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Afterword: The “Half-Viewless Harp”—Secondary Resonances of Ossian

© 2019, Boydell and Brewer

© 2019, Boydell and Brewer

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents xi
  3. Preface xiii
  4. Acknowledgments xvii
  5. Note to the Reader xxi
  6. 1. Battling Critics, Engaging Composers: Ossian’s Spell 1
  7. 2. On Macpherson’s Native Heath: Primary Sources 18
  8. 3. A Culture without Writing, Settings without a Score, Haydn without Copyright, and Two Oscars on Stage 32
  9. 4. “A Musical Piece”: Harriet Wainewright’s opera Comàla (1792) 45
  10. 5. Between Gluck and Berlioz: Méhul’s Uthal (1806) 57
  11. 6. Fingallo e Comala (1805) and Ardano e Dartula (1825): The Ossianic Operas of Stefano Pavesi 72
  12. 7. From Venice to Lisbon and St. Petersburg: Calto, Clato, Aganadeca, Gaulo ed Oitona, and Two Fingals 87
  13. 8. Beethoven’s Ossianic Manner, or Where Scholars Fear to Tread 102
  14. Excursus: Mendelssohn Waives the Rules: “Overture to the Isles of Fingal” (1832) and an “Unfinished” Coda 113
  15. 9. The Maiden Bereft: “Colma” from Rust (1780) to Schubert (1816) 123
  16. 10. Scènes lyriques sans frontières: Louis Théodore Gouvy’s Le dernier Hymne d’Ossian (1858) and Lucien Hillemacher’s Fingal (1880) 146
  17. 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) 171
  18. 12. The Musical Stages of “Darthula”: From Thomas Linley the Younger (ca. 1776) to Arnold Schoenberg (1903) and Armin Knab (1906) 194
  19. 13. The Cantata as Drama: Joseph Jongen’s Comala (1897), Jørgen Malling’s Kyvala (1902), and Liza Lehmann’s Leaves from Ossian (1909) 216
  20. 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) 238
  21. 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) 257
  22. 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) 274
  23. Afterword: The “Half-Viewless Harp”—Secondary Resonances of Ossian 293
  24. Appendix 1: Title Page and Dedication of Harriet Wainewright’s Comàla 305
  25. Appendix 2: French and German Texts of Louis Théodore Gouvy’s Le dernier Hymne d’Ossian 307
  26. Appendix 3: Texts of Erik Chisholm’s Night Song of the Bards 310
  27. Appendix 4: Provisional List of Musical Compositions Based on the Poems of Ossian 313
  28. Notes 323
  29. Selected Bibliography 387
  30. Index 389
Beyond Fingal's Cave
This chapter is in the book Beyond Fingal's Cave
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