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great abilities; fo humbly recommending myself to favour and patronage,

your

I remain, &c.

I fhall add to the foregoing letter, another which came to me by the fame penny-post.

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From my own apartment near Charing Crofs.

Honoured Sir,

HAVING heard that this nation is a great encou

rager of ingenuity, I have brought with me a rope-dancer that was caught in one of the woods belonging to the Great Mogul. He is by birth a monkey; but fwings upon a rope, takes a pipe of tobacco, and drinks a glafs of ale, like any reasonable creature. He gives great fatisfaction to the quality; and if they will make a fubfcription for him, I will fend for a brother of his out of Holland that is a very good tumbler; and alfo for another of the fame family whom I defign for my Merry-Andrew, as being an excellent mimic, and the greatest droll in the country where he now is. I hope to have this entertainment in a readiness for the next winter; and doubt not but it will please more than the opera or puppet-how. I will not fay that a monkey is a better man than fome of the opera-heroes; but certainly he is a better reprefentative of a man, than the moft artificial compofition of wood and wire. If you will be pleafed to give me a good word in your paper, you fhall be every night a fpectator at my fhow for nothing.

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N° 29

Tuesday, April 3.

Sermo lingua concinnus utrâque

Suavior: ut Chio nota fi commifta Falerni eft.
HOR. Sat. I. x. 23.

Both tongues united fweeter founds produce,
Like Chian mix'd with the Falernian juice.

HERE is nothing that has more startled our Eng

entrance upon the stage. People were wonderfully furprifed to hear generals finging the word of command, and ladies delivering meffages in mufic. Our countrymen could not forbear laughing when they heard a lover chanting out a billet-doux, and even the fuperfcription of a letter fet to a tune. The famous blunder in an old play of "Enter a king and two fiddlers folus," was now no longer an abfurdity; when it was impoffible for a hero in a defert, or a princefs in her clofet, to fpeak any thing unaccompanied with mufical inftruments.

But however this Italian method of acting in Recitativo might appear at first hearing, I cannot but think it much more just than that which prevailed in our English opera before this innovation; the tranfition from an air to recitative mufic being more natural, than the paffing from a fong to plain and ordinary fpeaking, which was the common method in Purcell's operas.

The only fault I find in our prefent practice is the making ufe of the Italian Recitativo with English words.

To go to the bottom of this matter, I muft obferve, that the tone, or, as the French call it, the accent of every nation in their ordinary fpeech is altogether different from that of every other people; as we may fee even in the Welsh and Scotch, who border fo near upon

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us. By the tone or accent, I do not mean the pronunciation of each particular word, but the found of the whole fentence. Thus it is very common for an English gentleman, when he hears a French tragedy, to complain that the actors of all them fpeak in a tone; and therefore he very wifely prefers his own countrymen, not confidering that a foreigner complains of the fame tone in an English actor.

For this reafon, the recitative mufic, in every language, fhould be as different as the tone or accent of each language; for otherwife, what may properly exprefs a paffion in one language, will not do it in another. Every one who has been long in Italy knows very well, that the cadences in the Recitativo bear a remote affinity to the tone of their voices in ordinary converfation, or, to fpeak more properly, are only the accents of their language made more mufical and tuneful.

Thus the notes of interrogation, or admiration, in the Italian mufic, if one may fo call them, which resemble their accents in difcourfe on fuch occafions, are not unlike the ordinary tones of an English voice when we are angry; infomuch that I have often feen our audiences extremely mistaken as to what has been doing upon the ftage, and expecting to fee the hero knock down his meffenger, when he has been afking him à queftion; or fancying that he quarrels with his friend, when he only bids him good-morrow.

For this reafon the Italian artifts cannot agree with our English muficians, in admiring Purcell's compofitions, and thinking his tunes fo wonderfully adapted to his words; because both nations do not always exprefs the fame paffions by the fame founds.

I am therefore humbly of opinion, that an English compofer should not follow the Italian recitative too fervilely, but make ufe of many gentle deviations from it, in compliance with his own native language. He may copy out of it all the lulling foftnefs and Dying Falls, as Shakespear calls them, but fhould ftill remember that he ought to accommodate himself to an English audience; and by humouring the tone of our voices in ordinary converfation, have the fame regard to the accent of his own language, as thofe perfons had to 6 theirs

theirs whom he profeffes to imitate. It is obferved that feveral of the finging birds of our own country learn to fweeten their voices, and mellow the harsknefs of their natural notes, by practifing under those that come from warmer climates. In the fame manner I would allow the Italian opera to lend our English mufic as much as may grace and foften it, but never intirely to annihilate and deftroy it. Let the infufion be as ftrong as you please, but ftill let the fubject-matter of it be English.

A compofer fhould fit his mufic to the genius of the people, and confider that the delicacy of hearing, and taste of harmony, has been formed upon thofe founds which every country abounds with: in short, that music is of a relative nature, and what is harmony to one ear, may be diffonnace to another.

The fame obfervations which I have made upon the recitative part of mufic, may be applied to all our fongs and airs in general.

Signior Baptift Lully acted like a man of fenfe in this particular. He found the French mufic extremely defective and very often barbarous: however, knowing the genius of the people, the humour of their language, and the prejudiced ears he had to deal with, he did not pretend to extirpate the French mufic and plant the Italian in its ftead; but only to cultivate and civilize it with innumerable graces and modulations which he borrow'd from the Italian. By this means, the French mufic is now perfect in its kind; and when you fay it is not fo good as the Italian, you only mean that it does not please you fo well; for there is fcarce a Frenchman who would not wonder to hear you give the Italian fuch a preferThe mufic of the French is indeed very properly adapted to their pronunciation and accent, as their whole opera wonderfully favours the genius of fuch a gay airy people. The chorus in which that opera abounds gives the parterre frequent opportunities of joining in concert with the ftage. This inclination of the audience to fing along with the actors, fo prevails with them, that I have fometimes known the performer on the stage do no more in a celebrated fong, than the clerk of a parish-church, who ferves only to raise the

ence.

pfalm,

pfalm, and is afterwards drowned in the mufic of the congregation. Every actor that comes on the ftage is a beau. The queens and heroines are fo painted, that they appear as ruddy and cherry-cheek'd as milk-maids. The fhepherds are all embroider'd, and acquit themselves in a ball better than our English dancing-mafters. I have seen a couple of rivers appear in red stockings; and Alpheus, inftead of having his head covered with fedge and bull-rufhes, making love in a fair full-bottomed perriwig, and a plume of feathers; but with a voice fo full of shakes and quavers, that I should have thought the murmurs of a country brook the much more agreeable mufic.

I remember the laft opera I faw in that merry nation, was the rape of Proferpine, where Pluto, to make the more tempting figure, put himself in a French equipage, and brings Afcalaphus along with him as his Valet de Chambre. This is what we call folly and impertinence; but what the French look upon as gay and polite..

I fhall add no more to what I have here offered, than that mufic, architecture, and painting, as well as poetry and oratory, are to deduce their laws and rules from the general fenfe and taste of mankind, and not from the principles of thofe arts themselves; or in other words, the tafte is not to conform to the art, but the art to the tafte. Mufic is not defigned to please only chromatic ears, but all that are capable of diftinguishing harsh from difagreeable notes. A man of an ordinary ear is a judge whether a paffion is expreffed in proper founds, and whether the melody of those founds be more or lefs pleafing.

C

VOL. I.

F

Wednesday,

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