The Standard Operas (12th edition) - Their Plots, Their Music, and Their Composers by George P. (George Putnam) Upton
page 94 of 315 (29%)
page 94 of 315 (29%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
The last act passes in the desert. Assad beneath a solitary palm-tree
laments the destiny which pursues him ("Whither shall I wend my weary Steps?"). In the next scene the Queen appears, and an agitated duet follows, ending with her repulse. Assad in despair calls upon death to relieve him. The sky darkens. Clouds of sand envelop the fugitive. The palm bends before the blast as the simoom sweeps by. The storm at last subsides. The sky grows brighter; and the Queen and her attendants, with their elephants and camels, appear in a mirage journeying eastward as Sulamith and her lover expire in each other's arms. As their duet dies away, the chorus of maidens brings the act to a close with a few strains from the love-song in the first act. MERLIN. The opera of "Merlin" was first performed at Vienna, Nov. 17, 1886, and was heard for the first time in this country at New York, Jan. 3, 1887, under the direction of Mr. Walter Damrosch, with the following cast:-- KING ARTHUR Herr ROBINSON. MODRED Herr KEMLITZ. LANCELOT Herr BURSCH. GAWEIN Herr HEINRICH. GLENDOWER Herr VON MILDE. MERLIN Herr ALVARY. VIVIANE Fraülein LEHMANN. BEDWYR Herr SIEGLITZ. THE FAY MORGANA Fraülein BRANDT. THE DEMON Herr FISCHER. |
|