the Metropolitan Opera House, on February 11, 1907. Mr. Walter Rothwell conducted the Eng- lish performance, in which there were several changes of casts, the original Butterfly being Elza Szamozy (a Hungarian singer) ; Suzuki, Harriet Behne; Pinkerton, Joseph F. Sheehan, and Sharpless, Winifred Goff. Arturo Vigna conducted the first Italian performance at the Metropolitan, with Geraldine Farrar as Butterfly, Louise Homer as Suzuki, Caruso as Pinkerton, Scotti as Sharpless, and Albert Reiss as Goro. 174 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS Failures of this kind are frequently inexplicable, but it is possible that the unconventional character of the story and the insensibility of the Italians to national musical color other than their own, had a great deal to do with it in this case. Whatever the cause, the popular attitude toward the opera was displayed in the manner peculiar to Italy, the discontented majority whistling, shrilling on house keys, grunting, roaring, bellowing, and laughing in the good old-fashioned manner which might be set down as possessed of some virtuous merit if reserved for obviously stupid creations. "The Pall Mall Gazette" reported that at the time the composer told a friend that on this fateful first night he was shut up in a small room behind the scenes, where he could hear nothing of what was going on on the stage or in the audience-room. On a similar occasion, nearly a century before, when "The Barber of Seville" scored an equally monumental failure, Rossini, in the conductor's chair, faced the mob, shrugged his shoulders, and clapped his hands to show his contempt for his judges, then went home and composedly to bed. Puccini, though he could not see the discomfiture of his opera, was not permitted to remain in ig- norance of it. His son and his friends brought him the news. His collaborator, Giacosa, rushed into the room with dishevelled hair and staring eyes, crying : " I have suffered the passion of death ! " while Signorina Storchio burst into such a flood of "MADAMA BUTTERFLY" 175 tears and sobs that it was feared she would be ill. Puccini was cut to the heart, but he did not lose faith in the work. He had composed it in love and knew its potentialities. His faith found jus- tification when he produced it in Brescia three months later and saw it start out at once on a triumphal tour of the European theatres. His work of revision was not a large or comprehensive one. He divided the second act into two acts, made some condensations to relieve the long strain, wrote a few measures of introduction for the final scene, but refused otherwise to change the music. His fine sense of the dramatic had told him correctly when he planned the work that there ought not to be a physical interruption of the pathetic vigil out of which Blanche Bates in New York and Evelyn Millard in London had made so powerful a scene, but he yielded to the compulsion of practical con- eiderations, trying to save respect for his better judgment by refusing to call the final scene an act, though he permitted the fall of the curtain; but nothing can make good the loss entailed by the interruption. The mood of the play is admirably preserved in the music of the intermezzo, but the mood of the listeners is hopelessly dissipated with the fall of the curtain. When the scene of the vigil is again disclosed, the charm and the pathos have vanished, never to return. It is true that a rigid application of the law of unities would seem to forbid that a vigil of an entire night from eve 176 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS till morning be compressed into a few minutes; but poetic license also has rights, and they could have been pleaded with convincing eloquence by music, with its marvellous capacity for publishing the conflicting emotions of the waiting wife. * * * His ship having been ordered to the Asiatic station, Benjamin Franklin Pinkerton, Lieutenant in the United States Navy, follows a custom (not at all unusual among naval officers, if Pierre Loti is to be believed) and for the summer sojourn in Japan leases a Japanese wife. (The word "wife" is a euphemism for housekeeper, companion, play- fellow, mistress, what not.) This is done in a manner involving little ceremony, as is known to travellers and others familiar with the social customs of Nippon, through a nakodo, a marriage broker or matrimonial agent. M. Loti called his man Kangourou ; Mr. Long gave his the name of Goro. That, however, and the character of the simple proceeding before a registrar is immaterial. M. Loti, who assures us that his book is merely some pages from a veritable diary, entertains us with some details preliminary to his launch into a singular kind of domestic existence, which are interesting as bearing on the morals of the opera and as indicative of the fact that he is a closer observer of Oriental life than his American confrere. He lets us see "MADAMA BUTTERFLY" 177 how merchantable "wives" are chosen, permits M. Kangourou to exhibit his wares and expatiate on their merits. There is the daughter of a wealthy China merchant, a young woman of great accom- plishments who can write "commercially" and has won a prize in a poetic contest with a sonnet. She is, consequently, very dear 100 yen, say $100 but that is of no consequence ; what matters is that she has a disfiguring scar on her cheek. She will not do. Then there is Mile. Jasmin, a pretty girl of fifteen years, who can be had for $18 or $20 a month (contract cancellable at the end of any month for non-payment), a few dresses of fashion- able cut and a pleasant house to live in. Mile. Jasmin comes to be inspected with one old lady, two old ladies, three old ladies (mamma and aunts), and a dozen friends and neighbors, big and little. Loti's moral stomach revolts at the thought of buying for his uses a child who looks like a doll, and is shocked at the public parade which has been made of her as a commodity. He has not yet been initiated into some of the extraordinary cus- toms of Japan, nor yet into some of the distinctions attendant upon those customs. He learns of one of the latter when he suggests to the broker that he might marry a charming geisha who had taken his fancy at a tea house. The manner in which the suggestion was received convinced him that he might as well have purposed to marry the devil himself as a professional dancer and singer. Among 178 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS the train of Mile. Jasmin's friends is one less young than Mile. Jasmin, say about eighteen, and already more of a woman ; and when Loti says, "Why not her?" M. Kangourou trots her out for inspection and, discreetly sending Loti away, concludes the arrangement between night-fall and 10 o'clock, when he comes with the announcement: "All is arranged, sir; her parents will give her up for $20 a month the same price as Mile. Jasmin." So Mile. Chrysantheme became the wife of Pierre Loti during his stay at Nagasaki, and then dutifully went home to her mother without breaking her heart at all. But she was not a geisha, only a mousme "one of the prettiest words in the Nip- ponese language," comments M. Loti, "it seems almost as if there must be a little moue in the very sound, as if a pretty, taking little pout, such as they put on, and also a little pert physiognomy, were described by it." Lieutenant Pinkerton, equally ignorant with Lieu- tenant Loti but uninstructed evidently, marries a geisha whose father had made the happy dispatch at the request of the Son of Heaven after making a blunder in his military command. She is Cio-Cio- San, also Madama Butterfly, and she comes to her wedding with a bevy of geishas or mousmes (I do not know which) and a retinue of relations. All enjoy the hospitality of the American officer while picking him to pieces, but turn from their kins- woman when they learn from an uncle, who is a "MADAMA BUTTERFLY" 179 Buddhist priest and comes late to the wedding like the wicked fairy in the stories, that she has attended the Mission school and changed her religion. Where- fore the bonze curses her: "Hou, hou ! Cio-Cio-San, hou, hou ! " Sharpless, United States Consul at Nagasaki, had not approved of Pinkerton's adventure, fearing that it might bring unhappiness to the little woman; but Pinkerton had laughed at his scruples and emptied his glass to the marriage with an American wife which he hoped to make some day. Neither Loti nor Long troubles us with the details of so prosaic a thing as the marriage ceremony; but Puccini and his librettists make much of it, for it provides the only opportunity for a chorus and the musician had found delightfully mellifluous Japanese gongs to add a pretty touch of local color to the music. Cio-Cio-San has been "outcasted" and Pinkerton comforts her and they make love in the starlight (after Butterfly has changed her habili- ments) like any pair of lovers in Italy. "Dolce notte ! Quante stelle ! Vieni, vieni !" for quantity. This is the first act of the opera, and it is all expository to Belasco's "Tragedy of Japan," which plays in one act, with the pathetic vigil separating the two days which form its period of action. When that, like the second act of the opera, opens, Pinker- ton has been gone from Nagasaki and his "wife" three years, and a baby boy of whom he has never heard, but who has his eyes and hair has come to 180 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS bear Butterfly company in the little house on the hill. The money left by the male butterfly when he flitted is all but exhausted. Madama Butterfly appears to be lamentably ignorant of the customs of her country, for she believes herself to be a wife in the American sense and is fearfully wroth with Suzuki, her maid, when she hints that she never knew a foreign husband to come back to a Japanese wife. But Pinkerton when he sailed away had said that he would be back "when the robins nest again," and that suffices Cio-Cio-San. But when Sharpkss comes with a letter to break the news that his friend is coming back with an American wife, he loses courage to perform his mission at the contemplation of the little woman's faith in the truant. Does he know when the robins nest in America? In Japan they had nested three times since Pinkerton went away. The consul quails at that and damns his friend as a scoundrel. Now GOTO, who knows Butterfly's pecuniary plight, brings Yamadori to her. Yamadori is a wealthy Japanese citizen of New York in the book and play and a prince in the opera, but in all he is smitten with Butterfly's beauty and wants to add her name to the list of wives he has conveniently married and as con- veniently divorced on his visits to his native land. Butterfly insists that she is an American and cannot be divorced Japanese fashion, and is amazed when Sharpless hints that Pinkerton might have forgotten her and she would better accept Yamadori' 's hand. "MADAMA BUTTERFLY" 181 First she orders him out of the house, but, repent- ing her of her rudeness, brings in the child to show him something that no one is likely to forget. She asks the consul to write to his friend and tell him that he has a son, so fine a son, indeed, that she indulges in a day dream of the Mikado stopping at the head of his troops to admire him and make him a prince of the realm. Sharpless goes away with his mission unfulfilled and Suzuki comes in dragging GOTO with her, for that he had been spread- ing scandalous tales about the treatment which children born like this child receive in America. Butterfly is tempted to kill the wretch, but at the last is content to spurn him with her foot. At this moment a cannon shot is heard. A man-of-war is entering the harbor. Quick, the glasses! "Steady my hand, Suzuki, that I may read the name." It is the Abraham Lincoln, Pinkerton's ship ! Now the cherry tree must give up its every blossom, every bush or vine its violets and jessamines to garnish the room for his welcome ! The garden is stripped bare, vases are filled, the floor is strewn with petals. Perfumes exhale from the voices of the women and the song of the or- chestra. Here local color loses its right ; the music is all Occidental. Butterfly is dressed again in her wedding gown of white and her pale cheeks are touched up with carmine. The paper partitions are drawn against the night. Butterfly punctures the shoji with three holes one high up for herself 182 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS to look through, standing ; one lower for the maid to look through, sitting ; one near the floor for the baby. And so Butterfly stands in an all-night vigil. The lanterns flicker and go out. Maid and babe sink down in sleep. The gray dawn creeps over the waters of the harbor. Human voices, trans- formed into instruments, hum a barcarolle. (We heard it when Sharpless tried to read the letter.) A Japanese tune rises like a sailors' chanty from the band. Mariners chant their "Yo ho!" Day is come. Suzuki awakes and begs her mistress to seek rest. Butterfly puts the baby to bed, singing a lullaby. Sharpless and Pinkerton come and learn of the vigil from Suzuki, who sees the form of a lady in the garden and hears that it is the American wife of Pinkerton. Pinkerton pours out his remorse melodiously. He will be haunted for- ever by the picture of his once happy home and Cio-Cio-San's reproachful eyes. He leaves money for Butterfly in the consul's hands and runs away like a coward. Kate, the American wife, and Suzuki meet in the garden. The maid is asked to tell her mistress the meaning of the visit, but before she can do so Butterfly sees them. Her ques- tions bring out half the truth; her intuition tells her the rest. Kate (an awful blot she is on the dramatic picture) begs forgiveness and asks for the baby boy that her husband may rear him. Butterfly says he shall have him in half an hour if he will come to fetch him. She goes to the shrine of. "MADAMA BUTTERFLY" 183 Buddha and takes from it a veil and a dagger, reading the words engraved on its blade: "To die with honor when one can no longer live with honor." It is the weapon which the Mikado had sent to her father. She points the weapon at her throat, but at the moment Suzuki pushes the baby into the room. Butterfly addresses it passionately ; then, telling it to play, seats it upon a stool, puts an American flag into its hands, a bandage around its eyes. Again she takes dagger and veil and goes behind a screen. The dagger is heard to fall. Butterfly totters out from behind the screen with a veil wound round her neck. She staggers to the child and falls, dying, at its feet. Pinkerton rushes in with a cry of horror and falls on his knees, while Sharpless gently takes up the child. * * * I have no desire to comment disparagingly upon the denouement of the book of Mr. Long or the play of Mr. Belasco which Puccini and his librettists followed; but in view of the origin of the play a bit of comparative criticism seems to be imperative. Loti's "Madame Chrysantheme " was turned into an opera by Andre* Meseager. What the opera was like I do not know. It came, it went, and left no sign ; yet it would seem to be easy to guess at the reason for its quick evanishment. If it followed the French story, as no doubt it did, it 184 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS was too faithful to the actualities of Japanese life to awaken a throb of emotion in the Occidental heart. Without such a throb a drama is naught a sounding brass and tinkling cymbal. The charm of Loti's book lies in its marvellously beau- tiful portrayal of a country, a people, and a char- acteristic incident in the social life of that people. Its interest as a story, outside of the charm of its telling, is like that excited by inspection of an exotic curio. In his dedication of the book the author begged Mme. la Duchesse de Richelieu not to look for any meaning in it, but to receive it in the same spirit in which she would receive "some quaint bit of pottery, some grotesque carved ivory idol, or some preposterous trifle brought back from the fatherland of all preposterousness." It is a record of a bit of the wandering life of a poet who makes himself a part of every scene into which fortune throws him. He has spent a summer with a Japanese mousme, whom he had married Japanese fashion, and when he has divorced her, also in Japanese fashion, with regard for all the conven- tions, and sailed away from her forever, he is more troubled by thoughts of possible contamination to his own nature than because of any consequences to the woman. Before the final farewell he had felt a touch of pity for the "poor little gypsy," but when he mounted the stairs to her room for the last time he heard her singing, and mingled with her voice was a strange metallic sound, dzmn, "MADAMA BUTTERFLY' 1 185 dzinnl as of coins ringing on the floor. Is she amusing herself with quoits, or the jeu du crapaud, or pitch and toss? He creeps in, and there, dressed for the departure to her mother's, sitting on the floor is Chrysantheme ; and spread out around her all the fine silver dollars he had given her ac- cording to agreement the night before. "With the competent dexterity of an old money changer she fingers them, turns them over, throws them on the floor, and armed with a little mallet ad hoc, rings them vigorously against her ear, singing the while I know not what little pensive, birdlike song, which I dare say she improvises as she goes along. Well, after all, it is even more completely Japanese than I could possibly have imagined it this last scene of my married life ! I feel inclined to laugh." And he commends the little gypsy's worldly wisdom, offers to make good any counterfeit piece which she may find, and refuses to permit her to see him go aboard of his ship. She does, nevertheless, along with the Japanese wives of four of his fellow officers, who peep at their flitting husbands through the cur- tains of their sampans. But when he is far out on the great Yellow Sea he throws the faded lotus flowers which she had given him through the port- hole of his cabin, making his best excuses for "giving to them, natives of Japan, a grave so solemn and so vast" ; and he utters a prayer : "0 Ama-T4race- Omi-Kami, wash me clean from this little marriage of mine in the waters of the river of Kamo !" 186 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS The story has no soul, and to give his story, which borrowed its motive from Loti's, a soul, Mr. Long had to do violence to the verities of Japanese life. Yet might not even a geisha feel a genuine passion? The use of folk-tunes in opera is older than "Ma- dama Butterfly," but Puccini's score stands alone in the extent of the use and the consistency with which Japanese melody has been made the founda- tion of the music. When Signor Illica, one of the librettists, followed Sar Peladan and d'Annunzio into Nippon seeking flowers for "Iris," he took Mascagni with him metaphorically, of course. But Mascagni was a timid gleaner. Puccini plucked with a bolder hand, as indeed he might, for he is an incomparably greater adept in the art of making musical nosegays. In fact, I know of only one score that is comparable with that of "Madama Butterfly" in respect of its use of national musical color, and that is " Boris Godounoff ." Moussorgsky, however, had more, richer, and a greater variety of material to work with than Puccini. Japanese music is arid and angular, and yet so great is Puc- cini's skill in combining creative imagination and reflection that he knew how to make it blossom like a rose. Pity that he could not wholly overcome its rhythmical monotony. Japanese melody runs "MADAMA BUTTERFLY" 187 almost uninterruptedly through his instrumental score, giving way at intervals to the Italian style of lyricism when the characters and passions be- come universal rather than local types. Struc- turally, his score rests on the Wagnerian method, in that the vocal part floats on an uninterrupted instrumental current. In the orchestral part the tunes which he borrowed from the popular music of Japan are continuously recurrent, and fragments of them are used as the connecting links of the whole fabric. He uses also a few typical themes (Leitmotive) of his own invention, and to them it might be possible, by ingenious study of their re- lation to text and situation, to attach significances in the manner of the Wagnerian handbooks; but I do not think that such processes occupied the composer's mind to any considerable extent, and the themes are not appreciably characteristic. His most persistent use of a connecting link, arbitrarily chosen, is found in the case of the first motive of the theme, which he treats fugally in the introduc- tion, and which appears thereafter to the end of the chapter (a, in the list of themes printed here- with). What might be called personal themes are the opening notes of "The Star-Spangled Banner" for Pinkerton and the melody (d) which comes in with Yamadori, in which the Japanese tune used by Sir Arthur Sullivan in "The Mikado" is echoed. The former fares badly throughout the score (for which no blame need attach to Signor Puccini), 188 A SECOND BOOK OF OPERAS but the latter is used with capital effect, though not always in connection with the character. If Signor Puccini had needed the suggestion that Japanese music was necessary for a Japanese play (which of course he did not), he might have received it when he saw Mr. Belasco's play in London. For the incidental music in that play Mr. William Furst provided Japanese tunes, or tunes made over the very convenient Japanese last. Through Mr. Belasco's courtesy I am able to present here a relic of this original "Butterfly" music. The first melody (a) was the theme of the curtain-music; (6) that accompanying Cho-Cho-San, when dis- covered at the beginning spraying flowers, present- ing an offering at the shrine and burning incense in the house at the foot of Higashi hill; (c) the Yamadori music ; (d) the music accompanying the first production of the sword ; (e) the music of the vigil. There were also two Occidental pieces the melody of a little song which Pinkerton had taught Cho-Cho-San, "I Call Her the Belle of Japan," and "Rock-a-bye, Baby." "MADAMA BUTTERFLY" 189 f r t ir'f*f Themea from Puccini's "Butterfly" music By permission o/ KtconH