<h2><SPAN name="page213"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>HOW MANY CHARMS HATH MUSIC, WOULD YOU SAY?</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">The</span> argument of the late Herr
Wagner was that grand opera—the music drama, as he called
it—included, and therefore did away with the necessity
for—all other arts. Music in all its branches, of
course, it provides: so much I will concede to the late Herr
Wagner. There are times, I confess, when my musical
yearnings might shock the late Herr Wagner—times when I
feel unequal to following three distinct themes at one and the
same instant.</p>
<p>“Listen,” whispers the Wagnerian enthusiast to me,
“the cornet has now the Brunnhilda motive.” It
seems to me, in my then state of depravity, as if the cornet had
even more than this the matter with him.</p>
<p>“The second violins,” continues the Wagnerian
enthusiast, “are carrying on the Wotan theme.”
That they are carrying on goes without saying: the players’
faces are streaming with perspiration.</p>
<p>“The brass,” explains my friend—his object
is to cultivate my ear—“is accompanying the
singers.” I should have said drowning them.
There are occasions when I can rave about Wagner with the best of
them. High class moods come to all of us. The
difference between the really high-class man and us commonplace,
workaday men is the difference between, say, the eagle and the
barnyard chicken. I am the barnyard chicken. I have
my wings. There are ecstatic moments when I feel I want to
spurn the sordid earth and soar into the realms of art. I
do fly a little, but my body is heavy, and I only get as far as
the fence. After a while I find it lonesome on the fence,
and I hop down again among my fellows.</p>
<p>Listening to Wagner, during such temporary Philistinic mood,
my sense of fair play is outraged. A lone, lorn woman
stands upon the stage trying to make herself heard. She has
to do this sort of thing for her living; maybe an invalid mother,
younger brothers and sisters are dependent upon her. One
hundred and forty men, all armed with powerful instruments,
well-organised, and most of them looking well-fed, combine to
make it impossible for a single note of that poor woman’s
voice to be heard above their din. I see her standing
there, opening and shutting her mouth, getting redder and redder
in the face. She is singing, one feels sure of it; one
could hear her if only those one hundred and forty men would ease
up for a minute. She makes one mighty, supreme effort;
above the banging of the drums, the blare of the trumpets, the
shrieking of the strings, that last despairing note is distinctly
heard.</p>
<p>She has won, but the victory has cost her dear. She
sinks down fainting on the stage and is carried off by
supers. Chivalrous indignation has made it difficult for me
to keep my seat watching the unequal contest. My instinct
was to leap the barrier, hurl the bald-headed chief of her
enemies from his high chair, and lay about me with the trombone
or the clarionet—whichever might have come the easier to my
snatch.</p>
<p>“You cowardly lot of bullies,” I have wanted to
cry, “are you not ashamed of yourselves? A hundred
and forty of you against one, and that one a still beautiful and,
comparatively speaking, young lady. Be quiet for a
minute—can’t you? Give the poor girl a
chance.”</p>
<p>A lady of my acquaintance says that sitting out a Wagnerian
opera seems to her like listening to a singer accompanied by four
orchestras playing different tunes at the same time. As I
have said, there are times when Wagner carries me along with him,
when I exult in the crash and whirl of his contending
harmonies. But, alas! there are those other
moods—those after dinner moods—when my desire is for
something distinctly resembling a tune. Still, there are
other composers of grand opera besides Wagner. I grant to
the late Herr Wagner, that, in so far as music is concerned,
opera can supply us with all we can need.</p>
<p>But it was also Wagner’s argument that grand opera could
supply us with acting, and there I am compelled to disagree with
him. Wagner thought that the arts of acting and singing
could be combined. I have seen artists the great man has
trained himself. As singers they left nothing to be
desired, but the acting in grand opera has never yet impressed
me. Wagner never succeeded in avoiding the operatic
convention and nobody else ever will. When the operatic
lover meets his sweetheart he puts her in a corner and, turning
his back upon her, comes down to the footlights and tells the
audience how he adores her. When he has finished, he, in
his turn, retires into the corner, and she comes down and tells
the audience that she is simply mad about him.</p>
<p>Overcome with joy at finding she really cares for him, he
comes down right and says that this is the happiest moment of his
life; and she stands left, twelve feet away from him, and has the
presentiment that all this sort of thing is much too good to
last. They go off together, backwards, side by side.
If there is any love-making, such as I understand by the term, it
is done “off.” This is not my idea of
acting. But I do not see how you are going to substitute
for it anything more natural. When you are singing at the
top of your voice, you don’t want a heavy woman hanging
round your neck. When you are killing a man and warbling
about it at the same time, you don’t want him fooling
around you defending himself. You want him to have a little
reasonable patience, and to wait in his proper place till you
have finished, telling him, or rather telling the crowd, how much
you hate and despise him.</p>
<p>When the proper time comes, and if he is where you expect to
find him while thinking of your upper C, you will hit him lightly
on the shoulder with your sword, and then he can die to his own
particular tune. If you have been severely wounded in
battle, or in any other sort of row, and have got to sing a long
ballad before you finally expire, you don’t want to have to
think how a man would really behave who knew he had only got a
few minutes to live and was feeling bad about it. The
chances are that he would not want to sing at all. The
woman who really loved him would not encourage him to sing.
She would want him to keep quiet while she moved herself about a
bit, in case there was anything that could be done for him.</p>
<p>If a mob is climbing the stairs thirsting for your blood, you
do not want to stand upright with your arms stretched out, a good
eighteen inches from the door, while you go over at some length
the varied incidents leading up to the annoyance. If your
desire were to act naturally you would push against that door for
all you were worth, and yell for somebody to bring you a chest of
drawers and a bedstead, and things like that, to pile up against
it. If you were a king, and were giving a party, you would
not want your guests to fix you up at the other end of the room
and leave you there, with nobody to talk to but your own wife,
while they turned their backs upon you, and had a long and
complicated dance all to themselves. You would want to be
in it; you would want to let them know that you were king.</p>
<p>In acting, all these little points have to be
considered. In opera, everything is rightly sacrificed to
musical necessity. I have seen the young, enthusiastic
opera-singer who thought that he or she could act and sing at the
same time. The experienced artist takes the centre of the
stage and husbands his resources. Whether he is supposed to
be indignant because somebody has killed his mother, or cheerful
because he is going out to fight his country’s foes, who
are only waiting until he has finished singing to attack the
town, he leaves it to the composer to make clear.</p>
<p>Also it was Herr Wagner’s idea that the back cloth would
leave the opera-goer indifferent to the picture gallery.
The castle on the rock, accessible only by balloon, in which
every window lights up simultaneously and instantaneously, one
minute after sunset, while the full moon is rushing up the sky at
the pace of a champion comet—that wonderful sea that
suddenly opens and swallows up the ship—those snow-clad
mountains, over which the shadow of the hero passes like a
threatening cloud—the grand old chateau, trembling in the
wind—what need, will ask the opera-goer of the future, of
your Turners and your Corots, when, for prices ranging from a
shilling upwards, we can have a dozen pictures such as these
rolled up and down before us every evening?</p>
<p>But perhaps the most daring hope of all was the dream that
came to Herr Wagner that his opera singers, his grouped choruses,
would eventually satisfy the craving of the public for high class
statuary. I am not quite sure the general public does care
for statuary. I do not know whether the idea has ever
occurred to the Anarchist, but, were I myself organising secret
committee meetings for unholy purposes, I should invite my
comrades to meet in that section of the local museum devoted to
statuary. I can conceive of no place where we should be
freer from prying eyes and listening ears. A select few,
however, do appreciate statuary; and such, I am inclined to
think, will not be weaned from their passion by the contemplation
of the opera singer in his or her various quaint costumes.</p>
<p>And even if the tenor always satisfied our ideal of Apollo,
and the soprano were always as sylph-like as she is described in
the libretto, even then I should doubt the average operatic
chorus being regarded by the <i>connoisseur</i> as a cheap and
pleasant substitute for a bas relief from the Elgin
marbles. The great thing required of that operatic chorus
is experience. The young and giddy-pated the chorus master
has no use for. The sober, honest, industrious lady or
gentleman, with a knowledge of music is very properly his
ideal.</p>
<p>What I admire about the chorus chiefly is its unity. The
whole village dresses exactly alike. In wicked, worldly
villages there is rivalry, leading to heartburn and
jealously. One lady comes out suddenly, on, say, a Bank
Holiday, in a fetching blue that conquers every male heart.
Next holiday her rival cuts her out with a green hat. In
the operatic village it must be that the girls gather together
beforehand to arrange this thing. There is probably a
meeting called.</p>
<p>“The dear Count’s wedding,” announces the
chairwoman, “you will all be pleased to hear, has been
fixed for the fourteenth, at eleven o’clock in the
morning. The entire village will be assembled at ten-thirty
to await the return of the bridal <i>cortège</i> from the
church, and offer its felicitations. Married ladies, will,
of course, come accompanied by their husbands. Unmarried
ladies must each bring a male partner as near their own height as
possible. Fortunately, in this village the number of males
is exactly equal to that of females, so that the picture need not
be spoiled. The children will organise themselves into an
independent body and will group themselves picturesquely.
It has been thought advisable,” continues the chairwoman,
“that the village should meet the dear Count and his bride
at some spot not too far removed from the local alehouse.
The costume to be worn by the ladies will consist of a short pink
skirt terminating at the knees and ornamented with festoons of
flowers; above will be worn a bolero in mauve silk without
sleeves and cut <i>décolleté</i>. The shoes
should be of yellow satin over flesh-coloured stockings.
Ladies who are ‘out’ will wear pearl necklaces, and a
simple device in emeralds to decorate the hair. Thank God,
we can all of us afford it, and provided the weather holds up and
nothing unexpected happens—he is not what I call a lucky
man, our Count, and it is always as well to be prepared for
possibilities—well, I think we may look forward to a really
pleasant day.”</p>
<p>It cannot be done, Herr Wagner, believe me. You cannot
substitute the music drama for all the arts combined. The
object to be aimed at by the wise composer should be to make us,
while listening to his music, forgetful of all remaining artistic
considerations.</p>
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