A Book of Operas eBook

Henry Edward Krehbiel
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 298 pages of information about A Book of Operas.

A Book of Operas eBook

Henry Edward Krehbiel
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 298 pages of information about A Book of Operas.
the opera or operas which he has written since to be either published or performed because the world once refused to recognize his genius.  This notion, equally convenient to an indolent man or a colossal egoist—­I do not believe that Boito is either—­has been nurtured by many pretty stories; but, unhappily, we have had nothing to help us to form an opinion of Boito as a creative artist since “Mefistofele” appeared, except the opera books written for Verdi and Ponchielli and the libretto of “Ero e Leandro.”

Boito’s father was an Italian, his mother a Pole.  From either one or both he might have inherited the intensity of expression which marks his works, both poetical and musical; but the tendency to philosophical contemplation which characterizes “Mefistofele,” even in the stunted form in which it is now presented, is surely the fruit of his maternal heritage and his studies in Germany.  After completing the routine of the conservatory in Milan, he spent a great deal of time in Paris and the larger German cities, engrossed quite as much in the study of literature as of music.  Had he followed his inclinations and the advice of Victor Hugo, who gave him a letter of introduction to Emile de Girardin, he would have become a journalist in Paris instead of the composer of “Mefistofele” and the poet of “Otello,” “Falstaff,” “La Gioconda,” and “Ero e Leandro.”  But Girardin was too much occupied with his own affairs to attend to him when Boito presented himself, and after waiting wearily, vainly, and long, he went to Poland, where, for want of something else to do, he sketched the opera “Mefistofele,” which made its memorable fiasco at Milan in March, 1868.

To show that it is impossible to think of “Mefistofele” except as a series of disconnected episodes, it suffices to point out that its prologue, epilogue, and four acts embrace a fantastic parody or perversion of Goethe’s Prologue in Heaven, a fragment of his Easter scene, a smaller fragment of the scene in Faust’s study, a bit of the garden scene, the scene of the witches’ gathering on the Brocken, the prison scene, the classical Sabbath in which Faust is discovered in an amour with Helen of Troy, and the death and salvation of Faust as an old man.  Can any one who knows that music, even of the modern dramatic type, in which strictly musical forms have given way to as persistent an onward flow as the text itself, must of necessity act as a clog on dramatic action, imagine that such a number and variety of scenes could be combined into a logical, consistent whole, compassed by four hours in performance?  Certainly not.  But Boito is not content to emulate Goethe in his effort to carry his listeners “from heaven through the earth to hell”; he must needs ask them to follow him in his exposition of Goethe’s philosophy and symbolism.  Of course, that is impossible during a stage representation, and therefore he exposes the workings of his mind in an essay and notes to his score.  From these we may learn, among other

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
A Book of Operas from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.