Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Note to the Reader
- 1 Battling Critics, Engaging Composers: Ossian's Spell
- 2 On Macpherson's Native Heath: Primary Sources
- 3 A Culture without Writing, Settings without a Score, Haydn without Copyright, and Two Oscars on Stage
- 4 “A Musical Piece”: Harriet Wainewright's opera Comàla (1792)
- 5 Between Gluck and Berlioz: Méhul's Uthal (1806)
- 6 Fingallo e Comala (1805) and Ardano e Dartula (1825): The Ossianic Operas of Stefano Pavesi
- 7 From Venice to Lisbon and St. Petersburg: Calto, Clato, Aganadeca, Gaulo ed Oitona, and Two Fingals
- 8 Beethoven's Ossianic Manner, or Where Scholars Fear to Tread
- Excursus: Mendelssohn Waives the Rules: “Overture to the Isles of Fingal” (1832) and an “Unfinished” Coda
- 9 The Maiden Bereft: “Colma” from Rust (1780) to Schubert (1816)
- 10 Scènes lyriques sans frontières: Louis Théodore Gouvy's Le dernier Hymne d'Ossian (1858) and Lucien Hillemacher's Fingal (1880)
- 11 Ossian in Symbolic Conflict: Bernhard Hopffer's Darthula's Grabesgesang (1878), Jules Bordier's Un rêve d'Ossian (1885), and Paul Umlauft's Agandecca (1884)
- 12 The Musical Stages of “Darthula”: From Thomas Linley the Younger (ca. 1776) to Arnold Schoenberg (1903) and Armin Knab (1906)
- 13 The Cantata as Drama: Joseph Jongen's Comala (1897), Jørgen Malling's Kyvala (1902), and Liza Lehmann's Leaves from Ossian (1909)
- 14 Symphonic Poem and Orchestral Fantasy: Alexandre Levy's Comala (1890) and Charles Villiers Stanford's Irish Rhapsody No. 2: Lament for the Son of Ossian (1903)
- 15 Neo-Romanticism in Britain and America: John Laurence Seymour's “Shilric's Song” (from Six Ossianic Odes) and Cedric Thorpe Davie's Dirge for Cuthullin (both 1936)
- 16 Modernity, Modernism, and Ossian: Erik Chisholm's Night Song of the Bards (1944–51), James MacMillan's The Death of Oscar (2013), and Jean Guillou's Ballade Ossianique, No. 2: Les chants de Selma (1971, rev. 2005)
- Afterword: The “Half-Viewless Harp”—Secondary Resonances of Ossian
- Appendix 1 Title Page and Dedication of Harriet Wainewright's Comàla
- Appendix 2 French and German Texts of Louis Théodore Gouvy's Le dernier Hymne d'Ossian
- Appendix 3 Texts of Erik Chisholm's Night Song of the Bards
- Appendix 4 Provisional List of Musical Compositions Based on the Poems of Ossian
- Notes
- Selected Bibliography
- Index
Appendix 1 - Title Page and Dedication of Harriet Wainewright's Comàla
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 September 2019
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Note to the Reader
- 1 Battling Critics, Engaging Composers: Ossian's Spell
- 2 On Macpherson's Native Heath: Primary Sources
- 3 A Culture without Writing, Settings without a Score, Haydn without Copyright, and Two Oscars on Stage
- 4 “A Musical Piece”: Harriet Wainewright's opera Comàla (1792)
- 5 Between Gluck and Berlioz: Méhul's Uthal (1806)
- 6 Fingallo e Comala (1805) and Ardano e Dartula (1825): The Ossianic Operas of Stefano Pavesi
- 7 From Venice to Lisbon and St. Petersburg: Calto, Clato, Aganadeca, Gaulo ed Oitona, and Two Fingals
- 8 Beethoven's Ossianic Manner, or Where Scholars Fear to Tread
- Excursus: Mendelssohn Waives the Rules: “Overture to the Isles of Fingal” (1832) and an “Unfinished” Coda
- 9 The Maiden Bereft: “Colma” from Rust (1780) to Schubert (1816)
- 10 Scènes lyriques sans frontières: Louis Théodore Gouvy's Le dernier Hymne d'Ossian (1858) and Lucien Hillemacher's Fingal (1880)
- 11 Ossian in Symbolic Conflict: Bernhard Hopffer's Darthula's Grabesgesang (1878), Jules Bordier's Un rêve d'Ossian (1885), and Paul Umlauft's Agandecca (1884)
- 12 The Musical Stages of “Darthula”: From Thomas Linley the Younger (ca. 1776) to Arnold Schoenberg (1903) and Armin Knab (1906)
- 13 The Cantata as Drama: Joseph Jongen's Comala (1897), Jørgen Malling's Kyvala (1902), and Liza Lehmann's Leaves from Ossian (1909)
- 14 Symphonic Poem and Orchestral Fantasy: Alexandre Levy's Comala (1890) and Charles Villiers Stanford's Irish Rhapsody No. 2: Lament for the Son of Ossian (1903)
- 15 Neo-Romanticism in Britain and America: John Laurence Seymour's “Shilric's Song” (from Six Ossianic Odes) and Cedric Thorpe Davie's Dirge for Cuthullin (both 1936)
- 16 Modernity, Modernism, and Ossian: Erik Chisholm's Night Song of the Bards (1944–51), James MacMillan's The Death of Oscar (2013), and Jean Guillou's Ballade Ossianique, No. 2: Les chants de Selma (1971, rev. 2005)
- Afterword: The “Half-Viewless Harp”—Secondary Resonances of Ossian
- Appendix 1 Title Page and Dedication of Harriet Wainewright's Comàla
- Appendix 2 French and German Texts of Louis Théodore Gouvy's Le dernier Hymne d'Ossian
- Appendix 3 Texts of Erik Chisholm's Night Song of the Bards
- Appendix 4 Provisional List of Musical Compositions Based on the Poems of Ossian
- Notes
- Selected Bibliography
- Index
Summary
[Leather-bound, gold tooling, gold leafing, three volumes, one for each act, the pagination the same as for the single volume.]
COMALA,/A/Dramatic Poem/from/OSSIAN/As performed at the/Hanover Square Rooms/Set to Music by/MISS HARRIET WAINEWRIGHT/Dedicated with Permission to the/Most Noble Marquis Wellesley./LONDON/Printed for the Author by William Napier,/Musician in ordinary to his Majesty/Lisle Street, Leicester Square.
DEDICATION./TO HIS EXCELLENCY THE MOST NOBLE/RICHARD MARQUIS WELLESLEY, K.P./GOVERNOR GENERAL OF INDIA, CAPTAIN GENERAL, &c,&c,&c.
My Lord,
Without pretensions either to the Name or Talents of an Author, I yet presume to address an Epistle Dedicatory to your Lordship, trusting my Motive for so doing, will justify the Presumption of the Act.
Whatever Merit the indulgent Eye may ascribe to the musical Composition now offered to the Public, yet must I with heartfelt Gratitude acknowledge, that to your Lordship's kind Patronage and Example, I am greatly indebted for the Success attending my Publication.
The beautiful and sublime Poems of Ossian, from which I have selected the episode of Comala, for the subject of my Opera, are too generally known and admired by the Amateurs of Literature, among whom your lordship holds a distinguished Place, to require any comments on my Part.
Your Lordship's hereditary and acquired Taste for Music, exalted Character and distinguished Rank, were very powerful Incitements to my aspiring for the Honor of dedicating my Opera to your Lordship, whose condescending Acquiescence with my Request, has stampt an additional Value on the Work, and ushered it into the Musical World, with Credit and with Eclat.
I have the Honor to be,
My Lord,
With the most grateful Respect,
Your Lordship's
Much obliged, and most obedient humble Servant,
HARRIET STEWART.
Calcutta, August, 1803.
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- Beyond Fingal's CaveOssian in the Musical Imagination, pp. 305 - 306Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2019