King Arthur or, The British Worthy (Z. 628), is a
semi-opera in five acts with music by
Henry Purcell and a
libretto by
John Dryden.
It was
first performed at the Queen's Theatre, Dorset Garden
, London, in late May or early June
1691.
The plot is based on the battles between
King Arthur's
Britons and the
Saxons, rather than the legends of
Camelot (although
Merlin does make an appearance). It is a
Restoration spectacular,
including such supernatural characters as
Cupid and
Venus plus references
to the Germanic gods of the Saxons,
Woden,
Thor, and
Freya.
The tale
centres on Arthur's endeavours to recover his fiancée, the blind Cornish
Princess Emmeline, who has been abducted by his
arch-enemy, the Saxon King Oswald of Kent
.
King Arthur is a "dramatick opera" or
semi-opera: the principal characters do not sing,
except if they are supernatural, pastoral or - in the case of
Comus and the popular
Your hay it is
mow'd - drunk. Secondary characters sing to them, usually as
diegetic entertainment, but in Act 4 and
parts of Act 2, as supernatural beckonings. The singing in Act 1 is
religious observance by the Saxons, ending
with their heroic
afterlife in
Valhalla. The protagonists are actors, as a great
deal of
King Arthur consists of spoken text. This was
normal practice in 17th century English opera.
King Arthur
contains some of Purcell's most lyrical music, much of it inspired
by French dance rhythms and adventurous (for the day)
harmonies.
Composition
Dryden probably wrote the original libretto for
King
Arthur in 1684 to mark the 25th anniversary of King
Charles II's
Restoration the following year. The
original text of
King Arthur no longer exists but it was
to be in three acts with an
allegorical
prologue. For unknown reasons Dryden abandoned his intention to
have the whole work set to music and developed the prologue into
another opera,
Albion and
Albanius, a collaboration with the Spanish composer
Louis Grabu. However, Charles II died in
February 1685 and
Albion and Albanius was first
inauspiciously performed in June 1685 during the
Monmouth Rebellion. It was a failure and
Dryden shelved any plans he had for the rest of the
King
Arthur libretto.
In the mean time, England entered a turbulent period in its
history. After the Catholic
James
II took the throne, Dryden too converted to Catholicism. When
the Protestant
William III
overthrew James in the
Glorious
Revolution in 1688, Dryden refused to renounce his faith and so
lost his job as
poet laureate to his
rival
Thomas Shadwell. Purcell's
career had also suffered after the death of the music-loving
Charles II. With their sources of royal patronage gone, both
playwright and composer were looking to make money as freelance
professionals and the London stage offered attractive
opportunities.
In 1690, the theatre manager
Thomas
Betterton decided to risk putting on another operatic work, the
first since the ill-fated
Albion and Albanius. This was
the semi-opera
Dioclesian
(1690), an adaptation of a play by
Beaumont and Fletcher. Purcell's music
for the production and the lavish staging made it a triumph and
Betterton was eager for another such success. He persuaded Dryden
to dust off and revise the libretto for
King Arthur so
Purcell could set it. The two had already collaborated on stage
works (Dryden had written the prologue for
Dioclesian and
Purcell the incidental music for Dryden's comedy
Amphitryon) and Dryden was effusive in his praise of
Purcell's musical abilities.
In his preface to the printed edition, Dryden explained he had had
to adapt the libretto to the changed political circumstances of
1691: "But not to offend the present Times, nor a Government which
has hitherto protected me, I have been oblig'd so much to alter the
first Design, and take away so many Beauties from the Writing, that
it is now no more what it was formerly..." He also made alterations
to suit Purcell's musical needs: "the Numbers of Poetry and Vocal
Musick, are sometimes so contrary, that in many places I have been
oblig'd to cramp my Verses, and make them rugged to the Reader,
that they may be harmonious to the Hearer: Of which I have no
Reason to repent me, because these sorts of Entertainments are
principally design'd for the Ear and the Eye; and therefore in
Reason my Art on this occasion, ought to be subservient to
his."
Performance history
The exact date of the premiere is unknown but the wordbook was
advertised in
The London Gazette from 4 June to 8 June
1691, suggesting a recent staging. Peter Holman believes it was
performed in May. The production was not as spectacular as
Dioclesian or the later
The
Fairy Queen but it proved the most financially successful
for the theatre. Betterton himself took the role of King Arthur,
despite being in his fifties. The contemporary writer
Roger North was most impressed by Charlotte
Butler's singing of Cupid, describing it as "beyond anything I ever
heard upon the stage", partly ascribing her success to "the liberty
she had of concealing her face , which she could not endure should
be so contorted as is necessary to sound well, before her gallants,
or at least her envious sex."
King Arthur was revived at least twice during Purcell's
lifetime and continued to be performed in the later 1690s. The
first major revival in the eighteenth century was staged in 1736.
This production left the work unaltered, but later revivals
involved varying degrees of revision.
They included a
performance in Dublin
in 1763;
David Garrick and Thomas Arne's version in 1770; and John Kemble and Thomas
Linley's transformation of King Arthur into a two-act
after-piece entitled Arthur and Emmeline in
1784.
Libretto
Political allegory?
According to Curtis Price, the original 1684-5 version was probably
an allegory of the
Exclusion
crisis, a major political dispute over who would succeed
Charles II: his Catholic brother, James, Duke of York; or the Duke
of Monmouth, his illegitimate - but Protestant - son. The faction
backing James was nicknamed the "Tories"; that in favour of
Monmouth, the "Whigs". The latter were led by
Anthony
Ashley-Cooper, the Earl of Shaftesbury. Dryden was a convinced
Tory and had already satirised Shaftesbury and other Whigs in his
poem
Absalom and
Achitophel (1681). In Price's reading, King Arthur
represents Charles II, the Britons are the Tories, and the Saxons
are the Whigs. Oswald is the Duke of Monmouth and Osmond/Grimbald
is the Earl of Shaftesbury. Philidel is the
Marquess of Halifax,
a political moderate much admired by Dryden (he would dedicate the
printed edition of
King Arthur to Halifax). Emmeline
personifies the "national conscience."
Sources and influences
Dryden did not base his libretto on standard versions of Arthurian
myth, although he was familiar with such books as
Geoffrey of Monmouth's
Historia
Regum Britanniae. He did, however, use other works of
literature as sources of inspiration. There are clear parallels
between
King Arthur and Shakespeare's
The Tempest (which Dryden had revised in
line with Restoration taste in collaboration with
Sir William Davenant in 1667 and which
had been turned into a semi-opera with music by
Matthew Locke in 1674).Ellen A. Harris has
described the links between the characters: Prospero and Merlin are
both good magicians who use an "airy spirit" (Ariel in
The
Tempest, Philidel and
King Arthur) to defeat a
potential usurper (Alonzo/Oswald). The relationship between Arthur
and Emmeline is like that between Ferdinand and Miranda. Like
Miranda, Emmeline is an innocent who has "never seen a man" (quite
literally true in the case of the blind Emmeline). Finally, there
are obvious similarities between the "earthy spirits" Grimbald and
Caliban, although there is no evil wizard corresponding to Osmond
in
The Tempest.
Dryden also used material he found in
epic
poetry: the idea of the "enchanted wood" is taken from Canto
XVII of
Tasso's
Gerusalemme liberata; and Andrew
Pinnock suggests the rivalry between Arthur and Oswald is like the
conflict between Gondibert and Oswald in Sir William Davenant's
unfinished poem
Gondibert (1650).
In his preface, Dryden explained how he had conducted historical
research into
Germanic paganism in
order to write the sacrifice scene in the first act: "When I wrote
it, seven years ago, I employ'd some reading about it, to inform my
self out of
Beda,
Bochartus,
and other Authors, concerning the rites of the Heathen
Saxons...". But Andrew Pinnock believes "practically all
the ritual came from a far handier source (which unaccountably
Dryden forgot to mention): Aylett Sammes's
Britannia Antiqua
Illustrata (1676)."
Music
The "Frost Scene" in the third act has always attracted praise from
critics. Edward J. Dent wrote that "The Frost Scene is one of
Purcell's most famous achievements" with "its bold contrasts of
style, and the masterly piling up of the music to a climax at the
end of the chorus ''Tis love that has warmed us'." Thomas Gray,
commenting on the 1736 production, described it as "excessive fine"
and claimed that the Cold Genius' solo was "the finest song in the
play." This aria ("What power art thou who from below") is
accompanied by shivering strings, probably influenced by a scene
from Act IV of
Jean-Baptiste
Lully's opera
Isis (1677)
but, as Peter Holman writes, Purcell's "daring chromatic harmonies
transform the Cold Genius from the picturesque figure of Lully (or
Dryden, for that matter) into a genuinely awe-inspiring character -
the more so because Cupid's responses are set to such frothy and
brilliant music." It has been suggested that the whole scene was
inspired by the
Frost fairs held on the
Thames during the 1680s.
Roles
| Cast |
Voice type |
Premiere cast, May/June? 1691
|
| King Arthur |
spoken role |
Thomas Betterton |
| Oswald, King of Kent, a Saxon and a Heathen |
spoken role |
Joseph Williams |
| Conon, Duke of Cornwal, Tributary to King Arthur |
spoken role |
John Hodgson |
| Merlin, a famous Inchanter |
spoken role |
Edward Kynaston |
| Osmond, a Saxon Magician, and a Heathen |
spoken role |
Samuel Sandford |
| Aurelius, Friend to Arthur |
spoken role |
John Verbruggen ("Alexander") |
| Albanact, Captain of Arthur's Guards |
spoken role |
William Bowen |
| Guillamar, Friend to Oswald |
spoken role |
Joseph Harris |
| Emmeline, Daughter of Conon |
spoken role |
Anne Bracegirdle |
| Matilda, Her Attendant |
spoken role |
Mrs. Richardson |
| Philidel, an Airy Spirit/Cupid |
soprano |
Charlotte Butler |
| Grimbald, an Earthy Spirit |
bass or baritone? |
John Bowman |
| Saxon Priests |
bass (or baritone) and tenor |
one played by John Bowman |
| Two Valkyries |
soprano and alto |
|
| British Warrior |
tenor |
|
| Shepherds and Shepherdesses |
tenor, two sopranos/SATB chorus |
|
| Cold Genius |
bass |
|
| Two Sirens |
sopranos |
|
| Three Nymphs |
sopranos |
|
| Aeolus |
bass or baritone |
|
| Nereid |
soprano |
|
| Pan |
bass or baritone |
|
| Venus |
soprano |
|
| He (in Mr. Howe's song) |
bass or baritone |
|
| She (in Mr. Howe's song) |
soprano |
|
| Honour |
soprano |
|
|
Synopsis
(Musical numbers given in bold)
Act One
Scene 1
- 1. Overture
- 2. Air
- 3. Overture
The Britons prepare for the battle which will decide who will rule
their land: the Christian Arthur or the heathen Saxon Oswald. It
augurs well for them: it is
Saint George's
Day and the Britons have already defeated the Saxons in ten
battles. Conon, Duke of Cornwall, explains the origins of the war.
Oswald had sought his daughter, the blind Emmeline's, hand in
marriage but she rejected him because she is in love with Arthur.
Arthur enters reading a letter of support from his magician Merlin.
He meets Emmeline and tries to explain to her what seeing means. A
trumpet calls Arthur to battle.
Scene 2: "The scene represents a place of Heathen worship; The
three Saxon Gods, Woden, Thor, and Freya placed on Pedestals.
An Altar.
Oswald and his magician Osmond
sacrifice horses and pray to the Saxon
gods for victory in the coming battle. Osmond's servant, the spirit
Grimbald, arrives and says he has persuaded six Saxons to offer
themselves as a human sacrifice. He also admits he has lost control
of the other spirit, Philidel, "a puleing Sprite" who "Sighs when
he should plunge a Soul in Sulphur,/As with Compassion touched of
foolish man." Philidel was supposed to have drawn up the vapours
from the marsh and blown them in the face of the Christian soldiers
but when he saw the crosses on their banners, he refused to carry
out this task. Osmond says he will punish Philidel later.
The sacrifice scene:
- 4. "Woden, first to thee"
(Tenor, bass and chorus)
- 5. "The white horse neigh'd
aloud" (Tenor and alto)
- 6. "The lot is cast, and Tanfan pleas'd" (Soprano)
- 7. "Brave souls, to be renown'd in
story" (Chorus)
- 8. "I call you all to Woden's
hall" (Alto and chorus)
Scene 3: "A battle supposed to be given behind the Scenes, with
Drums, Trumpets, and military Shouts and Excursions."
The Britons sing a song of triumph as the Saxons flee the
battlefield:
- 10. "Come if you dare"
(Symphony followed by tenor and chorus)
Act Two
Scene 1
The tender-hearted Philidel pities those soldiers who have lost
their lives in the battle. Merlin arrives in his chariot and orders
Philidel to tell him who he is. Philidel explains he is a spirit of
the air and one of the fallen angels, but he has repented. He
deserts Osmond and joins Merlin. Philidel tells Merlin that
Grimbald is planning to deceive the victorious Britons by leading
them to drown in rivers or fall off cliffs. Merlin leaves Philidel
his band of spirits to save the Britons from this trap. Grimbald
arrives disguised as a shepherd guiding Arthur and his men.
Philidel and his spirits and Grimald and his spirits compete to win
Arthur's trust:
- 10. "Hither this way"
(Chorus)
- 11. "Let not a moonborn elf deceive
thee" (Grimbald)
- 12. "Hither this way"
(Chorus)
- 13. "Come follow me"
(Philidel and spirits)
Grimbald admits defeat, vows revenge on Philidel and
vanishes.
Scene 2: A pavilion
Emmeline and her maid Matilda await news of the battle. To pass the
time, a "Crew of Kentish Lads and Lasses" entertain them with songs
and dances:
- 14. "How blest are the shepherds, how
happy their lasses" (Shepherd and chorus)
- 15. "Shepherd, shepherd, leave
decoying" (Two shepherdesses)
- 16a. Hornpipe
- 16b. "Come, shepherds, lead up a
lively measure" (Chorus of shepherds)
Oswald and his comrade Guillamar stray from the battlefield, chance
upon the pavilion and kidnap Emmeline and Matilda.
Scene 3
A group of Britons continue the battle.
Scene 4
Arthur holds a parley with Oswald and begs him to return Emmeline,
offering him land from the
River Medway
to the
Severn, but Oswald refuses to
relinquish her.
Act Three
Scene 1
Arthur and his men attack Oswald's castle but Osmond's magic
defeats them. Osmond has conjured a "Magick Wood" which bars access
to the castle. Merlin promises to help Arthur reach Emmeline and
restore her sight with potion in a vial.
Scene 2: A deep wood
Grimbald catches Philidel as he scouts the enchanted wood for
Merlin. Philidel pretends to submit but secretly casts a spell on
Grimbald which renders him powerless to move. Merlin asks Philidel
to guide Arthur through the wood and gives him the vial, which the
spirit uses to rid Emmeline of her blindness. Emmeline is amazed at
the new world before her eyes. Merlin's spells also allow Arthur
and Emmeline to meet for a brief moment, but Emmeline will not be
free until the enchanted wood is destroyed. Osmond enters, intent
on seducing Emmeline for himself, having drugged his master
Oswald.
Osmond tries to win Emmeline over by showing her a
masque acted by spirits.
He conjures up a
vision of "Yzeland
" and
"farthest Thule".
- The Frost Scene
- 18. Prelude
- 19. "What ho! thou genius of this
isle" (Cupid wakes the "Cold Genius",
who is the spirit of Winter).
- 20. "What Power art thou, who from
below..." (The Cold Genius reluctantly wakes from his
slumbers)
- 21. "Thou doting fool"
(Cupid)
- 22. "Great Love, I know thee
now" (The Cold Genius acknowledge's love's power)
- 23. "No part of my dominion shall be
waste" (Cupid)
- 24. Prelude
- 25. "See, see, we assemble"
(Chorus and dance of the Cold People)
- 26. "'Tis I that have warm'd
ye" (Cupid, followed by ritornello and chorus of Cold People: "'Tis Love
that has warm'd us")
- 27. "Sound a parley" (Cupid
and Cold Genius, followed by ritornello and chorus)
The masque fails to persuade Emmeline and Osmond resorts to force
but the captive Grimbald's shouts interrupt him. Osmond goes to
free him, promising Emmeline he will be back.
- 28. Third Act Tune:
Hornpipe
Act Four
Scene 1
The freed Grimbald warns Osmond that Arthur is approaching the
enchanted wood, where Merlin has undone his spells. Osmond decides
to replace the threatening spells with seductive ones.
Scene 2: Scene of the Wood continues
Merlin leaves Arthur at the entrance to the wood with the spirit
Philidel as his guide. Philidel has a wand which will banish all
magical deception. Arthur hears seductive music from two
Sirens bathing in a stream (
29.
"Two Daughters of this Aged Stream are we").
Though tempted, Arthur realises it is an illusion and presses on.
Next, "Nymphs and Sylvans" emerge from the trees singing and
dancing (
30. Passacaglia: "How happy the
lover"). Again, Arthur rejects them and begins the task of
destroying the wood. When he chops a tree with his sword, blood
pours out of it and the voice of Emmeline cries out in pain. It
convinces Arthur that it is Emmeline, who has been turned into a
tree by Osmond, and Arthur is just about to embrace the tree when
Philidel reveals it is really a trick by Grimbald. Philidel
captures Grimbald and Arthur cuts down the tree, dispelling the
enchantment from the wood and freeing the way to Oswald's castle.
Philidel drags off Grimbald in chains.
Act Five
Scene 1
Now his magic has been destroyed, Osmond is terrified of the
approaching Arthur. He decides he must persuade Oswald to fight for
him.
Scene 2
Arthur and the Britons are preparing to storm the castle when
Oswald comes out and challenges his rival to single combat for the
hand of Emmeline and the crown. They fight and Arthur disarms
Oswald. Arthur spares his life but tells Oswald he and his Saxons
must return to Germany because the Britons "brook no Foreign Power/
To Lord it in a Land, Sacred to Freedom." Osmond is cast into a
dungeon with Grimbald. Arthur is reunited with Emmeline and the
work ends with a celebratory masque.
The final masque:Merlin conjures a vision of the
ocean around Britain. The Four Winds create a storm which is calmed
by
Aeolus:
- 33. "Ye Blust'ring Brethren of the
Skies" (Aeolus)
allowing
Britannia to rise from the waves
on an island with fishermen at her feet.
- 34. Symphony (The fishermen
dance)
- 35. "Round thy Coasts, Fair Nymph of
Britain" (Duet for Pan and a Nereid)
- 36. "For Folded Flocks, on Fruitful
Plains" (Trio of male voices)
- 37. "Your hay it is Mow'd, and your
Corn is Reap'd" (Comus and peasants)
- 38. "Fairest Isle"
(Venus)
- 39. "You say 'tis love" (Duet
for "He" and "She"; according to the printed libretto, the words
were written by "Mr. Howe")
- 40. "Trumpet Tune (Warlike
Consort) (Merlin reveals the Order of the Garter)
- 41. "Saint George, the Patron of our
Isle" (Honour and chorus)
- 42. Chaconne (The masque ends with a "grand
dance")
Recordings
Audio
- King Arthur St Anthony Singers, Philomusica of London,
conducted by Sir Anthony Lewis
(Decca)
- King Arthur English Baroque Soloists, Monteverdi
Choir, conducted by John Eliot
Gardiner (Erato, 1985)
- King Arthur Les Arts Florissants, conducted by
William Christie (Erato,
1995)
- King Arthur The English Concert and Choir, Trevor Pinnock (Archiv, 1999)
- King Arthur Le Concert Spirituel, conducted by
Hervé Niquet (Glossa, 2004)
DVD
Notes
- The London Stage, part 1
- Judith Milhous, "The Multimedia Spectacular on the Restoration
Stage", British Theatre and the Other Arts, 1660-1800, ed.
Shirley Strum Kenny, Cranbury NJ: Associated University Presses,
1984.
- H. Neville Davies 2000
- Holman p.204
- Shay pp.9-11
- Works Vol 16. p.4
- Works p.4
- Shay p.9
- Holman p.208
- Price p.298
- Harris p.257
- Price pp.290-293
- Price p.292
- Viking p.567
- Ellen T. Harris pp.257-258
- Pinnock p.246
- Works p.6; "Bochartus" is Alain Bouchart, author of
Grandes Croniques de Bretaigne (1514)
- Pinnock p.247
- Quoted by Dearing in Works p.328
- Holman p.205
- By James Winn, referred to by Dearing in the notes to
Works p.328
- Works p.299
Sources
- The Works of John Dryden Volume 16, edited by Vinton
A. Dearing (University of California Press, 1997)
- Curtis A. Price Henry Purcell and the London Stage
(Cambridge University Press, 1984)
- Curtis A. Price: booklet notes to the recording of King
Arthur by John Eliot Gardiner
- Peter Holman Henry Purcell (Oxford University Press,
1994)
- Robert Shay, "Dryden and Purcell's King Arthur: Legend
and Politics on the Restoration Stage", in Richard Barber (ed.)
King Arthur in Music (DS Brewer, 2002)
- Todd S. Gilman, "London Theatre Music: 1660-1719", in Susan J.
Owen (ed.) A Companion to Restoration Drama
(Wiley-Blackwell, 2001)
- Andrew Pinnock "King Arthur expos'd: a lesson in
anatomy" in Curtis Price (ed.) Purcell Studies (Cambridge
University Press, 1995)
- Ellen T. Harris "King Arthur's journey into the
eighteenth century" in Curtis Price (ed.) Purcell Studies
(Cambridge University Press, 1995)
- The Viking Opera Guide ed. Amanda Holden (Viking,
1993)
Further reading
- Davies, H. Neville, "King Arthur: or, The British Worthy" in
Henry Purcell's Operas, The Complete Texts, ed. Michael
Burden, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2000.
- Dent, Edward J. Foundations of English Opera,
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1928.
- van Lennep et al. [eds] William, The London Stage,
parts 1 (1965) and 2 (1959), Southern Illinois University Press,
Carbondale.
- Moore, R. E. Henry Purcell and the Restoration
Theatre, Greenwood Press, Westport CT, 1961.
- Sawkins, Lionel, "trembleurs and Cold People: How
Should They Shiver?" ,Performing the Music of Henry
Purcell ed. Michael Burden, Clarendon Press, Oxford,
1996.
External links