Curiosities of Music


   A Collection of Facts, not generally known, regarding the Music of
                       Ancient and Savage Nations

                                   By
                             LOUIS C. ELSON

    [Illustration: publisher logo]

                         OLIVER DITSON COMPANY
                                 BOSTON

                          New York    Chicago
                 CHAS. H. DITSON & CO.    LYON & HEALY

             Copyright, MDCCCLXXX, by J. M. STODDART & CO.
              Copyright, MCMVIII, by OLIVER DITSON COMPANY


                         TO MY ESTEEMED FRIEND,
                         Dr. C. Annette Buckei,
                     THIS LITTLE WORK IS DEDICATED.




                                PREFACE.


In this work, I have endeavored to bring together the most curious
points in the music of many nations, ancient and modern. As the work
originally appeared in a magazine (“The Vox Humana”) I was obliged to
avoid any extended research into disputed points, such as Hebrew music,
Greek music, water organs, etc., as being too abstruse for periodical
reading. Yet many of the facts contained in its columns have not yet
found their way into English literature. This was so entirely the case
with Chinese music, that I was tempted to somewhat transgress my limits
on this subject, it being, apparently, a neglected one. In all the other
chapters I have merely sought out such facts as would interest, and
present a comprehensive idea to the general reader, whether musical or
not.

My hearty thanks are due to Col. Henry Ware, and Mr. J. Norton, of
Boston, for many facilities afforded and suggestions offered, in the
course of compiling this book. If it fills an unoccupied niche, however
small, in musical literature, it will have fulfilled the desire of

                                                             The Author.




                                CONTENTS


  I Introduction                                                       7
      The Hindoos                                                      8
  II Ancient Egyptian                                                 15
  III Biblical and Hebrew                                             26
  IV Ancient Greek Music                                              35
  V The Public Games of Greece                                        39
  VI The Philosophers, and Greek Social Music                         53
  VII Greek Theatre and Chorus                                        67
  VII The Dances of Ancient Greece                                    79
  VIII Ancient Roman Music                                            85
  IX Music of the Roman Theatre                                       95
  X Music of the Roman Empire                                         99
  XI History of Chinese Music                                        114
  XII Chinese Music and Musical Instruments                          142
      Of the Sound of Stone                                          145
      Of the Sound of Metal                                          148
      Of the Sound of Baked Clay                                     149
      Of the Sound of Silk                                           149
      The Sound of Wood                                              151
      The Sound of Bamboo                                            153
      The Sound of Calabash                                          155
      Miscellaneous Instruments                                      156
      The Sound of the Voice                                         158
  XIII Chinese Musical Compositions and Ceremonies                   162
      Hymn to the Ancestors                                          164
  XVI The Chinese Theatre and Dances                                 176
  XVII Music of Japan                                                201
  XVIII Music of Savage Nations                                      229
  XIX African Music                                                  251
      Praise of Dingan, A Very Celebrated Chief                      254
  XX Music of the Early Christian Church                             280
      Greek Church                                                   288
      Syrian Church                                                  290
      The Armenian Church                                            292
      The Churches of Africa                                         293
      General Synopsis of Early Christian Music                      296
  XXI The Ambrosian and Gregorian Chant                              299
  XXII Music in Europe from the Fifth Century                        308
  XXIII The Ancient Bards                                            323
  XXIV The Troubadours and Minne-Singers                             329
  XXV Curiosities of the Opera. Modern Composers, and Conclusion     352
  Footnotes                                                          364
  Index.                                                             365




                         CURIOSITIES OF MUSIC.




                               CHAPTER I.
                             INTRODUCTION.


Music has been broadly defined by Fetis as “the art of moving the
feelings by combinations of sounds;” taken in this broad sense it may be
considered as coeval with the human race.

Vocal music, in a crude form, is as natural in man, to express feelings,
as it is for a cat to purr or a lion to roar; as regards instrumental
music, the primitive man might have found in every hollow tree a
reverberating drum, and in every conchshell or horn of cattle, the
natural beginnings of instrumental music; we shall find later that many
nations ascribe the discovery of their music to the accidental appliance
of some natural instrument; our surest guide in watching the rise of the
art, should be the manner in which savage peoples, yet in a state of
nature, produce music, and we shall find too, that even the lowest in
the scale, even those beings who make the monkey tribe nearer and dearer
to us, as possible relatives (the bushmen of Australia for example),
have still a method of “moving the feelings by means of combinations of
sounds.”

It is therefore, really in barbarous nations, that we may, reasoning by
analogy, find in what state music existed when our own ancestors were in
a state of nature; but in order to give a more chronological character
to our sketches we will begin with the _Music and Musical Mythology of
the Ancients_.


                              THE HINDOOS.

With this people, and the Egyptians we find proofs of the existence of a
musical system at a time which far antedates the earliest reliable
Scriptural records.

Among the Hindoos especially, as far back as history extends, music has
been treated not only as a fine art, but philosophically and
mathematically. According to the oldest Brahminical records, in their
all-embracing “Temple of Science,” it belongs to the 2d chief division
of Lesser Sciences, but its natural and philosophic elements, are, with
a nice distinction, admitted into their holiest and oldest book, the
_Veda_.[1] Of course it has a divine origin ascribed to it, in fact the
entire realm of Indian music is one tale of Mythology.

According to Brahminical accounts, when Brahma had lain in the egg three
thousand billion, four hundred million of years (3,000,400,000,000) he
split it by the force of his thought and made Heaven and Earth from the
two pieces; then Manu brought forth ten great forces, which made Gods,
Goddesses, good and evil spirits and Gandharbas (Genii of music), and
Apsarasas (Genii of Dance), and these became the musicians of the Gods,
before man knew of the art. Then Sarisvati, Goddess of Speech and
Oratory, consort of Brahma, at Brahma’s command brought the art to man
and gave him also his finest musical instrument, the Vina, of which
hereafter. Music then found a protector in the demi-god Nared, one of
the chief Indian musical deities, while Maheda Chrishna helped it along
by allowing five keys, or modes, to spring from his head (_a la_
Minerva) in the shape of Nymphs, and his wife Parbuti, added one more;
then Brahma added thirty lesser keys, or modes, and all these modes were
also Nymphs.

The Hindoo scale has seven chief tones and these tones are represented
as so many heavenly sisters.

In the Indian legends, music is represented as of immense might. All
men, all animals, all inanimate nature listened to the singing of Maheda
and Parbuti with ecstasy.

Some modes were never to be sung by mortals, as they were so fiery that
the singer would be consumed by them. In the time of Akber, it is
related, that ruler commanded Naik Gobaul, a famous singer, to sing the
Raagni[2] of Fire; the poor singer entreated in vain, to be allowed to
sing a less dangerous strain; then he plunged up to his neck in the
river Djumna, and began: he had not finished more than half of his lay
when the water around him began to boil; he paused (at boiling point)
but the relentless, or curious Akber, demanded the rest, and with the
end of the song the singer burst into flames and was consumed. Another
melody caused clouds to rise and rain to fall; a female singer is said
once to have saved Bengal from famine and drought in this manner.
Another lay caused the sun to disappear and night to come at midday, or
another could change winter to spring or rain to sunshine. All these
typify beautifully the might of music with this race. Of the four chief
tone systems, two also have divine origin, from Iswara and from Hanuman
(the Indian Pan), the others come from Bharata Muni who invented the
drama with music and dance, and from Calinath.

When Chrishna was upon the earth as a shepherd, there were sixteen
thousand pastoral Nymphs or Shepherdesses who fell in love with
him.—They all tried to win his heart by music, and each one sang him a
song, and each one sang in a _different key_, (let us hope not all at
once). Thence sprang the sixteen thousand keys, which according to
tradition once existed in India.

In order that the full extent of Hindoo Musical Mythology may be
conceived, we will now sketch the tones which are employed.

We have stated that there are seven chief tones; these tones have short
monosyllabic names; as we give to our notes the syllables, _do_, _re_,
_mi_, etc., the Hindoos call their scale tones _sa_, _ri_, _ga_, _ma_,
_pa_, _dha_, _ni_, _sa_, which are certainly as easy to vocalise upon as
our _solfeggi_; in fact the language is very well adapted to music, as
it has all the softness, elegance and clearness of the Italian. Von
Dalberg says that Sanscrit unites the splendor of the Spanish, the
strength of the German, and the singableness of the Italian.

With the resemblance of seven chief tones, however, the similarity ends,
for while our scale has only half tones as smallest interval, the
Hindoos have quarter tones, and not equally distributed either; thus:

    whole    small     half    whole    whole    small     half
     tone    whole     tone     tone     tone    whole     tone
 Sa       Ri       Ga       Ma       Pa       Dha      Ni       Sa
     ¼¼¼¼     ¼¼¼       ¼¼      ¼¼¼¼     ¼¼¼¼     ¼¼¼       ¼¼

In theory it will be seen that the octave is always a half tone flat,
but practically they correct this by singing it on its proper pitch. On
six of the above intervals they found their chief modes but they form
various lesser modes on each interval, i. e., they could give ten
different modes, or scales, starting from C alone.

These six chief styles, are, of course, six Genii, corresponding to the
six Hindoo divisions of the year, these are each married to five Nymphs,
the thirty lesser styles; each Genii has eight sons, who are each
wedded, also to Nymphs, one apiece. There seem to be few celibates in
Hindoo Mythology, therefore an exact census gives to this interesting
family six fathers, thirty mothers, forty-eight sons, forty-eight
daughters-in-law, or one hundred thirty-two in all, each of them being
the God or Goddess of some particular key, and each of them, of course,
having a distinctive name; we shall not give the various names, but to
illustrate the relationship among them, the following will suffice; the
four 1-4 tones beginning on the fifth tone of the scale, _Panchama_ (or
_Pa_) are the Nymphs _Malina_, _Chapala_, _Lola_ and _Serveretna_, while
the next full tone (_Dha_) is owned by Santa and her sisters; if _Dha_
should be flatted 1-4 tone which would give it the same pitch as the
highest 1-4 tone of _Pa_, (called Serveretna), the poetical Hindoo would
not say “_Dha_ is flat,” but “_Serveretna_ has been introduced to the
family of _Santa_ and her sisters.”[3]

Although the musical art of the Hindoos had such an early existence, it
seems not to have developed or receded much since ancient days; they
possess airs to which the European ear instantly, and involuntarily
attaches harmony, (auxiliary voices), and yet they have not the
slightest craving for harmony. They are completely satisfied to express
all emotion by melody, sometimes combined with the dance, and yet do not
feel the monotony, which would be obviated by additional voices.

But it must be said that, so far as melody goes, they have great taste
and discrimination; the music often approaches the European in form and
rhythm, and the Hindoo seems to feel instinctively the importance of the
tonic, and dominant, and often finishes the phrases of a melody with a
half cadence.[4]

Of the Hindoo instruments the Vina takes the lead; as before mentioned,
they ascribe to it a divine origin; it has four strings and is
incorrectly defined as a lyre by many commentators, but it is rather a
guitar than lyre, and is made of a large hollow bamboo pipe, about 3½
feet long, at each end of which are two large hollow gourds, to increase
the resonance: it may be roughly compared to a drum major’s _baton_,
with a ball at _both_ ends, while the strings extend along the stick; it
has a finger-board like a guitar, and the frets are not fastened
permanently on it, but stuck on by the performer with wax.

The tone is both full and delicate, sometimes metallic and clear and
very pleasant. The music composed for it is usually brilliant and rapid,
and the Hindoos seem to have their Liszts and Rubinsteins; in the last
century Djivan Shah was known throughout all India as a _virtuoso_, on
the Vina.

They ornament their Vinas sometimes very richly and there are paintings
of their chief performers, sitting with magnificent Vinas leaning
against their bodies, this being the attitude of the player. They also
have possessed from time immemorial, a three-stringed violin, so that
Raphael and Tintoretto may not have committed an anachronism in painting
Apollo with a violin.[5]

A Guitar called Magoudi, finishes the list of characteristic stringed
instruments.

The instruments of percussion and wind instruments are more numerous.
They possess four kinds of drums, and their popular, secular dances are
usually accompanied by the Vina, for the melody, and drums, bells and
cymbals.

Flutes they have possessed from remotest antiquity, and a muffled drum
called Tare for funeral occasions, and they also have a double flute
with a single mouth piece. We will not dwell further upon their
instruments; there is but one, the _Vina_, which is really fitted to
produce beautiful music.

The Hindoos complain that their old music is deteriorating and such
singers as Chanan or Dhilcook, two vocal celebrities of the last
centuries, have passed away. When one inquires for the miracle-working
Ragas, (improvised songs) in Bengal, the people say there are singers
probably left in Cashmere who can give them; and should you inquire in
Cashmere they would send you to Bengal for them, but in reality there
seems to have been comparatively little change in the style of Hindoo
music from its earliest days.




                              CHAPTER II.
                           ANCIENT EGYPTIAN.


The ancient Egyptians ascribed the origin of music to opposite causes,
some legends giving its invention to beneficent Deities, while other
legends are interpreted to give its origin to Satan, the evil principle,
or at least the principle of sensuality, as represented by the buck
Mendes. Hermes (or Mercury) is accredited with first having observed the
harmony of the spheres, and the lyre also is represented as being his
invention, in the following legend:

A heavy inundation of the Nile had taken place, and when the waters
receded, there was left upon the banks a tortoise, who went the way of
all tortoises, and after a time was completely dried up by the sun; the
tendons however, which were attached to the shell, remained, and became
tightly drawn by the expansion of the shell. Hermes, wandering upon the
bank, accidentally struck his foot against it; the tendons resounded,
and Hermes thus found a natural lyre.

This legend is however found also in Hindoo and Greek Mythology, and may
be one of those tales, springing from Arian root, which belong to almost
every race. We also find an Egyptian Apollo and Muses in other musical
legends, according to Diodorus Siculus.

“When Osiris was in Ethiopia,—the Egyptian God Osiris was a sort of
blending of Bacchus and Apollo—he met a troupe of revelling satyrs, and
being a lover of pleasure and taking delight in choruses of music, he
admitted them to his already numerous train of musicians. In the midst
of these satyrs were nine young maidens, skilled in music and divers
sciences.”

The Egyptians also considered Horus, brother of Osiris, (equivalent to
the Greek Apollo) as God of Harmony.

Thus three Gods have the honor of fostering Egyptian music, Osiris,
Horus, and Hermes.

Hermes, or (by his Egyptian name) Thoth, was the especial God of many
sciences, and is said to have written two books of song, or works
relating to the song-art. According to Diodorus, the Lyre which he had
invented had three strings, which represented the three seasons of
Egypt; the deepest string was the wet season, the middle one the growing
season, the highest the harvest season: the tones of Egyptian music seem
to be taken from the seven heavenly planets, as known to the ancients,
and from this circumstance Ambros hazards the conjecture that the
diatonic scale was known to them.

Among the mythical musical personages of the earliest Egyptian music,
may be mentioned Maneros, who was son of the first king of Egypt, who
succeeded the second dynasty of demi-gods.

He seems to be analogous to the Linus, (son of Apollo), of the Greeks;
he died young, and the _first_ song of the Egyptian music[6] was in his
honor; it was a lament over his untimely end, the swift passing away of
Youth, Spring, etc. The song was sung under various guises, for Maneros,
Linus, Adonis, etc., among various ancient nations, and Herodotus was
surprised at hearing it in Egypt. But in course of time the song itself,
and not the king’s son was called Maneros, and gradually diffused its
influence, (the warning of the passing away of Joy) through Egyptian
social life; at their banquets a perfectly painted statue of a _corpse_
was borne round and shown to each guest, and there was sung the
following warning:

  “Cast your eyes upon this corpse
  You will be like this after Death,
  Therefore drink and be merry now.”[7]

The song also from being a mournful one, became in time joyous and
lively,[8] Plutarch thinks that the words Maneros, became synonymous
with “Good Health.” The fashion was after the conquest of Egypt,
imitated in Rome.[9] The ancient Egyptian music was really a twofold
affair and is well symbolized in being attributed by some to good, by
others to evil gods; for it was used in the religious services of the
highest gods, (except, according to Strabo, in the services of Osiris,
at Abydos) and on the other hand was degraded as a pastime for the
lowest orders.

The musicians were not held in any respect, and were not allowed to
change their occupation, but were obliged to transmit it from father to
son and were also probably compelled to live in a certain quarter of the
cities wherein they dwelt.[10]

Of course there were celebrated singers and performers, and also leaders
of the chants, and royal singers, who were exceptions to the foregoing
rule, but according to Diodorus Siculus, the Egyptians not only
considered music a useless art, but even a hurtful one, as it enervated
the soul and made man effeminate. Yet for all this there are found among
ancient sculptures many representations of singers and musicians
evidently belonging to the higher classes, though we cannot but believe
that these exceptions only prove the rule, and even to-day music is
considered a sensuous and rather unmanly art, by Eastern nations.

Among the most ancient songs of Egypt there seem to have been little
refrains sung by the working classes while at labor; there is here not
conjecture but absolute certainty, for the words of part of one of these
songs are preserved, on an ancient picture of threshers of grain, oxen,
etc.; the threshers sing, according to Champollion’s learned
deciphering,

  “Thresh for yourselves, oh oxen,
  Thresh for yourselves;
  Measures for your masters,
  Measures for yourselves.”

In a grotto at _El bersheh_ there is also a painting of the
transportation of a colossal statue from the quarry, and here also while
one hundred and seventy-two men are laboring at the ropes, one is
perched upon the statue and is giving the time of a refrain, which all
are to sing.

The custom of singing while at work still exists in Egypt, as, for
example, sailors sing a particular song when starting on a voyage,
another when there is danger of a collision, another when the danger is
past.

Music was a chief portion of the Egyptian funeral ceremonies, and on the
walls of nearly all the tombs of ancient days, are found paintings of
the funeral ceremonies; the greater part of what is known of their
instruments comes from this source; the best singers and players were
engaged for the purpose by the richer classes, and sang mournful chants,
being similar to the professional mourners at present found in the East.
The music was probably chiefly melodic, or one-voiced, though this
subject has some ambiguity attached to it, our only guide as to their
music being the representations in the tombs, etc., as not a scrap of
actual music has been left to us; but when we consider the furious
controversy about, and the different interpretations of the fragments of
Greek music which time has left us, this may be an _advantage_ rather
than otherwise. There is one painting[11] left, which seems to confirm
the idea that the Egyptians knew something of the effect of harmony.
This painting represents two harpers at one side and three flute players
at the other, while between them are two singers, one of whom seems to
be following with his voice the melody of the harpers, while the other
sings with the flutes; this seems to intimate that the Egyptians
possessed, at least _two-voiced_ harmony.

Chappell, in his admirable History of Music, says that it is
mathematically impossible, that all of the instruments represented in
their paintings should have been played in unison.

The music of Egypt was for a long time regulated by the Government, that
is all innovations were punishable by law; probably this referred only
to religious music, and did not affect popular music.

In all ages there seem to have been two distinct schools of music, the
scientific, and popular. There is no doubt that while the early European
theorists held that _only consecutive fifths and fourths_ were musical,
the populace had a less forced and more beautiful style, and it is more
than probable that in Egypt the popular music was totally different from
the sacred.

All the songs appear to have been accompanied by a clapping of hands,
and therefore the rhythm was probably strongly marked. The effect of
this clapping of hands is by no means unpleasant, and is still used by
the negroes of America in some songs and dances, and among various
barbarous nations. It seems curious to think, that in witnessing these
lively dances, one may be beholding a counterpart of the enjoyments of
four thousand years ago, or that in witnessing the _pirouettes_ of a
ballet dancer, we are amusing ourselves in the ancient Egyptian manner;
the latter fact is proved by ancient paintings, however. Other ancient
Egyptian dances were similar to the modern jigs, clog dances and
breakdowns, as is amply shown by figures found both in Upper and Lower
Egypt.

The Egyptians had also dances with regular figures, forward and back,
swing, etc.; these dances were restricted to the lower orders, the upper
classes being forbidden to indulge in them.

If we could transport ourselves back to Thebes in its days of grandeur,
we should be somewhat astonished at the slight change, in comparison
with what is usually supposed, from our own times. Imagine the time of a
great religious festival. The Nile is crowded with boats, loaded to
their utmost capacity, with passengers, offerings, etc. Sometimes
hundreds of thousands came to Thebes or Memphis, and especially to
Bubastis, on such occasions. From each boat is heard playing and
singing. Within the city all the streets are full; here march by a troop
of Pharaoh’s soldiers, all the privates uniformed alike, their marching
regular, and their drill well attended to; at their head is a military
band, (picture found at Thebes) of trumpeters, drummers beating the drum
with their _hands_, and other performers; along that mighty avenue of
Sphinxes is marching a procession to one of the temples: here also
musical instruments, particularly flutes, head the column, and a
processional hymn is being sung, to which the white-robed priests keep
time while marching, as they carry the sacred golden barge of the God,
full of treasure of various kinds.

Here is passing along, a deputation from some far off tributary prince
in the heart of Æthiopia, carrying presents for the king, and all around
is life, bustle, and enjoyment. In some of the temples music is
sounding, (the temple of Osiris, at Abydos, being the only exception,)
and the clang of the sistrum is often heard. Truly the life of ancient
Egypt was as joyous and varied as that of more modern times.

The sistrum was, until the Napoleonic expedition to Egypt, which gave to
the world the wonders of this store house of antiquity, considered the
representative of Egyptian music. It was merely a short, oval hand frame
which held three or four metal bars; sometimes bells were hung upon
these bars, and by shaking the instrument, as a baby shakes a rattle,
which it really in principle resembles, a jingling of the bars or bells
was produced.

Latterly it has been thought that the sistrum was not a musical
instrument at all; but, like the bell sounded at the elevation of the
Host in Catholic churches, was used as a means of riveting and
impressing the minds of the worshippers. At all events the sistrum takes
no rank among Egyptian musical instruments. The harp was really the
instrument on which they lavished the most attention; paintings, and
fragments of harps have been found, in the so-called “Harpers’ Tomb,”
which caused Bruce to exclaim that no modern maker could manufacture a
more beautiful piece of workmanship.

The ancient Egyptian harps look very modern indeed, except for the fact
that they have no front board or “Pole,” and it seems strange that they
could bear the tension without its support; the pitch could not have
been at all high. There was a species of harp, of the compass of about
two octaves, with catgut strings, (wire strings the Egyptians had not),
found in a tomb hewn in the solid rock at Thebes, so entirely preserved
that it was played upon by the discoverer, and gave out its tones _after
being buried 3000 years_. Of course the strings perished after exposure
to the air.

Fetis, to whom musical history owes so much, has here fallen into a
singular mistake. He says “it would scarcely be believed that the
ancient Egyptians with whom the cat was a sacred animal, should have
used _cat-gut_ strings on their instruments, but the fact is proved
beyond a doubt.” This is all very true, but M. Fetis seems not to have
known the fact that cat-gut has not its origin in the _cat_, but is
almost always, in reality _sheep-gut_.

The list of instruments of ancient Egypt embraces harps of various
numbers of strings, Nabla, from which come the Roman _Nablium_ and
Hebrew _Nebel_, a sort of Guitar; Flutes, single and double, (a flute
player often headed the sacred processions, and Isis is said to have
invented the flute.) Tambourines and hand drums; sometimes the Egyptians
danced to a rhythmic accompaniment of these alone.[12] The flute was
generally played by men, and the tambourines by women. Lyres, of various
shapes, often played with the hand, but sometimes also with a plectrum,
(a short, black stick, with which the strings were struck,) trumpets,
cymbals, and some metal instruments of percussion. There are many
paintings in which entire orchestras of these instruments are playing
together, but probably all in unison.

There exists an excellent painting from a Theban tomb,[13] in which we
see an Egyptian musical party in a private house. Two principal figures
are smelling of small nosegays, while two females offer to them
refreshments; three females are dancing and singing for the amusement of
the guests, who sit around, apparently having a very enjoyable time;
below are seen slaves preparing a banquet, which is to follow the music.
The Egyptians often had music before dinner.

Another application of music is pictured in a very ancient painting,
given by Rosellini,[14] in his great work; in it is seen a woman nursing
an infant, while a harper and singer are furnishing music, possibly to
lull the child to sleep; in almost all these paintings the singers are
represented with one hand to their ear in order to catch the pitch of
the instruments more readily.

But the most interesting painting has been copied, in the folios of
Lepsius,[15] from a tomb of great antiquity; it represents a course of
_musical instruction_ in the department of the singers and players of
King Amenhotep IV. (18th Dynasty). We see several large and small rooms,
connecting with each other; furniture, musical instruments and
implements are seen all around, especially in the small rooms or
closets. In the large rooms are the musicians, engaged in practising and
teaching; one teacher is sitting, listening to the singing of a young
girl, while another pupil is accompanying her on the harp; another girl
stands attentively listening to the teacher’s instructions, (_class
system_ evidently); in another part two girls are practising a dance,
while a harper accompanies; other musicians are variously engaged. In
one room is a young lady having her hair dressed, and in another, a
young miss has leant her harp against the wall, and is sitting down with
a companion to lunch. This certainly gives a fair insight into the music
life of old, and we leave Egyptian music, of which _as music_ we know
nothing, with more satisfaction after this glance at the _Royal Egyptian
Conservatory of Music_.




                              CHAPTER III.
                          BIBLICAL AND HEBREW.


The earliest scriptural mention of music is in Genesis, Chapter IV.
where Jubal is spoken of as “Father of those who handle the harp and
organ.” But harp and organ must by no means be confounded with our
modern instruments of the same name. The harp was probably an instrument
of three strings, while all the very ancient references to an organ,
simply mean a “Syrinx” or Pan’s pipes. The music of Biblical History is,
as is almost all the music of ancient nations, combined to a great
extent with the dance; the dances of the ancients were what to-day would
be called pantomimes, expressing joy, sorrow, fear, or anger, by the
motions and expressions of face and body, rather than by the feet.

The real character of the ancient Hebrew music, as well as of many of
the musical instruments, is involved in utter obscurity, and no clues to
enlighten the investigator, remain in the modern music of this usually
most conservative of peoples; much of their musical system was borrowed,
until David’s time certainly, from the Egyptians.

The music of the modern Jews is tinged in almost every instance with the
character of the music of the people around them; thus the same psalms
are sung in a different manner by German, Polish, Spanish, or Portuguese
Jews.

One little trace of their primitive music remains; on the occasion of
their New Year, a ram’s horn is blown, and between the blasts on this
excruciating instrument the following phrases are addressed to the
performer,—

  _Tahkee-oo, Schivoorim, Taru-o._

These words, which also have a reverential meaning, may possibly at one
time have been addressed to the ancient musicians, to give to them the
order of the music. Strong presumptive proof that this blowing of the
trumpet is the same as it was in King David’s time is found in the fact
that it is blown in the same rhythm, by the Jews _all over the world_.
It certainly requires no forced interpretation to call the Ram’s horn
(Schofer) one of their early instruments, as it would be their most
natural signal-call both in peace and war.

In all the Jewish theocracy, the music naturally took a theosophical
character, and is seldom detached from religious rites; we shall find
the same spirit running through other of the ancient civilizations, even
barbarians seeming to share in the almost universal impulse to praise
the Deity with this art, and this should prove to supercilious critics
that however ill-sounding the music of other races may appear to our
ears, to _them_ it was a highly considered art, and as such, merits our
attention.

David may be regarded as the real founder of Hebrew music. He must have
possessed great skill even in his youth, as the instance of his being
able to soothe Saul’s crazed mind with his music, proves. This may be
regarded as one of the earliest notices of the effects of music in
mental disease. What the nature of his inventions and reforms in music
afterwards were, and how far he remodelled the style which had been
brought from Egypt, cannot now be known, as Jerusalem has been pillaged
nearly twenty times since his reign, and every monument, or inscription
which might solve the enigma, has long been destroyed.

There are still marks and inflections in the Hebrew Scriptures which are
evidently intended to show the style in which they were to be chanted.

Regarding the instruments spoken of in Scripture as being used in the
Temple there is also no certainty. In the Talmud there is mention of an
organ which had but ten pipes, yet gave one hundred different tones;
this instrument is placed about the beginning of the Christian Era, and
is called _Magrepha_; it is said of it, that its tones were so powerful
that when it was played, the people in Jerusalem could not hear each
other talk. Pfeiffer conjectures that it was probably not an organ, but
a very loud drum. There are other authorities who have endeavored to
prove that the _Magrepha_ was simply a _fire shovel_; they contend that
it was used at the sacrifices of the Temple to build up the fire, and
was then thrown down, with a loud noise, to inform people outside how
far the services had progressed. The reader has liberty to make his own
choice, for the authorities are pretty evenly balanced,—_organ_, _drum_,
or _fire shovel_.

We must make some allowance for Oriental exaggeration in musical
matters, for when Josephus speaks of a performance by 200,000 singers,
40,000 sistrums, 40,000 harps, and 200,000 trumpets, we must imagine
that either Josephus’ tale, or the ears of the Hebrews, were tough. All
these statements only enlarge a fruitless field, for in it all is
conjecture.

The flute was a favorite instrument both for joy and sorrow: the Talmud
contains a saying that “flutes are suited either to the bride or to the
dead.”

The performance of all these instruments seems to have been always in
unison, and often in the most _fortissimo_ style.

Calmet gives a list of Hebrew instruments including viols, trumpets,
drums, bells, Pan’s pipes, flutes, cymbals, etc., and it is possible
that these have existed among them in a primitive form.

The abbé de la Molette gives the number of the chief Jewish instruments
as twelve, and states that they borrowed three newer ones from the
Chaldeans, during the Babylonian captivity.

According to records of the Rabbins, given by Forkel, the Jews possessed
in David’s time, thirty-six instruments.

Some of the instruments named in the Scriptures are as
follows:—_Kinnor_, usually mentioned in the English translation as a
harp, so often alluded to in the Psalms, (“Praise the Lord with harp,”
etc., xxxiii:2,) was probably a lyre, or a small harp, of triangular
shape: that the Hebrews possessed a larger harp is more than probable,
for they were in communication with Assyria and Egypt, where the harp,
in a highly developed state, was the national instrument, but it is a
matter of much dispute, as to which of the musical terms used in the
Scriptures was intended to apply to this larger harp.

The _Nebel_, or _Psaltery_, was a species of Dulcimer.

The _Asor_;—When David sang of an “instrument of ten strings,” he
referred to the asor, which is supposed to have been a species of lyre,
with ten strings, and played with a _plectrum_, a short stick of wood,
or bone, usually black, with which the strings were struck.

The _Timbrel_ or _Taboret_, was a small hand drum, or tambourine,
probably of varying shapes and sizes; the hand drum was derived from
Egypt, for it was customary for women to dance in that country entirely
to the rhythm of drums and tambourines; the military hand drum had the
shape of a small keg with parchment over the ends; that is to say, the
diameter at the middle was greatest.

_The Organ_;—as before stated this was simply a set of pandean pipes.

_Cymbals_;—there seems to be no doubt that the Hebrews possessed various
instruments of percussion of divers shapes.

_Trumpets_;—apart from the ram’s horn, and other curved horns which were
called trumpets, there also existed a straight trumpet of more
artificial construction. “Make thee, two trumpets of silver: of one
piece shalt thou make them.” Numbers ix:2.

It is probable that the sistrum, the guitar, and pipes, were also
possessed by this nation; about nineteen instruments are mentioned in
the scriptures, but some of the meanings are so dubious that they have
been translated by the general terms, harp, lute, psaltery, timbrel,
etc.

How many different opinions are held, upon Hebrew music may be judged
from the fact that the word “_Selah_,” which was probably a musical
term, and is found in so many of the psalms, has given rise to the most
vehement and fruitless controversy. Hesychius says that it means a
charge of rhythm, in the chanting; Alberti denies this, as it sometimes
occurs at the end of a psalm, where certainly no change is possible:
some have suggested that it meant a modulation from one key to another;
Forkel, however, thinks that the Hebrews were not so far advanced in the
science of music as to understand modulation, but Fetis upsets Forkel by
remarking that the modulations, though not harmonic, might have been
purely melodic, by the introduction of tones, foreign to the key, as
occurs in many eastern melodies.

Herder says also “the Orientals even of our day, love monotonous chants,
which Europeans find doleful, and which at certain passages or phrases,
change totally and abruptly their mode and time: the word _Selah_ was
without doubt an indication of such a change.” The last part of this
opinion, Fetis sets down as pure hypothesis.

Two ancient Greek versions of the Old Testament give the meaning of the
word as “forever,” and as “for all ages.”

Alberti thinks the word is a recapitulation of the chords of the psalm:
Rosenmüller proves that this is impossible in some cases.

Augusti thinks it is an expression of joy similar to “Hallelujah.”

David Kimchi thinks it a sign of elevation of the voice; Mattheson and
Pfeiffer agree in the opinion that it signifies a _ritornella_, or short
symphony between the verses, to be played by the instruments alone.

Eichhorn thinks it means _Da Capo_, but Rosenmüller and Gesenius, (the
latter treats the matter with great erudition, and his opinion is
entitled to respect,) both think that it signifies a rest in the song
part, as we might write _Tacet_.

Gesenius has found almost the only corroborative testimony of the whole
controversy in the fact that the grammatical root of the word Selah, is
repose, or silence.

La Borde has boldly, not to say audaciously, given a unique
interpretation. He says “David invented the art of shading the sounds;
the word _Selah_ is equivalent to the Italian word _smorzando_,
extinguished, dying away.” And then he gives a highly colored picture of
the beauty and grace of the effects produced, though all that he proves
is that he has a little stronger imagination than the others. We must
also give the curious opinion of Wolff, who thinks that “_Selah_” has no
sense whatever, and was only added to fill up the metre of a verse.

Several other eminent writers, including Fetis, who gives a full account
of this war of opinions,[16] decline to hazard an opinion in so dark a
matter.

Another conjectural description of the mode of singing among the ancient
Hebrews, is the commentary of Herder on the song of Deborah and Barak,
Judges v.; he says, “probably verses 1-11 were interrupted by the shouts
of the populace; verses 12-27 were a picture of the battle with a naming
of the leaders with praise or blame, and mimicking each one as named;
verses 28-30 were mockery of the triumph of Sissera, and the last verse
was given as chorus by the whole people.”

One cannot fail to observe some resemblance between this music and the
slave music of some sections of the southern states: in the
camp-meetings, and religious services, a tune which is well known to all
is chosen, and as the spirit moves, often a whole song appropriate to
the occasion is improvised. Of some such description must have been
Miriam’s song, after the downfall of Pharaoh’s host; she probably chose
a tune which was familiar to the people, and improvised, while the
people kept the rhythm, or sang refrains.

Of course the element of poetry was immeasurably greater among the
Israelites than among the Negroes, but the similarity of improvisation
and religious fervor is noticeable.

When Miriam sang, there was as yet no distinctive style of Hebrew music;
we must remember that she had obtained an Egyptian education, and that
up to David’s time the music was an imitation of the Egyptian school.

The raptures of some commentators as to the exceeding beauty of the
music of David, are quite safe, for it is easy to affirm where no one
can bring rebutting evidence, but if it partook of the loudness of most
ancient and barbarous music,—“Play skillfully, and with a loud noise,”
Psalms xxxiii:2—our modern music may after all be some compensation for
its utter loss and oblivion.




                              CHAPTER IV.
                          ANCIENT GREEK MUSIC.


The mythology of Greek music is too well known, for us to go into any
details upon the subject; with this people every thing relating to
music, was ennobled and enriched by an applicable legend, or a finely
conceived poem. In fact music (mousiké), meant with the Greeks, all the
æsthetics, and culture that were used in education of youth, and the
strictly _musical_ part of the above training had special names, as
_harmonia_, etc., to designate it.

The subject of Greek music has given rise to more commentary and
dispute, than any other in the entire realm of musical history.

The mode of notation employed was peculiar; it consisted in placing the
letters of the alphabet in various positions, straight, sideways, etc.,
and sometimes even, fragments of letters were used.

There are in existence but three authentic Greek hymns[17] with music,
viz: hymn to Calliope, to Apollo, and to Nemesis; there is also in
existence, some music to the first eight verses of the first Pythian of
Pindar, which Athanasius Kircher claimed to have discovered in a
monastery near Messina, but the best authorities reject this as
spurious. The copies of the above hymns are not older than the fifteenth
century, and have probably been much perverted by the ignorance, or
half-knowledge of the transcribers, who seeing a fragment of a letter,
would restore the whole letter, or change its position, thereby greatly
altering the character of the music.

To this fact is to be attributed the dense fog, which has prevented us
from fully understanding the ancient Greek music.

On this slight foundation however, learned writers have built an edifice
of erudition which consists of countless volumes of pedantry and
ingenuity, mixed with a large amount of abuse for those who did not
agree with their solution.

As we intend to deal, in these articles, more with curious musical facts
than with musical systems, we will dismiss this branch of the subject
entirely by referring the reader to the best representative works of
this monument of research, which are Chappell’s History of Music, vol.
I., Ambros’ Geschichte der Musik, vol. I., pp. 218-513, Fetis’ Histoire
Generale de la Musique, vol. III., pp. 1-418. Kiesewetter, and Drieberg
also have written profoundly on the subject. These will give the
different opinions held in the matter.

The _scale_ of the Greeks, is however, definitely known, and was similar
to our minor scale, although it contained no sharp seventh. Play on any
pianoforte the notes, A B C D E F G, and you have played the Greek one
octave diatonic scale.

The nomenclature was however different, and some commentators have
forgotten to explain the fact, that what the Greeks called the _highest
note_, meant the longest string of the instrument, and consequently the
_lowest_ tone.

Another fact which has given rise to much controversy is the pitch of
the lyre or phorminx; it seems that the mode of tuning this instrument
varied in Greece at different epochs, and even in different localities
at the same epoch.[18]

The word harmony (harmonikē) has also been misunderstood, as it does not
mean harmony in our sense of the word, but the arrangement and rhythm of
a melody. Whether the Greeks understood harmony or not, in the modern
sense, has been the chief cause of the before-mentioned “Battle of the
Books.”

The lowest note of the scale was called Proslambanomenos, and had not
the importance of the middle note, called Mese, which really became the
principal note of the scale.

The Greek music practically, was very like our present minor modes, and
the singing of some young Greek of two thousand years ago, would
probably have sounded pleasantly to modern ears.

The earliest Greek scale had but four tones, and was probably used to
accompany hymns. It might still suffice for many church chants.[19]
People seldom think how much music can be manufactured from three or
four notes; Rousseau gave a practical illustration of it in the last
century, by writing a not very monotonous tune, on three notes. But an
instrument founded on so few notes might also have been used to give the
pitch to the voice in reciting, or half-singing a poem. We must remember
that the poems of Greece were chanted in public; and even in modern
days, orators pitch their voices higher than in conversation, when
addressing an assembly.

Early Grecian music experienced its first real onward movement, when
Egypt was thrown open to foreigners. Up to the reign of Psammetichus I.,
(664 B. C.) Egypt was closed to aliens, exactly as China has been closed
in days not long gone by. Psammetichus first opened his kingdom to the
Greeks, and Pythagoras learned enough in Egypt to greatly change the
character of Greek music. Though some Greek writers with an excess of
zeal, have made the statement that he taught the Egyptians, by bringing
to them the seven-stringed lyre. Considering the fact that the Egyptians
had as many as twenty-two strings, the claim is rather audacious.

But what placed the Greeks in advance of all other ancient nations, in
music, was the fact that they early recognized its rank as a _fine art_.




                               CHAPTER V.
                      THE PUBLIC GAMES OF GREECE.


The public games of Greece in which music and musical contests were a
feature, gave to the art a decided impetus, for when competition began,
musical study must have preceded.

The Olympic games were celebrated at Olympia every fifth year, in July,
and lasted five days. They were dedicated to Zeus (Jupiter), and were
established (according to some re-established, having existed in
Mythical ages) by Iphitos, king of Elis, in the ninth century before the
Christian era.

For a long time none but Grecians were allowed to compete in them. If
there existed internal war in Greece at the time, an armistice was
effected during the games. The contestants were trained for ten months
previous to the contest. The prizes awarded to the victors were wreaths
of wild olive twigs, cut from a sacred tree which grew in the
consecrated grove of Olympia, and the victors were presented to the
spectators, while a herald proclaimed the name of each, his father, and
his country.

The first day opened with a sacrifice to Zeus, after which a contest of
trumpeters took place. This contest was not regularly instituted until
396 B. C., but after that period it was not interrupted. There are still
annals left of the most celebrated contestants; Archias of Hybla, gained
the prize for three successive Olympiads; and Athenæus says that
Herodorus of Megara, a most famous trumpeter, gained the prize _ten
times in succession_. Pollux says he gained _seventeen_ victories, which
is well-nigh incredible, but both agree in saying that this remarkable
performer was in one year crowned in the four great sacred games, the
Olympian, Pythian, Nemean, and Isthmian. His music was so loud that the
audience were sometimes stunned by the concussion. Other anecdotes of
this wonderful trumpeter remain. He was of giant stature, and slept upon
a bear skin, in imitation of Hercules and the lion skin. He could play
upon two trumpets at the same time, and when he did so, the audience had
to sit farther away than usual, on account of the immense sound. His
performances were of great use in military affairs. Once at the siege of
Argos, the troops were giving way when Herodorus began to sound his two
trumpets, which so inspired the warriors of Demetrius, that they
returned to the fight and won the victory.

The trumpet cannot really be classed among Grecian musical instruments,
as it was rather a signal than any thing else. It was blown when heralds
made any proclamation, in military movements, etc., and seems to have
been appreciated only by the loudness with which it was blown.

It was also frequently played at the Olympic games during the
horse-races, to inspirit the animals.[20]

In fact at the public games the music had a most noisy character, and
trumpeters were proud of bursting a blood vessel, or otherwise injuring
themselves by excess of zeal.

The contest of trumpeters was the only musical (?) one of these games,
though flute-playing took place on the fourth day, when according to
Krause,[21] the _pentathlon_ took place. This was a set of five athletic
games; leaping, running, throwing spear, throwing _discus_, and
wrestling. Here flute-playing also served to animate the contestants.
The flutes too, considering the purpose for which they were used, must
have been played in a violent manner.

Harmonides, a young flute-player, on his first appearance at the games
wishing to _astonish_ the audience, began by giving such a tremendous
blast on his instrument, that he expired on the spot, probably having
burst a blood vessel, and having literally blown himself out with his
first note. The audience was probably astonished.

The sacred games next in importance, were the Pythian. These games were
at first celebrated by the Delphians, every ninth year, but about 590 B.
C., the Amphyctions (another Grecian tribe) obtained the control of
them, and instituted them every fifth year. They took place on a plain
near Delphi, and were in honor of Apollo, commemorating his victory over
the serpent Python; the good principle defeating the evil principle, as
in Egyptian, and most other mythologies. Pindar’s odes have celebrated
the victories at some of these games. Being dedicated to Apollo, it was
but natural that music, (under this head, the Greeks understood most of
the accomplishments of the muses,) should play the most important part.

Religious poems were chanted, with an accompaniment upon the lyre or
phorminx. The first poet-musicians who gained the prize were
Chrysothemis,[22] Philammon, an earlier poet-musician than Homer, and
Thamyris. According to Pausanius, all these singers were probably
priests of Apollo. The Amphyctions first established prizes for songs
with flute accompaniment, and for flute _solos_. Cephallon obtained a
prize for songs accompanied by Kithara, a small lyre, and Echembrotus
one for songs with flute, while Sacadas of Argos took the prize three
consecutive times for his flute solos. After him came Pythocritus of
Sicyon, who won the prize at these games six consecutive times, which
covers an interval of _thirty years_ of triumphs.

Athletic sports also were introduced later. The prizes were, as at
Olympia, wreaths only.

The use of the flute both as solo instrument, and as accompaniment, was
however, soon abolished, it being used as funeral music, and for dirge
playing among the Amphyctions, and therefore having too many melancholy
associations to allow of its use in these festive games. Finally _solos_
on the small lyre (kithara) were allowed prizes.

It is said that at one of these contests a flute player gained the prize
in a singular manner. He was playing the straight flute, when the reed
in the mouth-piece became closed by accident, on which he instantly
changed the position of his instrument, and played it as an _oblique_
flute; his presence of mind was rewarded, by winning the prize.

The Nemean games were commemorative of the slaying of the Nemean lion,
by Hercules. There was no musical contest in the games, but flutes were
used, to stimulate the athletes, and were probably allowed prizes.

The Isthmian games celebrated upon the Isthmus of Corinth, whence their
name, were similar to the Nemean; music not being of any importance in
them.

In Chios there has been found a stone on which the names of the victors
in the musical contests are inscribed. From it we learn that prizes were
given for reading music at sight, rhapsodizing, accompanying the voice
with a small harp played with the hand, and accompanying with kithara
played partially with the fingers of the left hand, and partially with a
_plectrum_ held in the right hand.

The lesser games of Greece were also not inconsiderable. The great
festival of Athens was the Panathenæa, held in honor of Athene the
patron goddess of the city. It was established according to tradition,
about 1521 B. C., and was at first intended for the citizens of Athens
only. It took place about the middle of July.

At the later Panathenæa, the people of all Attica used to attend. There
seem to have been two divisions of this festival, a greater and lesser
Panathenæa, the former being celebrated every four years, the latter
every year. The lesser Panathenæa consisted of recitations, gymnastics,
musical competitions, and a torch race in the evening, the whole
concluding with the sacrifice of an ox. The greater, was even more
extensive. The Homeric poems were sung, dramatic representation took
place, magnificient processions marched to the temple of Athene Polias,
and the whole city was full of mirth and gayety. The prizes were jars of
oil made from the sacred tree on the Acropolis.

Pericles, (fifth century B. C.,) gave to music a greater prominence than
ever before in these games, by erecting a structure especially for
musical entertainments and contests, the Odeum, in the street of the
Tripod; this edifice was very well adapted in its acoustical properties,
for according to Plutarch’s description, the roof was dome-shaped, or
nearly so, and vast audiences could hear solos distinctly.

In Sparta, in the month of August (Carneios) there were celebrated the
great Carneian games, which lasted nine days. In these games musical
contests also took place, and dances of men, youths, and maidens, as
well as gymnastic exercises. Sparta also had a special building for
musical purposes. Theodore of Samos erected the Skias, a building for
musical uses, in the market place. Sparta was in fact, the cradle of
Grecian music.

In the early days, songs were learned and transmitted down, from mouth
to mouth. Homer’s poems were preserved in this manner for five hundred
years. In Sparta however, they first began to crystallize into form and
regularity. Yet strange to say, Sparta gave birth to no musicians of
eminence, even though she was so long the arbiter, and director of
Grecian musical taste.[23]

Terpander of Lesbos, one of the founders of Greek music, came early to
Sparta. He is reported to have gained the prize at the first musical
contest of the Carneian games, B. C. 676, and is said to have studied in
Egypt, but he certainly could not have done so before his first advent
in Sparta, for Egypt was at that date still closed to foreigners, and
had even guards set to prevent the landing of strangers by the sea.[24]

Terpander gained the Pythian crown four times in succession, and was the
most famous poet-musician of his time. His fame spread through all
Greece, but it was especially in Sparta that he won renown, for his
high, manly and earnest strains awoke a sturdy and manly response in the
bosoms of the rugged Spartans. It is probable however that at the first
visit to Sparta, his songs were not so powerful. At that time, (676 B.
C.) he probably sang chiefly the poems of Homer. We say _sang_, but it
is not even sure that they had, what we should call a tune, attached to
them; they were possibly recited in a musical pitch of voice, which
could not be called even a chant.

There was at this time, little music among the Spartans, and that of
rather martial, or else of religious character; as for example we learn
that the Spartans marched into battle to the sound of many kitharas, as
did also the Cretans, and it was supposed to have been in honor of the
Gods, that they did so; though Thucydides, more practically, says that
it was only that they might move forward regularly and in time. On
Terpander’s second visit to Sparta, he changed the entire mode of
Spartan music, and enlarged it. The return happened in this wise:—

At the beginning of the second Messenian war Sparta was in great
perplexity. Messenia by alliances with other tribes threatened
destruction from without. Within all was dissension; agriculture
prostrate, antagonism between those who had lost their lands through the
wars and those who possessed them, a demand for a new distribution of
land, and prospective anarchy. At this juncture, the Oracle of Delphi
was consulted, and gave reply that “discord would be quelled in Sparta
when the sound of Terpander’s harp was heard there,” and told the
Spartans, also to call the counsellor from Athens. So Terpander was sent
for, and also the counsellor Tyrtaeus from Athens.

The effect of Terpander’s songs upon the populace on this occasion is
described as something remarkable; men burst into tears, enemies
embraced each other, and all internal dissension was at an end.[25]

It is recorded therefore, that Terpander with his harp had quelled all
dissension in Sparta, but by this anecdote we may see that in what the
ancient Greeks called music, the words really played the most important
part. To show this yet more clearly, we will here give an instance from
later Athenian history where the same power was exerted for a similar
purpose. A war between Athens and Megara, for the possession of the
island of Salamis, had resulted in such continued disaster to Athens,
that the Athenians had left the island to its fate, and it was forbidden
upon penalty of death to broach the subject to the public again. Solon
however, attired himself as a messenger from the island to the
Athenians, and in this character sang a song which roused such a martial
spirit, that on the instant a large body of volunteers was formed, who,
under Solon, effected its reconquest.

Terpander and Tyrtæus composed most of their songs in march rhythm, and
after this the Spartans sang hymns, while marching into battle to the
sound of many kitharas, which were afterwards displaced by the more
penetrating flute.

Terpander also composed love songs, and banquet songs as well as nomes
or hymns, and his choruses were sung at all Spartan festivals and
sacrifices, they were taught to Spartan youths and maidens, and all
seemed to vie in doing him honor. He had really helped the music of
Greece to a higher plane, for it is said that he enlarged the lyre or
phorminx from four strings, to seven, and also made improvements in the
scale.

Contemporary with this poet-musician was Olympus, who must not however
be confounded with an Olympus who lived six hundred years previously,
that is, about 1250 B. C. Plato says that the music of Olympus was
especially adapted to animate the hearers. Plutarch says that it
surpassed in simplicity and effect, all other music. He is said to have
composed the air which caused Alexander to seize his arms, when it was
sung to him; according to Aristotle his music filled all hearers with
enthusiasm. Much relating to Olympus must however be relegated to the
land of myths. It has even been doubted whether he ever really existed,
though that is carrying scepticism too far.

Among the other characters which existed on the borderland of Greek
musical history, may be mentioned Polynestos, and Alcman who brought to
Sparta in its full glow, the love song, (Lydian measure). Alcman seems
to have been easily aroused to sing of female beauty, and composed some
choruses especially for the

  “Honey-voiced, lovely singing maidens,”

which were sung by female voices only.

The fragments which remain of Alcman’s verses do not justify the immense
fame which he seems to have enjoyed in Greece. Alcman was preceded by
Thaletas of Crete, who was sent for by the Spartans 620 B. C. to sing to
the Gods, in order that Sparta might be freed from a severe plague,
which was then ravaging the state. The plague ceased, and Thaletas for a
time stood at the head of all Spartan music. That country as above
mentioned, either would not, or could not encourage home talent.

Sacadas of Argos came soon after with a yet more luxurious style, and
introduced the flute as an accompaniment to chorus music.

To this foggy period of history, also belongs Tisias of Himera, who made
an indelible impression on Greek music. He was the first who regulated
the motions of the chorus, and who reduced chorus singing to a settled
system; from the fact that at one period of the song, (the _epode_, or
_finale_) he made the chorus stand quiet, instead of dancing he received
the nickname of “Stesichorus.” In some of the works of Stesichorus, one
can easily see the germ of the choruses of Æschylus or Sophocles.[26]

If in the ancient Grecian music, the composer, poet, and performer seem
to be spoken of in common, the reader must recollect that in those days,
_all three_ branches of the art were united in one individual. It will
also aid some readers, if we define here what the functions of the Greek
chorus were. In the earliest days, the whole chorus simply sang refrains
after the solo of some cultivated singer; gradually whole compositions
were entrusted to their charge. Pantomimic action probably always
existed in connection with their songs, as with almost all ancient
singing. Stesichorus first gave them different historical or
mythological subjects to act, in a dramatic manner. At a later epoch the
chorus entered in a peculiar manner into the action of the drama. They
stood upon the stage as interested spectators of the various events;
they advised the Protagonist or only individual character[27] as to his
course of action, and when some startling incident, a murder for
example, had taken place, they would strongly express their feelings,
horror, dismay or fear, and thereby intensify the effect upon the
audience.

An imitation of the Greek chorus may be found in Schiller’s “Bride of
Messina.”

Stesichorus was deservedly honored as the founder of Greek chorus music,
and a statue was erected to his memory. Among those next following his
era we find Ibycus, a poet-musician attached to the court of Polycrates,
tyrant of Samos. This mighty sea king and despot had a considerable
liking for music; for we learn also that he kept a choir of beautiful
boys, whose duty it was to sing sweet Lydian melodies during his meals.
About 580-70 B. C. Alcæus and Sappho became leaders in Grecian musical
culture, or poetry, for the two are inseparable. The two poets seem to
have formed a mutual friendship. Of Sappho we have remaining an ode to
Aphrodite which makes it a matter of regret that the remains of her
poetry are so fragmentary.[28] At Mytilene she seems to have gathered
around her a large and elegant circle, composed entirely of females to
whom she taught poetry and music; in fact her house must have been a
musical university for her list of scholars embraces names from all
parts of Greece. Ottfried Müller[29] compares her life, surrounded by
all these fair followers, with that of Socrates surrounded by the flower
of Athenian youth.

Sappho’s career is the more wonderful from the fact, that among the
ancient Greeks, the entire mission of woman was supposed to consist in
rearing her family, attending to the first education of her sons, who at
an early age passed into the hands of their teachers, teaching
housewife’s duties to her daughters, and attending to them herself;
according to Pericles, that woman was most to be prized of whom no one
spoke, either in praise or blame.

Sappho’s poetry had great effect even on the rough character of Solon,
the law giver; hearing for the first time one of her songs, which his
nephew sang to him, he vehemently expressed the wish that he might not
die before he had committed to memory so beautiful a song.

Sappho’s name is almost the only female one in the whole realm of
ancient Greek music, which was pure, noble, and uncontaminated.
Latterly, even her character has been assailed, but the accusation has
been refuted by Herr Welcker, of Bonn, (in the _Rheinisches Museum_,)
Ottfried Müller and other learned writers. After her, music as practiced
by the female sex, was handed over to the most degraded, (the _Hetarae_)
and seems to have borrowed from Egypt many lowering qualities,[30]
including dancing girls and ribald songs.

Anacreon of Teos, introduced into Greece the light, airy songs, in
praise of woman, wine, etc., “It is no great stretch of fancy,” says a
thoughtful writer,[31] “to imagine his songs as expressing our modern
_Allegretto Grazioso_, _Andante Scherzoso_, etc.”

From precisely this point however (the lack of signs of expression in
all Greek music) another writer[32] deduces the opinion that Greek music
must always have been in a crude state, and by no means of the beauty
which some enthusiasts ascribe to it.




                              CHAPTER VI.
               THE PHILOSOPHERS, AND GREEK SOCIAL MUSIC.


From the sixth century B. C., music may date its entrance into the
positive sciences, for Pythagoras, born about 570 B. C., first began to
analyze music from a scientific point of view, and to ascertain how far
it rested upon natural laws. Pythagoras is said to have been the son of
a wealthy merchant. He was as before mentioned, one of the earliest
Greeks in Egypt, and after having been instructed for some time by the
priests, had at last the honor of being admitted into the Egyptian
college of priesthood.

After remaining in Egypt twenty-two years, he spent some time among the
Chaldeans, and at last returned, full of wisdom, to his native Samos.
But here the sensuality of the court of Polycrates was so little to his
taste, that he departed to the city of Croton in southern Italy, where
he founded the order of Pythagoreans.

With the order itself, we have little to do, but when we consider that
its founder was the pioneer of scientific musical research, its
proceedings become in some degree interesting.

“All is number and harmony” was the fundamental maxim of this
philosopher,[33] and he sought for the laws in music, therefore, in
nature. This led to some mistakes of course, for the laws of nature had
not been made clear enough for thorough guidance, in that era. It is
said that Pythagoras one day, passing by a blacksmith’s shop heard the
blows of different hammers sound the fundamental, fourth, fifth, and
octave, and entering, he weighed the different hammers, thereby
obtaining the proportion of these intervals to each other.

This story has been proved to be a silly myth, for the proportions given
are wrong. He should have weighed the anvils not the hammers, and anvils
of such difference in size as would be requisite to produce these
intervals would not be seen in blacksmiths’ shops.

Pythagoras taught that not the ear, but mathematics, should be the guide
in music. He held that the universe was constructed on a musical plan,
and was probably the first to introduce among the Greeks the theory of
the music of the spheres. The fact that man could not hear this
music,[34] was explained by the statement that the sounds were either
too deep or too high for our ears. The reasoning was plausible enough,
and has been confirmed by science, for sounds of less than sixteen
vibrations in a second are inaudible on account of their depth, and
those exceeding 38,100 vibrations in a second are too high for the human
ear to perceive.[35] Starting from this premise Pythagoras formed a
scale founded on the seven planets, as known to the astronomers of that
time. This was its form:

   Moon.   Mercury.   Venus.     Sun.      Mars.   Jupiter.   Saturn.
     E         F         G         A         B         C         D

The sun was Mese, the controlling middle note, around which all the
others circled.

The order of Pythagoreans were held together by the firmest ties, and
Pythagoras has been, not inaptly, compared in this capacity with
Ignatius Loyola. His adherents, who numbered about three hundred were,
in most cases, wealthy and noble, and the power of the society was
always upon the side of aristocracy.

Pythagoras was very select in the admission of members, exercising great
vigilance lest improper or undesirable persons should be allowed to
enter; in this he was guided not a little by his skill in Physiognomy.
The initiates had, it is said, to pass through a most rigorous and
lengthy period of probation, they were obliged to maintain silence for
five years,[36] and in other ways had their powers of endurance,
severely tested. After entering the brotherhood,[37] the mode of life
was entirely dictated by Pythagoras. The members were clothed in pure
white. They were forbidden all animal food, and beans. They had
different grades of advancement among themselves, the highest being
undoubtedly instructed in a purer religion than that which obtained
around them, though outwardly they conformed with the religion of the
populace. Mathematics, music, and astronomy were studied, and gymnastics
regularly practised.

Playing upon the lyre was obligatory, and none of the order went to
sleep at night, without having previously purified his soul, and set it
in harmony through music; and at rising in the morning, the strength for
the day’s labors and duties, was sought for in the same manner.
Pythagoras wrote many songs as correctives to undue excitement and
passion; he is said once to have brought to reason a young man beside
himself with jealousy and wine, by the power of a song.

Clinias, a Pythagorean, took up his harp and played whenever any passion
arose in his breast; to a person who asked him the reason of the action,
he replied, “I play to compose myself.”

While the music of Terpander, Olympus, etc., was intended for high state
and religious purposes, that of Pythagoras was intended to bring the art
into domestic and inner life. Choruses were, however, also chanted by
his followers, and were adapted to various occasions, as for example, at
the opening of Spring, the scholars would gather in a circle around the
harper, who played the accompaniment, and sing pæans of welcome to the
opening season. Other philosophers also allowed music to enter into
their teachings, though not to so great a degree, but almost all of them
understood enough of music to form an opinion.

Plato seemed decidedly to object to instrumental music, for he says “the
using of instruments without the voice is barbarism and
charlatanry.”[38]

Aristotle was disposed to allow more freedom, for he spoke of music as a
delicious pleasure, either alone (instrumental) or accompanied with
voice; but in instrumental solos he admitted the lyre and kithara only,
and rejected the flute, which he thought not to be a moral instrument,
and only capable of inflaming the passions.

The philosophers as a class were really not very advantageous to musical
progress, for they fought tooth and nail for the old school of music.

They sought only moral effects by the means of great simplicity, and any
intricate innovations displeased them; but in spite of their resistance
the art began to improve.

The Skolion, or banquet song had a great influence on the music of
Athens. At the banquet, or symposium, the harp was passed from hand to
hand, and each person who made any pretence to education or good
breeding was expected to be able to improvise or at least to sing a good
_skolion_.

There was certainly in the time of Pericles, music enough to choose
from, for there is much evidence that the Athenians of that day
possessed an extensive library of music;[39] and it was in this era, the
early part of the fifth century B. C., that the social music reached its
height.

Themistocles once being present at a banquet had the harp (kithara)
presented to him, and was desired to sing his _skolion_; full of
confusion and shame he was obliged to acknowledge his ignorance of
music, and we can judge of the value in which the art was held, by the
sneers and jests which were pointed at him. At last stung to the quick
by the sharp witticisms, he retorted, “it is true I do not know how to
play the kithara, but I know how to raise an insignificant city to a
position of glory.”

The _skolion_ was a really poetical and worthy song, and must not be
confounded with those lower and vulgar songs which were sung to the
guests by hired jesters and buffoons.[40]

The subjects of the _skolion_ were sometimes of rather a lofty style;
praise of heroes,[41] calls to the gods, rules of life, often joyous,
sometimes sedate; but in all of them a less exact rhythm and style were
allowed than in other compositions. A few have been preserved to our
day; one begins, “my kingdom is my spear and sword,” another composed by
Chilon contains the following beautiful thought; “Gold is rubbed upon
the touchstone, and thus is tested, but the soul of man is tested by the
gold, if it be good or evil.” But the kithara, although used in the
_skolion_, was not the only instrument of the fashionable young men of
ancient Athens, for the flute found great favor among them; in fact
flute playing grew to be quite a mania for a time. It was part of the
musical education of youth. Most of the teachers of the instrument came
from Bœotia.

Flute players of ability were held in high honor; the art of flute
playing received such an impetus that different flute schools were
established in Athens; even rival methods of playing and teaching
existed.[42]

Flutes were played in almost every place where music was required, to
accompany hymns, at worship, and even sometimes the Greeks represented
the combat of Apollo and the Python on this instrument, with kithara
accompaniment; this may be considered as the earliest “song without
words” in existence.

The ancients had some other attempts at tone pictures. Once an Athenian
kitharist played to Dorian, a representation of a storm at sea; on being
asked how he liked it, that ancient wit answered, “I have seen a better
storm in a pot of boiling water.” This would make the origin of the
phrase “a tempest in a teapot,” over two-thousand years old.

Sometimes all Athens was divided into cliques for this or that flute
player; and the price paid for flutes were appalling, some being sold as
high as three thousand dollars, many flute-makers becoming immensely
wealthy.

It received a slight check however, when Alcibiades, about 409 B. C.,
declined to play it, alleging as a reason, that it spoilt the shape of
the mouth. Alcibiades stood at the head of the fashion as well as of the
state, and after such a _dictum_ the _beau monde_ of Athens laid aside
the flute; but some ingenious flute maker took alarm, and invented a
mouth-piece which obviated the difficulty, and which Alcibiades found
more to his taste, on which it resumed its place in popular favor.

In Sparta it led the chorus, and was the military instrument, but the
Spartans disdained to make it a study, and only felt bound, at this era,
to discriminate between good and bad music.

In some Ionian cities, the human victims were led to the sacrifice, or
to their execution to the sound of flutes; and this dead march (called
the Nome of Kradias) was said to be peculiarly depressing.

Plutarch makes a warm defence of the flute, against the criticisms of
Plato and Aristotle. “The flute” he says “cannot be spared from the
banquet, leads the hymns to the gods, and with its rich and full tones
spreads peace and tranquillity throughout the soul;” but we must
remember that this was written at a much later epoch, when flute playing
became more universal than in the days of Pericles, and when the
instrument had probably been altered and improved.

Flute players sometimes made large fortunes. Nicomachus was known for
his wealth in jewels acquired by his skill on the instrument.

Lamia was one of the most famous of Athenian flutists. This female was
celebrated through Greece and Egypt for her skill, as well as for her
wit and beauty. The latter was not overrated, for a portrait of her has
been discovered in a signet, which amply confirms the accounts of her
charms. Although born in Athens, she went early to Alexandria, in Egypt,
to study her art; somewhat as our modern musicians go to Italy or
Germany. She was received with open arms at the Egyptian court, and was
detained for a long time. Captured by Demetrius Polyorcetes, she soon
succeeded in conquering her conqueror, and on her return to Athens, a
temple was built to her, and she was worshipped under the name of _Venus
Lamia_. Her powerful “friend” Demetrius, may have had something to do
with this deification, but at all events, there were still left some
Greeks (Lysimachus for example) who had the manliness to protest against
the desecration, for the character of Lamia was far different from that
of Sappho.

It was not flute players only who earned immense salaries, for we learn
that Amabœus the kitharist, received nearly one thousand dollars for
each performance, and all flute-players, and kitharists, were welcomed
and honored at the courts of Greece, Egypt and Asia.

Ptolemy Philadelphus gave a large musical festival in Alexandria, Egypt,
about 280 B. C., at which six hundred skilled singers, kitharists and
flutists assisted; there have been larger festivals in point of numbers
in ancient times, but few, where so much educated talent assisted.
Ptolemy Physcon[43], an amiable Egyptian ruler, 146 B. C., who married
his brother’s wife, killed his baby nephew, or step-son on the wedding
day and afterwards married his niece, or step-daughter (for he made the
relationship very mixed) winding up by killing all the progeny as
_finale_, seems to have patronized and enjoyed music, in spite of his
family troubles.

Ptolemy Auletes, 80 B. C., was known as the “flute lover,” and though
king of Egypt was yet a very skilful virtuoso on this instrument.

We must not omit here to mention a species of Greek music which was an
outgrowth of the sacred games.

We have already stated how great the honor of achieving a victory at
these games was considered; and it was very natural that when a whole
city celebrated with joy the triumph of one of its sons, the poets would
also sing in high strains, the praises of the successful hero. These
poems soon became a necessary adjunct to the festivities, and may be
said to form a school of their own. They were chanted by a chorus under
the direction of the composer; and although at first they may have been
spontaneous, yet afterwards they became entirely a matter of purchase.

When a young man had carried off the victor’s wreath, he would
frequently send word at once to some famous poet-musician, to write a
chorus in his honor. Sometimes the city itself would order the poem, and
in Athens about 540 B. C., statues began to be erected to the victors
who were natives of that city.[44] Simonides, born about 556 B. C., may
be regarded as the founder of this style of composition, and he
certainly was the founder of the custom of receiving pay for laudatory
verses.

His contemporaries sneered greatly at him for this, and Pindar proves
him to have been very avaricious, but it really seems to have been no
more than just that the poet should have been compensated for his
exertions, as he not only had to write the poetry and music for the
occasion, but also to drill the chorus and lead the singing.

The ceremony of praise to the victor was either celebrated at the
conclusion of the games, upon the spot, or upon his return home;
sometimes also in after years, to keep alive the remembrance of past
triumphs.

The festivities were both religious and social. They began with a
procession to the temple, after which sacrifices were offered, either in
the temple, or in the victor’s house; this was followed by a banquet, to
which came the poet with his chorus, and intoned the triumphal ode, the
latter being considered the greatest event of the occasion.[45]

Simonides seems to have been in the market for all kinds of Epinikia, or
triumphal odes. Leophron of Rhegion, having won a race with mules at one
of these games, ordered a chorus on the subject from the poet; Simonides
felt a little indignant at the proposal and replied, curtly “I don’t
sing about mules,” but Leophron being very anxious in the matter,
offered a large price, upon which Simonides reconsidered his
determination, and wrote the ode. It began by saluting the mules in an
ingenious manner, only noticing one side of their ancestry,—“Hail! oh ye
daughters of the stormy footed horse.”

Simonides was not wholly, however, in this lower line of poetry; he
often competed in public musical, or poetical contests, and won
fifty-six oxen and tripods by such means. Even at eighty years of age he
added another to his lengthy list of victories. He was also considered
as very learned, and was sometimes reckoned among the philosophers.

One of his chief competitors at Athens, was Lasus of Hermione, who was a
practical and theoretical musician of some eminence.

Among the works of Lasus, there are some which are curiously
constructed. In his hymn to Diana, and in the Centaurs, the letter S
(sigma) is entirely avoided. The flute-players who accompanied the
choruses greatly disliked the hissing sound of S. as it did not blend
easily with their playing, and it was this fact which probably led Lasus
to so curious a style of poetry.

Among the scholars of Lasus was Pindar, (born in the spring of 522 B.
C.,) who came from a noble Theban family. Pindar’s parents were musical,
and there were several flute-players in his family, but he soon became
far more than a mere flute-player. He came to Athens, to study music, at
a very early age, for after his return to Thebes he began a further
course of studies under Corinna and Myrtis, two famous poetesses, then
in Bœotia, all of which was done before his twentieth year.

He strove in public contests with the two latter, but always
unsuccessfully; Corinna defeated him five times, which result, Pausanius
thinks, may have been partly due to her personal charms.

Corinna once offered to beautify Pindar’s early efforts with
mythological allusions, but on his bringing her a poem, the first six
verses of which touched on every part of Theban Mythology, she smiled
and said: “One must sow seed by handsfull, not by bagsfull.”

Pindar’s poetic career began very early, for at twenty years old he
wrote his first Epinikion (triumphal ode), in honor of a youth of the
tribe of Aleuads.[46] His services were soon sought for throughout all
Hellas; for although he imitated Simonides in writing for hire, yet his
muse was unquestionably a nobler one, and his _Epinikia_ bear an air of
heartiness which seems to be unfeigned. His songs were bolder and truer,
and not altogether composed of flattery, and he seems to have been an
eye-witness of many of the triumphs which he describes.

He also was engaged as poet to Hiero, of Syracuse, Alexander, (son of
Amyntas of Macedonia,) Theron of Agrigentum, Arcesilaus, King of Cyrene,
and for several free states; with the two former he was an especial
favorite, and yet his position never seemed that of a parasite, or a
courtier, for he told them the truth bluntly when occasion demanded. His
life was chiefly spent in the courts of his various royal friends. He
once resided at the court of Hiero, at Syracuse, for the space of four
years.

He died at the advanced age of eighty years.

The names of Simonides and Pindar may be considered as the greatest in
this branch of Greek music and poetry; and although the subjects were of
local interest only, yet Pindar has invested them with such beautiful
imagery that he has shown us (to alter the phrase of an ancient,) that
it is better to be a great man in a small art, than a small man in a
great one.




                              CHAPTER VII.
                       GREEK THEATRE AND CHORUS.


Among the many institutions which contributed to that polished
civilization which was the glory of ancient Greece, none were higher in
aspirations, or more prolific in results, than the Tragedies and
Comedies which were at certain intervals presented in the Theatre at
Athens. The Athenians were by this agency, brought to a cultivated
discrimination in music and poetry, and as we shall see later, the
choruses being chosen from the body of the people, and demanding an
amount of musical ability in the members, caused the study of music to
become almost a necessity to all.[47]

In its early days the Drama, (if it be worthy of the name,) must have
been a mere masquerading on any raised platform. It had its origin in
the festivities of Dionysius (Bacchus), for at the earliest Dionysian
festivals, the populace smeared their faces in wine lees, and thus
disguised, sang choruses in honor of this god of mirth.

In later times, linen masks were substituted, but only in the days of
Thespis, did the art assume some regular shape.

Comedy may be said to have arisen about 562 B. C., when Susarion and
Dolon travelled around, caricaturing the vices and follies of their
time, from a rude scaffold.

The first Tragedy was acted in Athens, by Thespis, from a wagon, in the
year 535 B. C. In the same year Thespis received a goat as reward for
playing “Alcestis” at Athens. Goats were frequently given as rewards for
this kind of composition, and the word Tragedy is derived by some, from
the words Tragos, a goat, Odé, a song, literally a “goat-song.”

The earliest attempt at dramatic action, with a plot, or incident to
give it connection, was the representation of the gift of the grape to
mankind, by Dionysius; this required three _dramatis personae_,
therefore Thespis changed his linen mask three times.

Solon was not well pleased with the new art; striking his stick upon the
ground he said: “If this sort of thing were allowed and praised, it
would soon be found in the market-place;” and to Thespis who was singing
a recitation in the character which he was acting, he said: “Are you not
ashamed to lie so?”

Solon had probably forgotten that when he aroused the Athenians to the
reconquest of Salamis, he had assumed the character of a herald from the
island. Solon had predicted right however, the drama became the most
cherished institution of Greece; even in its earliest stages, the state
fostered it, and it always attracted the peons for it was both a
religious, and popular enjoyment.

The sons of Pisistratus did much in these days to encourage and
stimulate it. They arranged contests, rewards, etc., with profusion.

The tragedies of Thespis which he both wrote and acted himself, had but
one performer, who, rapidly changing his mask, assumed various different
characters in the play. The monotony was soon felt, and in order that
dialogues might be used, a chorus was introduced, and then much of the
action consisted of duets between the solitary performer, or
_protagonist_, and the chorus.

Phrynicus, a few years later, allowed this single actor to take both
male and female characters; but the first thorough representation of
tragedy, with its properties carefully attended to, is due to the great
tragic poet Æschylus, who instructed the actor and the chorus carefully,
and gave attention to thoroughness in its every department so far as
then known.

The platform and auditorium were still uncouth wooden structures, until
a poetical contest took place between Phrynicus and others, when the
benches were so crowded that the whole structure gave way and many were
injured; after this the theatres were built of stone.

The performances were still regarded as belonging to religious rites;
the seats were at first built in a semi-circle around the altar of
Dionysius, and the theatre never became, as with us, an every-day
matter, but was only used at certain Dionysian festivals, which occurred
about three times each year. Æschylus aimed very much at the terrible in
his tragedies, and the poets of this era never sought to “hold the
mirror up to nature,” but rather to represent something awe-inspiring
and supernatural; therefore the actors had to prepare themselves in many
peculiar ways for the stage.

The characters of tragedy were represented as much larger than human
beings; to effect this the tragedian wore a kind of stilt-shoes with
very high heels, called _cothurne_, padded out his body in proportion to
his height, lengthened his arms by adding an artificial hand, and wore a
mask of large size, over his face. The stage upon which he appeared, was
also elevated above that on which the chorus stood, and the latter not
being artificially enlarged, must have appeared as pigmies, beside these
gigantic heroes.

The voice was pitched in a style corresponding to the magnitude of the
body; it has been suggested[48] that the large tragic mask may have
concealed some contrivance for strengthening the voice; however this may
be, it is certain that the voice of the tragedian needed to be metallic,
solemn and majestic, and that this, though partly a natural gift, had to
be strengthened by long and severe practice, and a vast amount of
physical strength was also required to move about naturally when so
extremely bundled up.

Lucian in his “_De saltatione_,” ridicules the tragic actor’s equipment.
He says: “What a ridiculous thing it is, to see a fellow stalking around
upon a pair of high heeled boots, with a terrible mask on, and a wide
gaping mouth, as if he intended to swallow the audience,[49] not to
mention the unseemly thickness of breast and body, all of which is done
to hide the disproportion between his extravagant height, and his meagre
body. Bawling aloud, and writhing his body in a thousand odd gestures;”
and then he alludes to the better singing and acting of previous time,
“but all sense of fitness is lost,” he concludes, “when Hercules enters
singing a mournful ditty, without either lion’s skin or club.”

With regard to the immovable mask, Ottfried Müller supposes that the
picture is overdrawn, for facial expression had far less to do with the
action of the drama of that day than we imagine; the character had not
so many changing emotions to depict, as in modern plays; he says[50] “we
can imagine an Orestes, or a Medea, with a set countenance, but never a
Hamlet or Tasso.”

We must also remember that the vast extent of the Athenian Theatre, made
it next to impossible to distinguish much play of feature, and that the
same masks were not worn throughout the play, but changed at any great
change of emotion. Oedipus in the tragedy by Sophocles, after
misfortunes came upon him, wore a different mask from the one worn in
his days of prosperity.

The first plays represented were relative to the history of the gods,
and demi-gods, but Phrynicus made a bold innovation by representing
contemporaneous events upon the stage. He once ventured to represent the
conquest of Miletus, from the Athenians; the effect, according to
Herodotus, was startling, the whole audience burst into tears, and the
Athenian government forbade any further plays on that subject,
prohibited the piece from ever being represented again, and fined the
poet heavily.

The contests between rival writers, by simultaneous production of their
pieces was a fruitful source of jealousy. Æchylus upon being vanquished
in one of these by Sophocles, took his defeat so much to heart, that he
left Athens for some years, and took up his residence in Sicily.

In the plays of Thespis and Phrynicus, one actor only was employed;
Æchylus enriched his works by adding a second performer, called the
_Deuteragonist_. Sophocles went beyond by adding the third, or
_Tritagonist_, and desired even more, for in his Oedipus in Colonus, he
found that four players were a necessity, and wrote the tragedy for that
number, but dared not publicly make the innovation, and therefore this
great work remained unperformed until after his death.

The above mentioned three performers, had their distinct lines of duty,
as we to-day have upon the stage, actors for each kind of character, but
the distinction was carried to great height on the ancient stage, for
the first actor always came on the stage from the right entrance, the
second from the left, and the third from the centre.

The stage of the Athenian theatre was very wide but not deep, and the
scenery was very simple; sometimes the house of the chief character was
represented, sometimes the tent of a hero, but oftenest the entrance of
a palace, before which the entire action of some dramas could take
place. They were always exterior views, and no scenes of the interior
parts of a dwelling were ever used. The whole active life of the Greek
was passed in the open air, so that it seemed more natural to him to
represent his characters as living similarly. The female characters were
often personated by boys.

There were many expedients to make the following of the action of the
play easier to the spectators, in such a vast space; programmes they had
not, opera glasses did not exist, so certain formulae took the place of
both; when standing on the stage of the Athenian theatre, and facing the
audience, the harbor and city of Athens were on the left hand, and
Attica on the right; a person entering from the right hand, was
therefore presumed to be a stranger who had come over land; and from the
left as coming from the city.

The stage also possessed some mechanical effects, such as chariots
descending from the skies, birds or even immense beetles soaring aloft
carrying persons with them, forms arising from the deep, thunder,
lightning, etc. The chorus was an immense help to the audience in
following the events of the piece, and we must now describe this
characteristic part of Greek tragedy.

The dramatic chorus probably appeared first as Satyrs, the natural
attendants of the jolly god Dionysius, in the plays of Thespis, and were
then numerous and ill disciplined.

Æchylus lessened the part of the chorus in his tragedies, and they no
longer sang an unceasing duet with the Protagonist, for the addition of
a second actor, made dialogues possible without their assistance.

The number of _Choryeutes_ (chorus players) in Æchylus’s tragedies was
twelve; Sophocles, and Euripides had usually fifteen.

In the tragedy of the “Eumenides” there was a special chorus of fifty
members; these were apparelled as the hideous furies of that name, all
in black, with angry countenances, snakes twining in their hair, and
blood dripping from their eyes; and suddenly these frightful apparitions
appeared on the stage: the effect was terrible, women shrieked, and fell
in convulsions, and several children died of fright. This event proves
that the stage effects were rather realistic in those days.

The chorus was felt as an inconvenience by Euripides, who yet could not
break the shackles of custom sufficiently to do away with it.

The arrangement of the chorus was changed when it was transplanted from
lyric to dramatic use. The dithyrambic chorus stood around an altar
singing hymns, and was wholly occupied with its music: the dramatic
chorus stood in the shape of a square, the director taking good care to
place the best dressed and handsomest choryeutes in front.

The songs were accompanied with well regulated movements, usually of a
stately and dignified character, such as befitted the characters which
they were representing, the parts which they performed usually being
those of Matrons or Patriarchs, who were best suited to give counsel,
comfort, or admonition to the acting characters of the drama.

The formation of choruses, was a matter of legislation. The archon of
the city, gave the task of forming the choruses, to some of the wealthy
citizens, who had the title of _Choregus_. This person was not the
chorus leader, but the founder of it. He had authority from the archon
to receive and select able singers; when he had the organization formed,
he engaged a _choryphaeus_ or director, to instruct the members in
singing and dancing; he engaged flute-players[51] to accompany them, and
paid a regular salary to them all, that of the flute-players being
higher than that of the singers. He had to board and lodge them; to
supply them with good beverages during rehearsals; to see that they
received nutritious food, and such as was good for their voices; to
supply them with masks, and costumes for their parts, and other duties
all tending to the well being of the chorus. The choregus received no
pay for this, but if in a dramatic contest his chorus was adjudged to be
the best, he received a wreath as a reward.

Expensive as this honor was, yet it was sought after by all the richer
class of Athens, as it was an ostentatious manner of showing their
munificence, for the tragic choruses vied with each other in the
splendor of their attire, their costumes being superb mantles of gold,
and purple. So costly was it that the saying became a well known jest,
that the way to ruin a man, was to get him appointed choregus.

The costume of the actors was also rich, without much reference to the
part they were playing. Hercules came on the stage in purple and gold
instead of with a lion’s skin.

The poet who had just completed a tragedy, and succeeded in obtaining a
hearing for it, applied to the Archon for a chorus; that functionary, if
he had confidence in the applicant, would assign him one of the choruses
which had already been formed and on receiving the permission from the
_choregus_, the composer would set to work, drilling them in their
various songs, attitudes, and movements. The director did not use a
stick for this purpose, as in modern days, but beat the time with a
heavy pair of iron shoes which he put on for the purpose.[52] The chorus
of comedy was a less expensive and smaller affair. The music which it
sang was also less difficult and grand.

The comedy chorus consisted of twenty-four members, who came on the
stage in detachments of six each.

The comedy costumes of both actors and chorus were something like what
we are accustomed to see in farce or pantomime; there was something
comical and exaggerated about them, which occasioned mirth of itself.
The masks were decidedly comic, and usually caricatured the countenance
of some public person well known to the audience. The comedy, especially
in the older days that of Aristophanes sought to teach the people by
holding up to ridicule, all such persons or measures as seemed to the
poet worthy of censure; therefore it dealt almost exclusively with the
events of the day, and such characters as Alcibiades, Socrates, Cleon,
etc., are constantly appearing, and in the most mirth-provoking manner.

It is a matter of regret, however, that Aristophanes wielded so much
influence, for he brought it to bear against Socrates, whom he was
narrow-minded enough to take as the representative of Sophistry, and
raised a popular feeling against him by his comedy of “The Clouds,” in
which he attributed the most interested motives to that grand
philosopher.

It is unfortunate for Cleon that the caricature of Aristophanes was
accepted as a portrait, and he has come down to us only as the noisy
impudent demagogue, as portrayed in “The Knights;” yet Cleon must have
been a rough and sturdy leader of the populace, to have attained so much
power.[53]

Aristophanes was aristocratic in his tendencies, and could not forgive
the tanner, for having risen from his humble sphere.

It required much courage however to attack the leader of the democracy,
with such boldness. Even the mask makers refused to make the comic mask
of Cleon; and when the mask was obtained no actor dared to play the
character, so that Aristophanes was obliged to act it himself. Cleon
embroiled Aristophanes in three lawsuits in consequence of his audacity.

The choruses of these comedies had sometimes to assume very odd parts,
as in the two comedies of the “Birds,” and the “Wasps,” where they
represented those creatures. The masks were made to correspond to the
character assumed, and in “The Wasps” each man had a short spear or
sting, which they sometimes thrust out, or drew in, and the whole chorus
would sometimes move about quickly with a buzzing noise. The wasps were
a satire upon the swarm of Athenian magistrates.[54]

One is forcibly reminded in these plays of the recent inventions of the
French _Opera Bouffe_.

In the later comedies, private intrigues began to form the plot, and
there was no great difference between these and the plays of modern
times.




                              CHAPTER VII.
                     THE DANCES OF ANCIENT GREECE.


The dances of Greece were of considerable variety, and seem to have been
both refined and coarse in their character. The earliest were probable
merely military manœuvres, which were performed to songs, or to
accompaniment of flute or kithara: or festival dances at the
Bacchanalian or Dionysian revels. The chief dances may be classed as the
Pyrrhic, the Cordax, and the Emmeleia.

The chorus itself, in very early times, was, in some parts of Greece
only used to heighten the effect of a solo song, by its pantomimic
dancing.

In Crete, youths and maidens joined hands and danced in a circle; in the
centre of such a circle sat the musician, who sang to the accompaniment
of a kithara, while the chorus expressed by their actions, _not by
singing_, the various emotions which he chanted.

The Pyrrhic, or war dance, was the pride of all Greece, and all young
men studied it.

In Sparta there was a law that all parents should send their sons, above
the age of five years, to the public place, to have them instructed in
the armed dance; on these occasions they were led by the teachers who
made them sing hymns, etc., as they danced. The Pyrrhic was in fact, a
mock battle, in four parts, representing the pursuit, overtaking,
combat, and capture of the enemy, and was used as drill, to make young
men proficient in the use of their weapons; it was accompanied by flute,
which instrument was the one which the Greeks thought aroused the
energies most.

The origin of the Pyrrhic is given as follows,—When Zeus, (Jupiter) was
born, his father Kronos, (Saturn) knowing that he should be dethroned by
him sought his life; he was hidden by the Corybantes, who on Kronos’
coming near, fearing that the child would be discovered by its crying,
began to dance about, and clashed their swords and shields, thus
drowning its voice and saving its life.

Dancing was equal, and often combined, with singing, and was held in the
highest estimation by the upper classes, and even the philosophers of
ancient Greece; though of course only in its higher branches, the lower
being usually abandoned to paid performers, as we to-day draw a wide
distinction between a fashionable ball-room dance, and a ballet, though
both are called dancing.

Skill in dancing, was a most envied accomplishment, for it meant both
grace, and the talent of expressing all emotions without words.

Lucian[55] says the real art of the dance is to express an action, and
gives a long list of mythological and historical deeds which were suited
to representation. “The dancer” he says “must understand history,
mythology, rhetoric,” etc.

One person performed the whole dance, no matter how many characters were
included in the action, and therefore he had to change his dress
sometimes with much rapidity. The Proteus of the fables, is imagined to
have been only a dancer skilled in sudden changes.

The philosophers not only praised, but practised the art. Plato led a
chorus of dancing boys; and considered those to be rough, uncouth churls
who disliked so pleasant a gift of the gods.[56]

Alcibiades danced in public, arrayed in great splendor. Sophocles was a
celebrated dancer, and leader of dancing; while yet a boy, after the
Greek victory at Salamis, he is said to have danced (according to some,
naked) before the trophies.

Socrates often entertained his guests with dancing, and studied it
himself at an advanced age.[57]

Exact information respecting the dance is lacking, some commentators
deeming it to have been very like our modern ballet, others maintaining
that there was a vast difference; Czerwinski and Wieland hold the former
opinion, and to all appearance justly. Some erudite writers have
endeavored to give the most circumstantial accounts of the ancient
manner of dancing.

Meibomius, one of the earliest writers on this subject, endeavored to
dance an ancient Greek dance to an ancient Greek tune, before the court
of Sweden, and Scaliger in the sixteenth century danced the Pyrrhic
dance fully armed, before the Emperor Maximilian;[58] both assumed far
too much knowledge in the matter.

There were undoubtedly numerous dancing schools, and possibly also some
set figures prescribed in certain dances, but these figures had no names
attached to them, and cannot be determined with certainty. The time was
marked as in chorus, by a leader, tapping on the floor with heavy iron
shoes. There are indications that a dance similar to the Virginia reel,
and other contra dances were known to them; also a dance which resembled
the game of “follow-my-leader,” where all imitated the postures and
gestures of a leader.

Many variations were allowed; Cleisthenes having promised the hand of
his daughter to the most successful dancer among her lovers,
Hippoclides, of Athens, tried an innovation on the usual style; having
danced the Emmeleia, or tragic dance successfully, he ordered the
attendants to bring him a table, upon which he sprang, and standing on
his head gesticulated with _his legs_. Cleisthenes indignant at this new
departure, exclaimed “Oh son of Tisander you have undanced your
marriage;” Cleisthenes caring more for his skill than for his marriage,
replied “that is perfectly immaterial to me.”

The Emmeleia, was the stately dance belonging to tragedy, and was the
one most practised by the poets of that time, as they were often obliged
to teach it to the chorus, thus adding the business of dancing master,
to their already numerous duties.

The Sicinis was a dance of demi-gods, and was suited to the immense
figure of the heroes of tragedy, already described. There was also a
dance representing Theseus wandering about in the labyrinth, the figures
of which must have been very twisted and irregular.

There was a species of dancing at banquets and revels, by paid female
performers, at which the shape and form of the dancer were as lavishly
displayed as in the modern ballet.[59]

The Cordax, or comic dance was throughout vulgar and unseemly, and no
Athenian could dance it unmasked, without bringing down upon himself the
reproach of the greatest impudence and immodesty. It was so outrageous
that the comic poets often tried to do without it. Aristophanes, in “The
Clouds” prides himself that he does not use it in that comedy. The
_cordax_ was a dance wherein the utmost vulgarity was not only allowed
but _demanded_.[60]

Lucian in his treatise “_de Saltatione_” intimates the existence of
various other dances which in his day had fallen into desuetude, as the
dance of the _Cranes_; also the Phrygian dance, which was only to be
danced when the performers were drunk, and jumped about, with uncouth
irregular leaps to the music of the flute.

Lucian also gives a specimen of the raillery of the people, when the
dancer was not suited to the part; when a small person undertook to act
Hector, they would call out, “we want Hector, not Astyanax.” To a fat
dancer, on making a leap they called “be careful, you’ll break the
stage;” and to a lean, sickly looking dancer they cried “go home, and
nurse yourself, never mind dancing.” Such little remarks are not
unsuited to the _gamins_ of the New York or London theatres.

We have dwelt rather long upon Greek Music, Theatre Chorus, and Dancing,
but the subject has more than usual interest, as in the Greek art, of
all descriptions, we find the seeds from whence has sprung our own.




                             CHAPTER VIII.
                          ANCIENT ROMAN MUSIC.


Art-love was not a distinguishing characteristic of the ancient Romans,
and we are not astonished therefore, to find them borrowing music from
Etruria, Greece, and Egypt; originating nothing, and (although the study
was pursued by the Emperors) never finding anything higher in its
practice than a sensuous gratification.

In the earliest days of Rome, the inhabitants were exclusively farmers,
or warriors, and their first temples were raised to Ceres, or to Mars.

The priests of Ceres came originally from Asia Minor, and were called
the Arval Brotherhood; flute-playing was a prominent feature in their
rites, and they were all proficient upon that instrument. Their number
was limited to twelve.

The worship of Mars was conducted by the Salian priests, whom Numa
summoned to Rome, from Etruria. These also used the flute as an
accessory to their sacrificial rites. In these primitive days of Rome,
much was borrowed from the Etruscans, in style and instruments of music.

The earliest songs of Rome were in praise of Romulus, and told the story
of the twin brothers, and the divine origin of the city. They were sung
by choruses of boys. Similar songs were sung during meals by the elders,
with an accompaniment of flutes; these latter songs being especially
directed to the young men and inciting them to be worthy of the deeds of
their ancestors.[61]

Under the rule of the Emperors, all these worthy compositions went to
decay, and were replaced by a much more degrading school of music. At no
time, however, was music considered a necessary part of the education of
Roman youth.

There existed in the later days of ancient Rome, some music schools, but
the study was far less universally pursued, than in Greece, at the same
epoch. The musical course, has been given by Quintilian, as follows,—

  Theoretical
    1st
      Arithmetic
      Physics
    2nd
      Harmony
      Rhythm
      Metrics
  Practical
    Composition
      Rhythm
      Melody
      Poetry
    Execution
      Playing Instruments
      Singing
      Dramatic Action

Which makes a rather formidable array, even to modern eyes.

Among the Roman musical instruments, the flute was the most popular, and
essentially national. We have already stated, that it was used in the
worship of their two chief deities; it was in secular use to a yet
greater extent.

This flute (Tibia) was hooped with brass bands, and had an immense
resonance. It was used by both sexes, but in public, and on most
religious occasions, was played by men.

The frequency with which it was used, made the art of playing it, a most
remunerative one, and the flute-players soon formed themselves into a
guild, or protective society. This guild had many privileges accorded to
it, and existed for a period of some centuries. The “Guild of Dionysian
Artists” was a society of later date, and was a Musical Conservatory,
Academy, and Agency all in one. It flourished greatly under the
patronage of various Roman Emperors, and for a long time supplied
singers and actors to the Roman world.

Valerius Maximus[62] has given an anecdote which shows how powerful, and
exacting the Guild of flute-players could afford to be.

They were one day excluded from the Temple of Jupiter, where they had
been allowed, by ancient custom, to take their meals; upon which the
entire Guild left Rome, and went to the village of Tibur near by. This
caused great embarrassment, no religious services could be held, and
scarce any state ceremony properly conducted. The senate thereupon sent
an embassy to induce them to return; in vain, the angry musicians were
inflexible. The wily embassadors then called the inhabitants of Tibur to
their aid, and these pretended to give a great feast, to welcome the
flute-players. At this feast, the musicians were all made very drunk,
and while asleep from the effects of their liquor, they were bundled
into chariots and driven back to Rome, where all their old privileges
were restored, and newer, and greater ones added.

They received the right to give public representations, and spectacles,
in Rome; but at these they were always masked, the reason given, being
their shame at the manner of their inglorious return to the city.

Flutes were used at funerals, and it appears that at one time the luxury
and pomp of Roman obsequies grew so excessive that a law was passed
limiting the number of flute-players on such occasions to ten.

Only at one time did the flute disappear from any public worship, and
that was when the worship of Bacchus was introduced into Rome. To this
rite the kithara was used; but this worship which was somewhat refined,
though jovial, among the Greeks, became among the Romans so debauched
and uxorious, that it was soon prohibited by law.

The flute was used in combination with other instruments at times.
Apuleius speaks of a concert of flutes, kitharas and chorus, and
mentioned its deliciously sweet effect. It was also used as a pitch
pipe, to give orators a guide in modulating their voices when addressing
an assembly; thus Caius Gracchus always on such occasions, had a slave
behind him, whose duty it was to aid him to commence his orations in a
proper pitch, and when his voice sank too low, or became too shrill, to
call him to better intonation by the sounds of the flute.

Although the flute was the favorite Roman instrument, it was by no means
the only one. Trumpets were used to a great extent. A one-toned trumpet
of very loud voice, was used for battle signals. These were of very
large size, usually of brass, and their sound is described as
“terrible.” There was also a smaller, shepherd’s trumpet of mellower
tone.

Another much used instrument, of peculiar character, was the
_sumphonium_ which did not differ materially from the modern
bag-pipe.[63]

Instruments of percussion, were few, and not indigenous to the Romans;
such as were used came from the East, and were chiefly used in the
worship of Eastern deities, at Rome. When the worship of Bacchus was
prohibited, they passed away, with that licentious rite. The most
complicated instrument of the ancient world, appeared in Rome during the
first century of our era. It was an _Organ_, not as in the scriptural
days a mere syrinx, or Pans-pipes, but an undoubted organ somewhat
similar in its effect to our modern instrument.

The instrument is said to have been invented by Ctesebius of Alexandria,
in Egypt, who lived about 250 B. C. They did not appear extensively in
Rome however, until nearly 300 years later. This organ has given rise to
much fruitless discussion. In the field of musical history especially,
“a little knowledge” has proved “a dangerous thing,” for where slight
descriptions exist of instruments or music, latitude is left for every
writer to form his own theory, to fight for it, and denunciate those who
differ from it.

We have seen what a battle was fought over the three little manuscripts
of Greek music, what a host of differing opinions were held about the
Scriptural word “Selah,” and now about this hydraulic organ, each writer
mounts his hobby horse, and careers over the field of conjecture.
Vitruvius, has given a full description of the instrument from personal
inspection, but as his technical terms have lost all significance to
modern readers, and have been translated in various ways, and as his
work contained no diagrams, or illustrations of the various parts, it is
useless.

Some writers[64] imagine the organ to have had seven or eight stops,
that is, so many different _kinds_ of tones, which would place them
nearly on a par with our own. Others[65] think that they possessed seven
or eight _keys_, that is so many _tones_ only. It has been a point of
dispute as to what function the water performed in working it. Vitruvius
is rather hazy on this point, saying only that it is “suspended” in the
instrument. The water, when the organ was played was in a state of
agitation, as if boiling.

There are medals still in existence, which were awarded to victors in
organ contests, on which this instrument is represented, with two boys
blowing or pumping, but the representation is too small to clear up any
doubtful points.

So much is certain, the organs were very powerful in tone, being
therefore the instruments best adapted to the large amphitheatres of
Rome, and were extremely popular, for it was complained that young men
forsook their other studies to learn to play them. The only possibility
yet remaining that their construction may be known to us, is in the
chance of discovering one in Pompeii.[66]

The functions of music in Rome were similar, though in a less degree, to
its uses in Greece. At the sacrifice, the banquet, the contest, and the
theatre, music was always an important adjunct. Prophets sometimes
inspired themselves by it, as in the east.

There were various games, public and private, at which competition in
music took place. But it was not, as in Greece, an art of simplicity and
feeling; the love of the extraordinary, the colossal and _outre_, the
desire for the most vulgar modes and excess of obscenity, soon degraded
the art from the rude simplicity it possessed in the days of the
republic.[67]

This desire for colossal effects was apparent in the Roman games. Seneca
says that in Nero’s time, the chorus was more numerous than formerly the
whole audience. Hosts of trumpeters, flute-players, etc., crowded the
stage. It is also well illustrated in the splendor of the Triumph.

Triumphs were of two kinds, the lesser of which was called _Ovatio_, and
was decreed for unimportant or easily-gained victories.

The grand Triumph (for important victories) was the highest military
honor that could be bestowed.

When it had been decreed by the Senate, the victorious General entered
Rome by the triumphal gate, where he was met by a procession of the
entire Senate; here he gave an oration in praise of the valor of his
army, and entering his triumphal chariot, the procession began. The
order was as follows:—

Musicians, singing and playing. These were chiefly trumpeters, and the
singers chanted triumphal songs.

The Senate and Magistrates.

The animals for the sacrifice, usually oxen, with their horns gilt, and
decked with garlands, accompanied by the priests.

Music, flute players, to assist at the sacrificial rites.

Wagons, filled with statues, plate, armor, ensigns, etc., the spoil
captured from the enemy.

The tribute from various countries, usually golden crowns, or ornaments
sent to grace the occasion.

The captive leaders, kings, or generals, with their wives, in chains.

Lictors with the fasces twined with laurel.

Musicians and dancers dressed as Satyrs, crowned with gold. In the midst
of these was a mimic, dressed as a female, who by his performance and
gestures, insulted and burlesqued the captives.

Persons sprinkling perfumes.

The victorious general, dressed in purple and gold, crowned with laurel;
he was seated in a circular chariot, drawn by four white horses. In his
right hand he held a branch of laurel, in his left an ivory sceptre,
surmounted by an eagle. His face was painted of a vermilion color, and a
golden _bulla_ hung from his neck.

Sometimes the chariot was drawn by elephants.

The children of the victor were allowed to ride with him, and he was
attended by many relatives and citizens dressed in white. Behind him
stood a slave carrying a richly gemmed crown, whose duty it was to
admonish him constantly during the triumph, by whispering in his ear,
“Remember that thou art a man.”

The Military Tribunes followed, and the procession closed with,—

The whole army, horse and foot, crowned with laurel, and carrying
various ornaments which they had won in the war.

They sang as they marched, the praises of their general, and of their
own bravery; but sometimes (for it was a day of license and carnival)
they sang the coarsest ribaldry and jokes concerning their leader; thus
the army of Julius Cæsar, sang some very personal and vulgar verses
about him, at his triumph.

The procession moved from the _Porta Triumphalis_, along the _Via Sacra_
to the capitol.

All the shops were closed, the temples all open. The buildings along the
route were decorated. Stands and scaffoldings were erected for the
convenience of spectators. Banquets were spread before every house, to
which all comers were welcome. It was in short a perfect carnival, but
far exceeding in its proportions that of modern Rome.

When the procession arrived at the Temple of Jupiter at the Capitol,
several of the captive leaders were taken from the ranks, and put to
death, for ancient Rome was cruel even in her rejoicings; the oxen were
also sacrificed, and the wreaths, with which their horns were decorated,
were thrown into the lap of Jupiter’s statue.

In the evening there was a grand banquet to the victorious General
(Imperator), after which he was escorted to his home with music and
song.

Nothing better illustrates the cruel, coarse, and sensual character of
Roman music than that employed at such a triumph. Loud trumpet tones, a
vile and ungenerous musical pantomime, the sacrificial music, and rude
impromptu songs of the soldiery were the chief musical accessories of
the greatest popular festival.




                              CHAPTER IX.
                      MUSIC OF THE ROMAN THEATRE.


In Rome as in ancient Greece there was a school of music, which was
devoted to the stage; but it was not held in such high esteem, nor was
it the work of the poet to supply it.

In the French _operas bouffes_ of our day we find the libretto and music
to be the work of different persons, and in this respect the Roman
comedies resembled them, save that while we rank the music above the
text, the Romans valued the words far more than the music; but in other
respects there was also much resemblance between the Roman tragedies and
modern _Opera Seria_. They divided the music into parts, such as
dialogues or duets, solos, and choruses.

Cicero says that a connoisseur could instantly determine by the style of
the music alone, what tragedy was being performed; this would indicate
an amount of tone-painting, which justifies our comparison of the Roman
with the modern stage.

The theatres were, as usual, of immense size. The Emperor Trajan built
an Odeum, or music hall, of which Apollodorus was the architect, which
was capable of seating twelve thousand spectators. These structures were
usually built of stone, and in the most thorough manner; there is
however one notable exception to the rule. In the reign of Tiberius an
amphitheatre erected by Atilius at Fidenæ, fell in during a gladiatorial
contest, and twenty thousand persons lost their lives.[68]

The music of the stage, tended rather to virtuosity than to real beauty,
the natural result being, that while Rome possessed many skillful
performers, she had no musical composers of eminence.[69] The names of
the composers of music to the comedies of Terence and Plautus are still
extant, but they seem to have enjoyed no special renown.

Quintilian speaks of the weak and womanish music of the stage, and
Martial in satirizing the Gaditanian female singers which were so much
sought for in the later days of ancient Rome, says, that it was the
surest sign of a fashionable dandy, to hear a young man trilling out the
latest Gaditanian ditties.

Many of the theatrical performers and singers were slaves, who were
bought for the purpose, and the most stringent and cruel measures were
taken to prevent them from ruining their voices by any kind of
debauchery. Theatrical factions also existed for this or that singer, in
which at times many lives were lost.[70] Laws were afterwards enacted,
to guard against such riots.

Another and less tolerable branch of Roman public musical diversion was
the dance, which although most skillfully performed by talented
pantomimists, was so indecent in its general character, and choice of
subjects, that it received strong condemnation from many writers of that
day.

Many anecdotes remain, showing how well acted this art must have been.

Demetrius, the cynic (in the reign of Nero) having reproached a dancer,
that his art was but an adjunct to music, the performer caused the
musical accompanists to cease playing, and enacted the subject of Mars
and Venus without music, and in such a manner that Demetrius was obliged
to retract, and said, “Even your hands seem to speak.”[71]

The professional dancers, or musical pantomimists, were most appreciated
under the luxurious reign of the Cæsars. A prince of Pontus once came to
the court of Nero, where he was royally entertained; as he did not
understand the Latin language, he could not appreciate theatrical
representations, but a celebrated dancer appearing, he was able to
understand his actions from beginning to end. On his departure, when
Nero had given him presents, he said “If instead, you would give me this
dancer, it would be the greatest favor of all;” on being asked the
reason, he replied that he had many barbarian neighbors, whose language
he did not understand, and that such an unfailing interpreter would be
of incalculable value to him.[72]

We can learn how much these performers entered into their acting by the
following anecdote. A dancer once acting the part of Ajax, in a double
character dance, became so frenzied, that he tore the clothes off from
the time-beater, (or conductor of music) seized the flute of the
accompanist and broke it over the head of Ulysses. The better class of
spectators condemned such a novel exhibition, but the lower orders
applauded vociferously. The performer afterwards became calm again, but,
on being desired to repeat the performance, he replied that it was
sufficient for a man to make a fool of himself _once_.[73]

The dance in Rome was esteemed only as an amusement and sensual
enjoyment, and was not studied by the respectable classes, save
sometimes in connection with singing, in which case it was not driven to
such excess as the pantomime dance described above; but neither song,
instruments, or dance were studied to any large extent among the masses
of the Roman people.




                               CHAPTER X.
                       MUSIC OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE.


Under the luxurious reign of the Cæsars, music attained unusual
prominence in Rome, but it was still the music of virtuosity, rather
than true art. Skillful performers multiplied, while talented composers
did not exist. The choruses were augmented to the utmost, their numbers
exceeding all previous extent.[74] New instruments began also to appear,
the sumphonia, the hydraulic organ, and others. The study of music began
to be fashionable (in some at least of its branches) and the emperors
themselves did not disdain to practise the art. It is a singular fact,
however, that exactly those emperors who were the greatest rascals, took
the greatest interest in music. Domitian founded games in honor of
Jupiter, in which he introduced Kithara playing and other musical
contests to amuse the populace. Heliogabalus sang, danced, played the
flute, organ, and pandura, and was proficient in giving musical
recitations with flute accompaniment. Caligula studied singing and
dancing, and was so fond of the former, that when at the theatre, he
could scarcely ever refrain from following the melodies which the
tragedians sang, by humming along with them. It is related of him,[75]
that during the height of his power and tyranny, he sent, one night, a
summons to three men of consular rank, to attend him at once at his
palace; in fear and terror, the three hastened to obey, scarcely
doubting that the night was to be their last on earth; on arriving, they
were most agreeably surprised to hear the sound of flutes, and the
emperor himself suddenly burst out before them, arrayed in full
theatrical costume, and sang them a song, after which he bowed and
retired, upon which they were dismissed, and returned to their anxious
families; we can imagine that, under the circumstances, Caligula
received very hearty applause that night.

Vespasian established musical games, and gave large sums to actors and
singers.[76]

Titus was a good singer and player.

In the later days of paganism, when the music of the Christian church
had already manifested its power and superiority, the Emperor Julian
endeavored to bolster up the religion of the ancestors, and fight the
church with one of its own weapons. He therefore sought to make an
extensive reform in the religious and sacrificial music. He endeavored
to form music schools at Alexandria, in Egypt, where a new school of
singing and composition might be inculcated, and whence Rome might draw
the material for a better religious music than had formerly obtained. In
one of his letters, he says: “I deem no study more worthy of attention
than good music. I desire that you select from among the population of
Alexandria certain well born lads, who shall be supplied each with two
Egyptian artabai per month, besides rations of corn, wine and oil, and
be provided also with clothes by the comptroller of the treasury. The
boys are to be chosen for a definite time according to their voice.
Should any give promise of further abilities to reach a high degree in
the science of music, let them be informed that we propose to offer to
such, very substantial rewards. That the minds of these lads will,
independently of our encouragement, be benefited by that cleansing power
which perfect music exerts, we may rest assured on the authority of
those who in past times have laid down excellent regulations on the
subject. So much for the new choristers. As for those now under the
instruction of the music master Dioscurus, make them act here all the
more diligently to their practice. Since we are prepared to assist them
in whatever way they may choose.”[77]

This beautiful scheme was frustrated by the death of its great
originator, about two years afterward.

But among all the Roman Emperors, none was a more passionate virtuoso,
and devotee of skillful music than that incomprehensible monster, Nero.
We shall enter into considerable detail regarding this curious emperor,
as he may stand as a type (although an exaggerated one) of the soulless
and sensual musical _virtuosi_ of his era. In giving his history (so far
as it relates to music) we follow mainly the version of Suetonius.

He studied music in his early youth, and first appeared publicly in the
games of the Roman youth, entitled the _Juvenalia_;[78] here he seems to
have made no remarkable impression, either by his voice or dramatic
action. Immediately on his accession to the throne, he sent for the
famous harper Terpnus, and took the greatest pleasure in his
performances; it was his habit to sit with him after supper till late
into the night. At last he began to practice upon the instrument
himself; and at the same time he began to apply himself assiduously to
the cultivation of his voice, although it is the testimony of all his
historians, that his voice was rather thin and husky.

The care he lavished upon the preservation of his voice, far out-does
that of any modern _prima donna_; he would lie on his back during part
of each day, with a sheet of lead on his stomach, or chest; he used
emetics and clysters copiously when it seemed at all out of order; his
food was always regulated with reference to its effect upon his voice,
and he forbore from eating many fruits and pickles, because they were
prejudicial to it.

He never delivered any addresses to his army because he feared that he
might thereby strain it; all his speeches to the soldiers were delivered
by proxy, even though he were present. On all occasions, he had his
voice-master by him, to caution him whenever he should be in danger of
over-straining, and this instructor was ordered, if the warning should
by any cause be unheeded, to clap a napkin upon his mouth by way of
enforcing his advice. Through the whole reign of this emperor however,
there was never less misery than while he was applying himself to his
musical education, or was upon his musical tours.

Encouraged by the improvement (real or imagined) in his voice, he became
desirous of appearing upon the public stage. The unjust valuation which
he placed upon the art, being apparent by his remark that “music
unheard, was valueless and unregarded.”

His first public appearance took place at Naples, A. D. 63; while
singing, the theatre was shaken by an earthquake, but Nero was not to be
checked, even by the elements, and sang to the end of his song.[79]
After the theatre had been vacated, it fell in; and Nero composed
lengthy hymns to the gods for his escape.[80]

On his return to Rome he was desirous of showing his skill in that
metropolis; at first he only sang to select audiences of friends at his
own palace, but infatuated with the applause of this flattering circle,
he was only too glad to follow their suggestion that such a fine voice
should not be hidden.

He instituted games in his own honor, entitled the _Neronia_, which were
celebrated in imitation of the Greek sacred games, every fifth year; at
these games he had introduced contests of flute and organ-players; he
was too impatient to wait until the allotted interval should have
expired, but ordered that the games should be celebrated in advance of
their accustomed time, and placed his name on the list of musical
competitors;[81] the Senate sought to avert such a disgrace, by offering
to decree the victory to him, without requiring him to compete, but Nero
answered, that he stood in no need of favor or protection; that he
depended entirely upon himself and upon his own merits; that he would
fairly enter the lists, and that the decision should come from the
judges.[82] When his name was called, he came on in his regular turn,
attended by a suite of high military officials, one of whom bore his
harp. After taking his place he announced that he would sing the story
of Niobe; this he did, and kept it up for hours, but at the conclusion
he (suddenly changing from singer to emperor) deferred the awards of the
judges for one year, as this afforded him an opportunity to appear again
in that time.

The people gave on this occasion immense applause, but whether they were
most pleased by the music, or by the novelty of the whole affair, is
doubtful.

But Nero could not wait even the exceptionally short time which he had
set, and appeared at numerous private shows, which were given from time
to time by private individuals of wealth and station. For these
performances he was glad to be offered compensation, not from any
avaricious motive, but because it stamped him as a thorough and
professional artist; of course many courtiers took advantage of this
foible and were very glad to pay him a princely _honorarium_. He was
offered on one occasion 1,000,000 sesterces for one appearance; this sum
being equivalent to $37,500 puts the enormous salaries of the modern
prima donna to the blush.

He sometimes sang for two or three days in the same place, only pausing
occasionally to take refreshments and recuperate, and seldom was any
song of his less than a day in length.

This in itself might have been an easily-avoided bore under ordinary
circumstances, but he prevented the possibility of a decreasing
audience, by posting sentinels at the doors, and forbidding all egress.
We can judge of the terrible dullness of these occasions by the fact
that some spectators, at times, jumped from the windows, at the risk of
their limbs, while others feigned death and were carried out for
burial.[83]

There were spies scattered through the audience, and any inattention to
the emperor’s singing was dangerous. The soldiers chastised every one
who did not applaud properly. If any of the lower classes presumed to
give adverse criticism, they were summarily dealt with, while those of
the upper rank who showed their weariness, were marked out for future
vengeance. The emperor had in reality the life of any subject in his
power, while seemingly only exerting legal authority; for he had
hundreds of informers, spies and perjurers about his court who could
fasten any charge on any person however high in station, and the
awe-struck senate was always ready to condemn. Many when charged with
any crime by the emperor’s minions, at once committed suicide as the
shortest way out of the scrape.

Among those who fell under Nero’s displeasure for not appreciating his
music, was the future emperor Vespasian, who during one of the songs,
fell fast asleep. Nero was with difficulty persuaded to spare his life,
but finally contented himself with banishing him from the court. The
scene must have been to some extent, ludicrous, when these poor, bored
victims of the emperor-musician, applauding vehemently, cried out for
more. Yet the applause did not always fall in the right place, and to
obviate this difficulty, the emperor formed a corps of _claquers_ or
professional applauders, whose duty it was to lead, and direct the
applause at the proper moments. This army of _claquers_ consisted of
many fashionable young men, and five thousand commoners. They could
easily be distinguished by their elegant attire and curled locks.

The system pursued was similar to that at present used in some of the
Parisian theatres; there was one chief, or leader, and several deputy
commanders; the force was divided into small parties, and mingled among
the _bona fide_ audience, and at a signal from their chief, there would
be applause of the required kind.

Nero lavished large sums on this _corps_, and was ever susceptible of
flattery to his musical talents: on some Alexandrians singing some
verses in his praise, he was so elated that he sent to Alexandria for
more singers and conferred many benefits upon them.

Once while singing in the Roman theatre, in the character of Orestes,
the murderer of his mother (which he certainly ought to have acted well,
for Nero killed his own mother) he came on the stage loaded with chains,
on which a young soldier rushed on the stage to deliver him; this
compliment to the reality of his acting was specially grateful to Nero.

The passion for acting and singing were with him almost monomania;
during the immense conflagration of Rome, which he himself had kindled,
(and which burned for six days and seven nights) he stood upon the tower
of Mecaenas, and was so impressed with the spectacle, that he hastened
to his theatre, put on the appropriate costume, and sang “The
Destruction of Troy:” hence the proverb “Nero fiddled while Rome was
burning,” which might run more appropriately “Nero sang because Rome was
burning,” for it was not callousness, as has been implied, but rather
the reverse of it; a venting of the emotions caused by the grandeur of
the spectacle.

That he had implicit belief in his musical powers, there can be no
manner of doubt, for he had thoughts of possibly using it as a
profession; it had been foretold that the time should come when he would
be forsaken by all; on which he replied to the soothsayer “an artist can
gain his livelihood in any country.”

In Greece at the public games, the musical contests were still an
important feature,[84] and the cities where they were celebrated,
hearing of Nero’s vanity in music, sent envoys to him with several
golden crowns, as tribute to his abilities in the art; Nero was
gratified beyond measure, and said that the Greeks had the only proper
appreciation of music. He gave a sumptuous supper to the envoys, after
which they begged that they might be permitted to hear that divine
voice; Nero, nothing loth, consented, and as might be expected the
Greeks went into ecstasies of applause. This determined Nero to make a
musical tour through Greece, and attend the sacred games there.

He started on his journey with a vast retinue, among which were the
entire force of _claquers_. Arriving in Greece he ordered the games
which did not fall in that year, to be celebrated out of course, and
also, contrary to all precedent, established musical contests at the
Olympic games, that he might have the honor of appearing in them.[85]

At these games, he appeared with all his enforced boredom, none being
allowed to leave the theatre, during his performances. The anxiety and
earnestness he displayed in these contests are almost incredible. He
bribed better artists to allow him to win, and he would address the
judges, telling them that he had made all study and preparation, and
taken all the care necessary for so important a contest, but the issue
was in their hands, he hoped therefore they would not regard any purely
accidental mishaps. The judges would thereupon mildly encourage the
timid contestant.

He always adhered strictly to the rules imposed upon the contestants; he
would never spit, or wipe the perspiration from his forehead; once on
dropping his staff, he was greatly alarmed lest the accident should lose
him the prize, but was reassured by one of the contestants who told him
that he was sure that the judges had not perceived the occurrence; after
the conclusion of his song, he fell on his knees, stretching out his
hands in humble supplication for the verdict of the judges. But when the
victory was awarded to him, (as it was always sure to be) his humility
was thrown to the winds; he then caused his own heralds to proclaim him
as the victor, and soon set up statues of himself in the various cities,
with laudatory inscriptions, according to the custom of Greece. Not
content however, with this, he also caused the statues of all previous
victors to be pulled down and thrown in the sewers.

He took the prize (of course) in every Greek contest in which he
participated. Competition was freely invited, though not as freely
tolerated.

In one of the Grecian contests a musician entered the lists against him,
who was very proud of his skill, and could not be bought; he contested
the prize so obstinately and skilfully, that Nero’s soldiers also
entered the contest by driving him to the wall, and killing him in sight
of the audience;[86] the prize was awarded to Nero.

His return from the tour was made with grand pomp; on reaching Naples,
he had a breach made in the walls (according to Greek custom) and made
his triumphal entry into the city, through it. In the same manner he
entered Rome and Antium. In Rome he arrogated to himself a full triumph,
and entered in state; all his prizes to the number of eighteen hundred
were placed in chariots, and appeared in the procession, each one
bearing an inscription as to where and when it was won. Statues were set
up, and medals struck in honor of his unprecedented musical success.
From this time forward, until his death he did not abate in his musical
studies or ardor.

Towards the close of his reign, he took much interest in the water
organ, of which we have previously given a description.

When his affairs were at a crisis, soon to be followed by his death, he
still gave most of his time to his favorite study. One day when
messengers first brought to him the tidings of a new rebellion, it is
related that he spent a few moments in consultation about these
momentous state affairs, and the rest of the day in showing to his
courtiers some new organs which he said he intended shortly to introduce
into the theatre.

When apprised of the fact that the legions of Julius Vindex had
mutinied, and that that able general had also declared against him, he
was sufficiently aroused to march against him, but, ever a maniac on the
subject of music, he declared that he intended to do nothing but appear
in the camp of the rebellious legions, and weep and sing to them
pathetic songs, which should so affect them that they would at once
return to their allegiance; the next day after the bloodless victory he
promised to appear and sing songs of triumph in the theatre; and he
thought it well that composers should begin to write the triumphal odes
at once.

In preparing for the expedition, his chief care was not for instruments
of war, but to provide safe carriage for his musical instruments; many
wagons were filled with these, as he took along several water organs.
But the expedition never took place, and he never had the chance of
testing the effects of pathetic music upon the Roman legions, for all
the army declared against him and he suddenly found himself deserted by
his court, and proscribed by the senate. In his downfall nothing hurt
him more than that his enemies spoke of him as “that pitiful harper,”
and he constantly appealed to his attendants if any could excel him in
the art.

He at this crisis made a vow that, if his reign continued peaceably, he
would appear in the games he intended to give in honor of his success
against the insurgents, and play the water organ, flute and sumphonia,
as well as enact a play, and dance; but these inflictions the Roman
people were spared.

In one night his seemingly strong power vanished, and he was compelled
to fly for his life, attended only by three or four persons. Having made
his way to the suburban residence of Phaon, one of his freedmen, it was
soon apparent that he could not escape, and that he must die, either by
the hands of the infuriated Romans, or by his own. Weeping and sobbing,
while his attendants prepared his grave, almost his last words before
his suicide were “Alas! what an artist the world is now to lose,” thus
in his latest moments, keeping up that egotism and infatuation for music
which had been one of his ruling characteristics through life.

The musical side of Nero’s character is certainly to some extent
ludicrous, but there were other and far darker sides to his hideous
character. These of course are not within our province to dwell upon,
but we have chosen to give a full description of his musical life that
the reader may clearly see how little of true art, or love of art could
have existed in so oppressive an atmosphere.




                              CHAPTER XI.
                     HISTORY OF CHINESE MUSIC.[87]


In Brande’s dictionary of arts and sciences, under the head of “Chinese
music,” the whole fabric of Chinese music is swept away in one short
sentence, at the close of which, the compiler curtly says,—“We ought,
perhaps to apologize for saying _so much_ of it.”

No right minded and just reader will echo so flippant an opinion; a
nation which more than four thousand years ago, had studied music as an
abstract science and which understood the laws of musical proportion
centuries before Pythagoras was born, certainly deserves more than a
passing notice from the musical historian, no matter how barbarous its
present music may seem.

The Chinese life and character, while apparently full of fancy, is in
reality quite emptily rational and pragmatic. In all the scientific
facts relating to music, the Chinese made early and thorough
investigations, but in that inventive inspiration which is the soul of
art, they seem to have been deficient. They possess a very full account
of their music both of modern and ancient days. Their musical history
teems with facts, and anecdotes, dating back far beyond every other
nation except the Egyptian. Their literature contains a vast number of
treatises and comments on the musical art, many of which are, however,
couched in very mystical and ambiguous language. In the Imperial library
at Pekin, there are four hundred and eighty-two books on this subject
exclusively.[88]

The invention of music, is ascribed by the Chinese to supernatural
beings.

The emperor Chi-hoang-che, who reigned in the time of the spirits, is
said to have invented the rules of pronunciation, the written characters
of the Chinese language, and finally music.[89] A mythological character
named Tong-how composed the earliest songs.

Kai-tien-chi, the ninth emperor of this spiritual dynasty, is credited
with many of the earliest songs. He also invented eight kinds of
instruments (which will be described later) the names of which are
certainly poetical enough,—

1. Love the people. 2. The black bird. 3. Don’t cut the trees. 4.
Cultivate the eight different grains. 5. Chant the celestial doctrines.
6. Celebrate the merits of the sovereign. 7. Imitate the virtues of the
earth. 8. Recall the memory of all existing things.

These names were probably given to the instruments from the special
songs which each accompanied.

Tcho-yung, a successor of the preceding emperor, is said once to have
listened to the songs of the birds, while the empire was in a state of
profound peace, and their singing caused him to invent a music which
penetrated every where, speaking to the intelligence, calming the
passions of the heart, causing perfect equilibrium in the emotions,
facilitating and improving the use of all the senses, and prolonging the
life of man.

The name of this music was _Tsie-ven_—“Temperance and mercy.”

This beautiful legend of the birds, seems almost Greek in its poetry,
but there exists yet another mythological bird in the Chinese tales,
which is extraordinarily like the Egyptian Phœnix. The _Foang-hoang_ was
a bird whose nest and abiding-place was wrapt up in mystery; it appeared
in China only at the birth of a good ruler, and its coming was always a
happy presage to the nation. The Chinese mythology, so far as it relates
to music, is evidently a traditional history, and poetically relates
actual occurrences, showing that, in all probability, their music
existed, and was highly esteemed in pre-historic times.

The authentic history of Chinese music may be said to begin with Fo-hi,
the first of the Ty dynasty, and the founder of the Chinese empire. He
reigned about 2950 B. C.[90] All good qualities seem to have been united
in this beneficent ruler; in all ways he sought to benefit his race.

It was not as an amusement, but as a means of popularizing his thoughts
on all sciences, that he regulated and arranged the system of music. His
first song celebrated his triumph over ignorance and barbarism; soon
after he composed the “Fisher’s song” in which he relates how he had
taught modes of fishing to the natives. He invented the kin, a stringed
instrument in the style of the modern zither, but with cords of silk,
and in it he symbolized all manner of things.

He rounded the upper part to represent Heaven; he flattened the lower
part to resemble the earth; one part of the instrument was called “The
abode of the dragon” (representing the breezes of Heaven); another part
was entitled “The nest of the Foang-hoang” (to betoken the seasons of
the year). By means of this instrument he could regulate his heart, and
curb his passions.[91]

“Those who would play the Kin,” says the Chinese commentator, “and draw
sounds from it which can charm, must have a grave countenance and well
regulated interior, they should pick it lightly, and give a tone neither
too high, nor low.”[92]

Many Chinese writers attribute some of the inventions which are credited
to Fo-hi, to his wife Niu-va, a supernatural personage who was regarded
as a holy and miraculous virgin in the Chinese annals.[93] The truth
about Fo-hi seems to be that he was a remarkably good man and a
benefactor to his race, and therefore many useful inventions, and
wonderful adventures are attached to his name, which cannot be
authenticated. Some writers consider him a myth, which is scarcely a
tenable position; others have endeavored to prove him to be neither more
nor less than the Noah of the Bible. There is little doubt that he made
improvements in Chinese music, and, by exaggeration, was called its
inventor. A Chinese writer in giving to the invention a greater
antiquity, beautifully says “Music had its cradle in the heart of man.”

Chin-noung, successor of Fo-hi, was also a good ruler; his chief works
in music seem to have been some alterations in the _Che_ (a sort of
_Kin_) and he was able by his playing to turn the heart of man, from
intemperate life, to celestial truth.

Hoang-ti, the next emperor, had music scientifically investigated and
established natural rules to the art. The reign of Hoang-ti is supposed
to have been about 2,600 B. C. In his day music though practised, was
not understood in its natural elements.

The Chinese even at that day, based all other sciences on music, and
sought to make this art (in a mystical and hyperbolical way) the
foundation of all others. The emperor therefore ordered Ling-lun to give
his attention to the development of the laws of music. The fables on the
subject of his researches are innumerable; he travelled to the
north-western part of China and took up his abode on a high mountain,
near which was a large growth of bamboos. Ling-lun took a bamboo, which
he cut between two knots; he removed the pith, and blowing in the tube,
a sound resulted which was of the exact pitch of the human voice when in
its normal state. Not far off was the source of the Hoang-ho, and
Ling-lun found that the tone of his tube was similar to the sound given
by the waters of that river in bubbling from the earth; thus was
discovered the first _Lu_, (or Li) the fundamental tone.

Ling-lun was pursuing his investigations further, when the Foang-hoang
appeared with its mate and perched upon a neighboring tree. The male
bird sang in six different tones, while the female also used six, but
different from the preceding. The first note of the mystical
Foang-hoang, was precisely in unison with the reed which Ling-lun had
cut from the bamboo.

On ascertaining this, the fable continues, Ling-lun cut twelve pieces of
bamboo and pitched them according to the notes of the two songsters; he
found by alternating the sounds of the male with the female bird, that
he had a chromatic scale. The six tones of the male were called the
_li-yang_ (masculine tones) the other six _li-yn_ (feminine tones), and
throughout all Chinese music, the distinction between the male and
female tones of the scale still exists. This was the first Chinese
discovery of the proportions of sound, the first step in the science of
Acoustics, and though covered over with fable and allegory, it really
preceded the discoveries of Pythagoras by many centuries; Ling-lun went
back to the emperor’s court and there measured and fixed the pitch of
the Chinese scale forever. Bells were also made of the official pitch,
that it might easily be perpetuated.

Hoang-ti also had immense trumpets made which imitated “the voice of
dragons,” and drums which sounded “like thunder.” This monarch was as
great and good in all arts and sciences, as he was in music. He seems to
have been a Chinese “king Alfred.” After him, came Chao-hao, at whose
accession the Foang-hoang again appeared, intimating thereby another
prosperous reign in this line of good and musical emperors. Chao-hao
invented the idea of marking the divisions of the night by strokes of a
drum, and also had founded a set of twelve copper bells, to represent
the twelve months of the year. He used all his efforts to make music
popular, and invented new modes of playing, making the _yang_ and _yn_
less distinct from each other, that is uniting the more powerful tones
(male) with the weaker (female). It is said that he first introduced
songs in honor of the ancestors, which play a very important part in
Chinese music, and that these hymns were performed for the first time,
in honor of the amiable emperor Hoang-ti.

The emperors next following, all protected and encouraged music. The
first songs, that is of a secular style, were composed about 2456 B. C.
At this time also, many new instruments were invented, and old ones
improved. With the reign of Yao, 2357 B. C., the chronological record of
Chinese emperors and their doings becomes much clearer. Under this
emperor, China had a season of great peace and prosperity. He invented
the instrument of musical stones, called the _king_, (to be described
later) and received the stones specially adapted to its manufacture, as
tribute from various provinces.

Chun, who succeeded him, though of low birth (he was nominated to the
throne by Yao) continued to advance the progress of music, and used it,
as the Greek philosophers did later, to prepare himself for public
business.

“It was to the sound of the _kin_,” says the Chinese historian,[94]
“that the great emperor Chun prepared to deal with the affairs of the
empire, and to the melody of the _kin_ is due the love and care which he
constantly gave to his people.” Chun composed the following song, words
and music, on the above instrument; it may be taken as a specimen of
very early Chinese improvisation.

“The breeze of midday brings warmth and dispels sorrow; may it be the
same with Chun; may he be the joy and the consolation of his people. The
breeze of midday causes the grain to grow, which is the hope of the
people; even so Oh, Chun! be thou the hope and the wealth of thy
subjects,” etc.

Chun also wrote a song in praise of agriculture. In the year 2284 B. C.,
he established uniformity of weight and measure, as well as a fixed
diapason throughout the empire, and endeavored to have all the bells
made in just proportions to each other. He also caused to be composed, a
melody celebrating the nine principal virtues; it was accompanied with
dances, in nine parts and contained nine modulations; it was named
_Siao-chao_ from the instruments which the dancers held in their hand.

Chun established five grand ceremonials, in each of which music bore a
part. First, a ceremony of rejoicing, in honor of Chang-ti (the supreme
being) and of the celestial spirits. Second, a festival in honor of the
ancestors. Third, a military celebration, in honor of the former
dissensions of the empire having given way to a tranquil peace. Fourth,
a feast dedicated to courtesy, when the beauties of concord and goodwill
were sung. Fifth and last, a ceremony in which the inter-dependence of
man was remembered, and the manifold blessings accruing by mutual
beneficence, chanted.

Chun also appointed a superintendent of music, who was to see that the
art was always exercised in its proper direction.

Kouei was appointed censor, and the instructions of the emperor to him,
are full of good sense. “Music should follow the sense of the words.”
“It should be simple and unaffected.” “Music is an expression of the
soul of the musician;” such sentiments as these show a keen appreciation
of the art, which seems all the more singular when we think of the
peculiar music to which it relates. The music of the time of Chun, is
rapturously eulogized by Confucius.

Yu, the great, only followed the example of his predecessors in setting
to music the most moral precepts and praising virtue, in song. It may
perhaps have been this association of high thoughts and ideas, the noble
character of the poetry, which gave music such a charm in the eyes of
the ancient Chinese. Yu made use of some primitive instruments, in a new
and very laudable manner;[95] desirous of being easily accessible to all
his subjects, he caused to be placed at a gate of his palace, five
instruments of percussion, which were to be struck by any applicant,
according to the nature of his business with the emperor.

A large bell announced a person who desired to complain of an injustice;
a drum signified a communication respecting the manners of the empire;
and a small bell, private or confidential business; a _tam-tam_, a
public or private misfortune; a tambourine, an accusation of crime which
was appealed from some lower tribunal to the adjudication of the
emperor.

This kindly emperor, regulated what was still deficient in music, and
did it so thoroughly that no further changes were necessary until the
Hia dynasty became extinct. The last of the above mentioned dynasty was
(for a change) a most vicious emperor. Kie was, according to the
chroniclers, a sort of Mongolian Caligula, and his memory is execrated.

The next dynasty, called Chang, after a prosperous series of emperors,
also ended with an atrocious tyrant called Tchow, who invented a
luxurious style of music, and is said to have first established the
feast of lanterns. He was deprived of throne and life by violence.

Ou-wang a later ruler, is chiefly celebrated for his military music, for
which he seems to have had a _penchant_ and of which he composed
considerable. One of his pieces was intended for performance while the
army formed itself in order of battle.

In his day, the discipline of music was very thoroughly attended to.
Every ceremony and rite had its appropriate music attached; the
musicians had to undergo two examinations each year, and all innovations
either in composition, or in the shaping of musical instruments was
jealously guarded against. No special features appear in the musical
history of China during the next few reigns.

In the reign of Koang-tsee, a valuable treatise on music was published,
which is still highly esteemed. At this era also were established
Mandarins of music and of the dance. At this epoch flourished the great
Kong-fu-tsee, or Confucius, the leader of Chinese thought and
philosophy.

This sage’s name was simply Kong, but his disciples added the title,
_fu-tsee_, which makes the meaning of the whole, Kong, the instructor,
or master. This was Latinized by the Jesuit missionaries into Confucius.
This philosopher cultivated the study of music and seems to have
esteemed it as highly as the Greek philosophers did a century later. He
revised and arranged many of the old books on musical ceremonies and
rites. He learnt the art in a distant province, as in his native place
music was but little known.

While in the kingdom of Tchi, Confucius heard some of the ancient music
of the days of Chun performed. The effect on him was so marvellous, that
for three months he scarcely could eat, for thinking of it. “I should
never have believed,” he said, “that composers could reach such a
pinnacle of perfection.”[96]

It is also said that Confucius was an excellent performer on the musical
stones of the _king_. Once while playing on this instrument a passer by
struck with the beauty of his performance, paused to listen, and
exclaimed “surely one who can play thus, must have his soul occupied
with great thoughts.”

In the later days of his wanderings, when he was reduced to the
extremity of poverty and starvation, he sang and played as usual,
showing no signs of depression or despondency. One of his disciples
ventured a reproach, asking how he could sing when they were all
famishing; he replied; “the wise man seeks by music, to strengthen the
weakness of his soul, the thoughtless one uses it to stifle his fears.”
The facts relating to Confucius, his wanderings and life are full of
anecdotes relating to his extreme love of the art, and are probably
authentic. The family of Confucius still exists in his native province,
having passed intact through sixty-eight or sixty-nine generations; they
are honored by special privileges and distinctions and are the most
notable hereditary aristocracy of China. It may be mentioned here, that
all the philosophers and literati of the empire were musicians as well:
in this respect strongly resembling the sages of Greece.

The theatre began to progress greatly in this era, (sixth century B.
C.), and one emperor was censured for devoting too much time to his
comedians, and too little to the worthy celebration of the ancestral
feast. The arts received a severe check when the Tchin or Tsin dynasty
obtained control of the entire realm. These were in reality the first
who united the various provinces under one rule, and who bore, with
right, the title of Hoang, or emperor. It is from this dynasty that
China takes its name (Tchina or Tsina). One of this set of conquerors,
Tchi-chi-hoang-ti, desirous of obliterating the memories of former
glories, which might prove prejudicial to his own, attempted, in 245 B.
C., a proscription of all science and art.

He commanded all ancient books to be burnt, and especially caused strict
search to be made for the books which Confucius had collected and
revised. Only works on agriculture and medicine were to be spared. A
large number of literary persons who had concealed part of their books
were put to death; yet many continued to risk their lives to preserve
the fruits of ancient culture. Books were hidden in walls of houses, in
tombs, and buried in the earth, whence they were long afterward
recovered. The emperor in proclaiming this war on literature gave as his
reason that the ancient books did not suit that era, that they were a
hindrance to progress, that they caused the people to neglect
agriculture which was the only substantial happiness of a nation, and
that they gave to the people liberty to censure the sovereign, and by
consequence, fostered disobedience and rebellion. Of course in this
universal persecution, music did not fare better than the other arts.
All instruments were ordered to be destroyed and made over after new
models. The bells which had given the standard pitch up to that time,
were melted down, and many of them used for the purpose of founding
colossal statues to deck the entrance of the imperial palace. But,
according to La Fage,[97] it was much easier for the musicians to evade
the emperor’s decree, and save their instruments, than for the literati
to save their precious books. There were few instruments and they were
less rigorously sought after, and it was an easy matter to conceal bells
or the _kings_ (musical stones) by burying them in the earth whence they
could be exhumed intact at any later period. Therefore in spite of the
exertions of the emperor, the ancient traditions and arts could not be
wholly extinguished; a spark still remained from which the torch of
science and art could be re-lit.

It was this despotic emperor, however, who built the _Wan-li-chang_ or
great wall of China, therefore his influence upon the empire was not
wholly exerted for evil, but rather directed towards the establishment
of himself and descendants as permanent rulers of China. The rule was
short however, for in 206 B. C. the _Han_ dynasty governed the empire.
The first of this family, named Kao, endeavored to repair the ravages
made in the field of learning by the Tsin despots.

He caused extensive search to be made in order that the ancient pitch,
division of tone, and system of modulation might be discovered. It was
partially unavailing, for we learn that though music was established in
all its splendor under the subsequent reign of Vow-ti, yet many writers
of that era (about 140 B. C.) assert that the art of regulating the
heart by means of music, was irretrievably lost, and that it only seemed
to inflame the baser passions.

In fact at this time, music was chiefly an adjunct of the theatre, and
each day brought forth new comedies, concerts, or ballets. A terrible
scandal was created in the reign of Tching-ti (an emperor who reigned
shortly after) by that sovereign taking one of his beautiful _corps de
ballet_, to wife.

These ballet dancers seem also to have been talented singers, and were
of similar station, though far inferior in talents, to the _Hetaræ_ of
ancient Greece. In the time of the last named ruler, there were found on
the bank of a river, sixteen ancient musical stones or _kings_, and the
fact that the sovereign esteemed this one of the most glorious events of
his reign, shows how earnest and persistent was the endeavor to reclaim
the old school of music from oblivion.

Between the years A. D. 8, and 23, many books relative to music were
written; the Chinese, however, assert that all of these were founded on
a false system and contained many errors. About A. D. 60, the president
of the tribunal of rites and music, made great efforts to collect the
remains of ancient knowledge, and place music once more upon its old,
pure basis. The work written by him was highly esteemed by the literati
but unfortunately, the musicians had become used entirely to the newer,
and less pure style of music, and were too lazy to care about learning
any new modes; therefore all manner of difficulties were placed in the
way of Pao-yé, and the reform was unsuccessful.

Tching-ti, A. D. 280, had at his court ten thousand women, who were all
proficient singers and players. Ngai-ti, one of his successors, tried to
remedy the luxury and effeminacy which had crept into every department
of music. He dismissed all his musicians, except those who performed at
sacred rites, or in military music (these being countenanced by ancient
usage) and all the troupes of singing girls were also broken up. The
poor musicians thus thrown out of employment numbered four hundred and
forty. The singing girls were yet more numerous.

These reforms seem to have been of short duration, for almost always,
after an emperor who enthusiastically attacked these abuses, came one
who with equal fervor, protected them.

One sovereign, A. D. 289, had at his palace five thousand actresses, and
the fourth successor of the reformer who dismissed his musicians, named
Tsin-ou-ti, although a lover of music, was also a great lover of luxury.
His greatest delight was to enervate the officials of high rank by
inviting them to carousals which he would extend far into the night, and
when the censors remonstrated with him on his course, he heard them
patiently; he would then invite them to dinner for the same day, and
there cause them to drink so copiously that they had to be carried
home.[98]

An emperor who reigned about 503 A. D. banished comedy and music from
the palace, and also established the funeral festival in honor of
Confucius, in which sacred music played a part.

Tay-tsung, who ascended the throne A. D. 626, was an active and thorough
reformer in music as in all other arts which needed his helping hand. In
the year 640, he turned his attention, after having brought the empire
to a state of peace, to bringing music back to its ancient and pristine
glory. In pursuance of this design, he ordered that everything relating
to ancient music, books as well as instruments, should be sent to his
court. An immense quantity of books, fragments, memoirs, old and new
instruments, etc., were discovered and collected, which were handed over
to a committee of _savans_, whose duty it was to retain the good, reject
the bad, and systematize the whole. Much was discovered by this means;
books were printed and the art of music received a strong impetus; but
still the Chinese held that the full beauty of the ancient art could not
be unearthed, perhaps because they could find nothing in it equaling
their expectations: but Tay-tsung for his efforts in the matter, was
ever after held in the highest esteem by the Chinese, who rank him with
the great and good rulers, Hoang-ti, Yao, etc.

Tay-tsung also composed, or caused to be composed, a war dance,
accompanied with the appropriate music; it was intended to inspire the
soldiers with virtue and courage, and to make them emulate heroes.

Under the emperors who came immediately after, comedy and theatrical
representations flourished. The musicians were always kept within the
limits of their caste however. A chief comedian once permitted himself
to make an allusion to state affairs, in a play; the emperor listened to
him with much attention, (the Chinese politeness is such that they will
accord the most respectful attention to a person whom they would like to
strangle,) but after the performance called the actor aside and told him
that he kept his troupe to amuse, not to advise him, and sent the poor
fellow into exile.

Another time a very talented musician committed a murder, and was
sentenced to death therefor; several officials endeavored to obtain his
pardon, and a number of musicians presented a petition to the emperor
acknowledging that the culprit was very guilty and fully deserved his
fate, but that his talents in music could not be replaced, and that
therefore his life should be spared. The emperor’s reply was a worthy
one, “you fear damage to the art of music” said he, “but I fear damage
to the laws and government of the empire.” The sentence was executed.
One emperor dared to raise a musician to special rank, and thus defied
the strong respect for caste, which existed in China.

Y-tsung, the causer of this great scandal, had in his service a great
performer, named Li-ko-ki, who was an especial favorite. One day when
Li-ko-ki had composed a specially agreeable song, the emperor, without
considering his profession, gave him the post of captain of the guards.
It caused an immense excitement among the sticklers for etiquette, for
all previous emperors, when they gave office to their musicians, first
caused them to renounce their profession, while Li-ko-ki still continued
in the practice of music; the emperor however carried his point. Y-tsung
also showered other unusual honors upon the members of this profession,
for it was his custom to give a dozen festivals each month, when the
musical _corps_ were allowed to eat at his own table.

In traveling, of which he was very fond, he rarely took along less than
five hundred musicians.

Under the last prince of the Tang dynasty there came many disasters upon
the Chinese empire, and the successful inroads of the Tartar invaders,
were most of all prejudicial to music; at one time the emperor was
forced to fly from the capital, his palace was pillaged, and the musical
instruments in it, either destroyed, or carried off to Tartary. When
peace had been concluded and tranquillity reigned again, there was an
earnest effort made to manufacture new instruments, but in doing this,
great obstacles had to be surmounted, the models were dispersed or lost,
and the official pitch was uncertain. A great search was made for the
set of bells which represented the authorized ancient scale, but in
vain; large sums were offered to the Tartars if they would make
restitution of those which had been carried off at the sacking of the
imperial palace, but these savages, after long delays, replied that they
could not ascertain what had become of the captured instruments.

Thus another disturbing influence was imported into the Chinese music;
but it was still as highly-prized an art as of old, for soon after these
calamities came rulers who were passionately devoted to it;
Tchowang-song, gave two provinces to a pair of favorite musicians; and a
subsequent emperor (_a la Nero_) took to the stage himself, in spite of
the horror of his remonstrating censors.

Music and art took a new impetus under the Song dynasty (A. D. 960 to
1279), and very many books were written, on music especially, but alas!
there was now so much uncertainty in the field of ancient (and therefore
in Chinese eyes correct) music, that the commentators fell into the same
pit which engulfed the modern decipherers of ancient Greek music, i. e.,
they speedily came to all kinds of varying and irreconcilable
conclusions. One thing they resolved however, which was that the bells
which gave the official scale were not correct; they therefore founded a
new set, which were so satisfactory to the emperor and his advisers,
that the former ordered his own official bells to be given to the
founders for recasting. The musicians were very ill pleased with the new
system, although obliged to conform to it, and yet determined that all
trace of the ancient scale should not be lost. They managed by
connivance with some officials to save a complete set. The bells were
indeed removed from the tribunal of music and rites, but instead of
being thrown into the furnace, they were with the tacit consent of high
authorities, buried in a court-yard of the palace, and long afterward
exhumed.

Tsai-yu, one of the later emperors, studied deeply to place music on a
secure footing,[99] and it is remarkable that his researches into the
proportions of tones, led him to the same results that were _afterwards_
discovered by the best acousticians of Europe.

Kang-Hi, in the year 1678-9, worked for the art in an extraordinary
manner; he founded an academy of music, and made his third son president
of the institution; he wrote a work, “The true method of the Ly-lu,” in
four books, and had a fifth added “_concerning European music_.”[100] In
a proclamation concerning the diminution of the number of
court-musicians, Kang-hi says, “Music has power to quiet the heart, and
therefore was beloved by our sages. They also could while enjoying
themselves at its practice, benefit themselves, because the fundamental
principles of government are contained in the art of music. But such a
comparison scarcely is suitable to virtuosity. Why, therefore, expend
money on it? I approve of the action of Ngai-Ti, (a former emperor) in
discharging them.”

The knowledge of European music, which this emperor attained, in
opposition to all previous custom in China, came through the Jesuit
missionary Pereira, a Portuguese by birth; and Grimaldi, a missionary of
the Propaganda. He found it (contrary to the custom of the Chinese)
quite to his taste.[101] He was particularly astounded by the ability of
Father Pereira to set down in notes, and sing any melody, after a single
hearing. He begged his two guests to prepare a work containing the
elements of European harmony, and on their completion of it, he had it
printed at his palace in a sumptuous manner, and as an especial honor,
he had his own name added to it as their coadjutor. He now forced his
musicians to learn and to play French, German and Italian music; they
did so quite exactly, but most mechanically and with much unwillingness,
for it was contrary to all their ideas of art or propriety. Kang-hi saw
that the effort would be useless unless he used severe measures in
enforcing his reform, and like a wise man he yielded and allowed his
performers to return to their own beloved style of music. But the spirit
of reform was yet in him, and so far as he was able, he introduced many
innovations and many alterations into all departments of Chinese music.

He made a proclamation saying that the old instruments though very good
were quite worn out, and that as new ones were necessary, he had
prepared a list of the ones required. One of these _instruments_, can
scarcely be called a musical one, as it was simply a flag, which was to
be displayed during the continuance of the musical performance.

Kang-hi is spoken of with much rapture by the Jesuit missionaries, for
he was not only European in his taste for music; he not only tolerated,
but greatly favored Christianity, and at one time it was feared by his
court, that he was about to embrace that faith. The real secret of his
intimacy with the Catholic missionaries, seems to have been only a great
desire on his part, to acquire new information.

He was greatly interested in the mechanism of a clavichord, which the
fathers brought with them to China, and ordered two of his musicians to
take lessons from them, upon the instrument; the pupils made very little
progress, as they were rather unwilling students.

It was not only in the emperor’s court, at this epoch, that European
music began to be known; many persons throughout all the empire, sought
to pave the way to Imperial favor by studying the new art. The method of
Father Pereira had been sent into each province by the emperor, and the
ancient _Li_ were for a time eclipsed by the _Do, re, mi_, etc., of the
“western barbarians.” It might have been a permanent reform, but for the
fact that the Chinese had always been accustomed to associate their
music in a peculiar manner, with virtue and morality; each tone
represented some moral precept, each species of the eight varieties of
sound represented to their mind some high thought or noble virtue; it
was this association of ideas, which evoked the eulogies of Confucius,
and it was this time-honored custom which prevented European music from
obtaining any foothold among them. When, a short time after, Amiot
endeavored to ingratiate himself with the Mandarins by means of his
music, he failed utterly, through the same cause.

He thus relates his effort:—

“I understood music passably well; I played the traverse flute and the
clavichord; I used all these little talents to make myself welcome to
the Chinese. On different occasions during the first years of my stay in
Pekin, I never failed to endeavor to convince those who heard me, that
our music, excelled that of their own country.”

It is to be remembered that these were educated persons, able to compare
and to judge; persons of the first rank, who honoring the French
missionaries with their kindness, came often to their abode to entertain
themselves with them, with various matters relative to the sciences or
arts cultivated in China.

“The cyclops,” “The savages,”[102] the most beautiful sonatas, the most
melodious airs of the flute, none of these made any impression on the
Chinese.

“I saw upon their countenances only a cold and vacant look, which
announced to me that I had not touched them in the least. One day I
asked them how they liked our music, and begged that they would tell me
frankly what they thought. They answered in their politest way, that
_our melodies were not made for their ears, nor their ears for our
melodies_, it was not therefore surprising, they could not find beauties
in our melodies, as they could in their own.”

“The melodies of our music,” said a distinguished doctor (in the service
of his majesty, the emperor); “the melodies of our music pass from the
ear to the heart, and from the heart to the soul. We feel them, and we
understand them; those which you have just played, have no such effect
upon us. The airs of our ancient music were something quite different;
one needed but to hear them, to be ravished with them. Our books give to
them the most pompous eulogies; but they tell us at the same time, that
we have, in a great measure, lost the excellent method by which the
ancients produced such marvellous effects.”[103] It is interesting to
place these remarks beside the reiterated opinion of many writers that
the Chinese music is not worthy of being called “music” at all; and then
to turn to that most proper definition of the art,—“Music is the art of
moving the feelings by combinations of sounds.”

The same obstacles exist to-day against change in the music of the
Chinese, as in the days of Kang-hi.

This emperor, in his later days added to the long list of his musical
efforts, a volume treating of dances, and also a collection of the most
celebrated ancient songs. The missionary who mentions this latter
work,[104] assures us that he dares not translate it, lest he should be
accused of placing the sentiments of the most noble psalms in the mouth
of the Chinese.

During Kang-hi’s reign the flute became quite fashionable in China, the
people becoming infatuated with it; Kang-hi himself became proficient in
its use, but on finding, later, that he had not benefited himself in any
way by its use he gave up the practice.

Young-tching, his successor, published new rules for music and assigned
a special music in honor of agriculture and husbandry, which was to be
performed each year. He did not take to the Jesuits as kindly as his
predecessor, for from A. D. 1724 to 1732 he was busily engaged in
expelling them from China.

Khian-long, his son, succeeded him in 1736. There is nothing remarkable
in the history of Chinese music from his day to the present time.

Lord Macartney’s embassy (1793) took place during the long reign of this
emperor. Many persons were attracted to the embassy’s rooms by the
European band which each evening gave a concert. Among the most
assiduous of these visitors was the chief of the emperor’s orchestra;
charmed with the sound of some of their instruments, yet absolutely
refusing to accept of them as a present, he sent several painters to
take designs of them on paper. These artists laid clarinets, flutes,
bassoons, etc., on immense sheets of paper, on which they traced the
exact shape and size of each, while underneath they wrote remarks giving
the exact dimensions of each aperture, valve and tube.

The chief announced his determination of making similar instruments from
these models, but in different proportions, which he proposed to fix for
himself. The result of the experiment is unknown.

The later emperors have all had long reigns, and left music in _status
quo_, the last emperor Hien-fung being only remarkable for his constant
drunkenness. Let us now examine more minutely the order of music which
has inspired such disgust to European ears, and such rapture to the
Chinese from the earliest ages down to the present time.




                              CHAPTER XII.
                 CHINESE MUSIC AND MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS.


The Chinese have from the very earliest times divided musical sounds
into eight classes, and imagined that in order to produce them, nature
had formed eight kinds of sonorous bodies. They divided them as
follows:—

1. The sound of skin, produced from the tanned skin, or parchment of
various animals. 2. The sound of stone. 3. Of metal. 4. Of baked clay.
5. Of silk, used in the form of strings as we use cat-gut, or wire. 6.
Of wood, used often in instruments of percussion. 7. Of bamboo, used in
flutes. 8. Of calabash, a species of gourd, out of which a peculiarly
constructed instrument was manufactured.

Of the skins of animals, many different instruments are made, all of
which may be designated under the general name of drums, but the Chinese
possess various kinds of drums of all shapes and sizes.[105] The most
ancient variety of these was the _Tou-kou_, which signifies earth drum,
so called because its body was made of baked clay, over each end of
which was drawn the skin. An instrument of this description was both
fragile and unwieldy; its disadvantages soon caused the clay to be
replaced by wood, out of which all subsequent drums were made, the size
and shape being varied according to the uses for which they were
destined. Nothing is said in the ancient writings as to what varieties
of wood were used in the manufacture of the earliest drums, but
tradition has it, that at first the wood of the cedar and mulberry, as
also sandal wood, were the most used.

The Chinese possess eight kinds of drums. 1. The _tsou-kou_, which had
the shape of a barrel, and was fixed upon a pole which ran through its
body. 2. The Yn-kou, similar to the above, but the body more elongated,
and the staff or pole which supported it usually thrust into the earth
to keep it firmly in position, while that of the tsou-kou stood upon a
cross piece at its base.[106] 3. A variety of the _tsou-kou_ called
hiuen-kou, of very large size; on each side of this drum is attached a
small drum, in shape like a kitchen pot, one of which is to be struck
lightly, the other heavily. 4. The kin-kou, another keg-shaped drum
mounted upon a pedestal; it is about six feet long, and six feet in
diameter. It receives different names according to the way it is
decorated; thus, if it bears on its case paintings of storms, it would
be called lei-kou; but if it is ornamented with birds of good omen, such
as the _foang-hoang_, or white swans, it is called _lou-kou_.[107] 5.
The great tao-kou, which is still used to give the signal for the
commencement of a song, is about one foot in length and diameter. 6. The
little tao-kou, a cross between a drum and a baby’s rattle, is about
seven inches long, mounted upon a stick, and through the centre of its
case a string is passed; at each end of this string are knots; when this
drum is played, the performer twirls it about rapidly, the knots fly
against the skin, and produce a sort of rattle or drumming. This drum is
used to show the completion of a verse or division of any musical
composition. It is also used in funeral processions and at commemorative
ceremonies.[108] 7. The _ya-kou_, a small drum which is filled with rice
grains. The skin of this drum is not only tanned but is boiled
afterwards in pure water. The sound of this instrument is soft and
pleasant. 8. The _po-sou_ is a drum of cylindrical shape, and is placed
upon a small table; it is played sitting; in all other respects it is
like the _ya-kou_.

These are the eight varieties of drums known to the Chinese; many of
them are still in use; there are also some varieties of military drums
which do not differ much from the preceding.

It is customary to cover not only the case, but the faces and sticks of
the drums with paintings.

Drums are used in China to give the hour at night, to announce persons
desiring audience, at some palaces, and for many other purposes as well
as for music. The Chinese also sometimes muffle their drums (in all
religious ceremonies which take place in presence of the emperor)
effecting this not in our manner, but by covering the instrument with
ornamented draperies of cloth, which absorb part of the sound.


                         OF THE SOUND OF STONE.

The custom of making a systematic use of stone, in music, is peculiarly
a Chinese institution. In the _Chouking_, one of the most ancient of
Chinese chronicles, we read that already in the almost mythological days
of Yao and Chun, the Chinese had observed that certain kinds of stone
were adapted to giving out musical sounds, and that these tones occupied
the place between the sound of metal and of wood, being less sharp and
penetrating than the former, and more sonorous than the latter, and more
brilliant and sweet than either.

Even in those days they carved and shaped the stones, in order to
extract from them the regular notes of their scale, and made instruments
of them which even to-day are used in China, and are named _king_.

These musical stones were highly valued, and received as tribute as
early as 2250 B. C. Those found on the surface of the earth, and near
the banks of the rivers, were most esteemed, as it was supposed that
their exposure gave clearness and purity to their tone.

These stones, called _Yu_, are found near the mountain streams and
torrents of Yun-nan. They are of extreme hardness and are polished in
the same manner as agate and precious stones. Large specimens are
extremely rare; those which Amiot saw at the Imperial palace, were three
feet by one foot eight inches in size, but they were considered unique.

Their weight (specific gravity) is also very wonderful, for stones which
seem to be not too heavy a burden for one man, require four men to move
them.[109] Those in the palace were of many colors, milk-white,
sky-blue, indigo-blue, yellow, orange, pale green, sea-green, red and
gray. Those most esteemed were of a single color throughout, though when
five colors blended, it was considered a valuable specimen. It may be
mentioned in this connection that the number five seems to acquire a
mystical significance among the Chinese, for their music has five
principal tones, they recognize five elements, five virtues, five
senses, five duties, and five principal ceremonies.[110]

Some of these stones resemble marble, and others seem to be
petrifactions of some sort. We are unaware whether those belonging to
the emperor have been examined by any recent geologist. The Duke de
Chaulnes in the last century, came to the conclusion that the stone was
marble, but that its organization differed in some respects from ours;
and that iron entered into its composition.

It is very difficult to complete an octave with the best of musical
stones. In carving and ornamentation they require most skillful
manipulation lest the pitch be endangered.

Under the Han dynasty a most harmonious _king_ was presented to the
emperor. The designs traced upon the stones were not quite satisfactory
to that potentate; on endeavoring to alter slightly the fashion of the
stones, the pitch of the instrument was irrevocably lost, and its
harmony destroyed forever.[111] The _king_ has from time immemorial been
played by striking the stones with a stick or mallet of hard wood. The
skill of the player is shown in the degree of shading he can impart to
the tones, by varying the force of his blows. Of all instruments, the
Chinese claim that the _king_ blends best with the human voice. The
entire Chinese chronicles teem with praises of this peculiar instrument.
Confucius was thrown into ecstatic bliss on hearing it for the first
time. The musical work entitled _Li-ki_ says: “the harmonious sound of
the _king_ invites the sage to think of the end of life. When he hears
it, he thinks of death, and fortifies himself in his love of duty.” But
this passage refers only to the great _king_ made of _Yu_ (the finest
melodious stones), which was only played on great religious occasions;
it is not singular that this instrument should be associated with
religious thoughts. There were other kinds of _kings_ which were used on
lesser occasions. In the imperial palace were several of smaller size,
called _pien-king_, which were composed of sixteen stones each. The
_tse-king_ consisted of one large stone, and is used to give the pitch
to other instruments, to signalize the commencement of a tune, and
according to some writers, was anciently used to beat the time
throughout a composition.

The shape of the stones is much like a carpenter’s square; and if
sixteen of these tools were suspended from a clothes horse, the shape at
least of the _king_ would be attained; but in the most ancient specimens
the stones are shaped with much more diversity, fishes, bats, and other
quaint forms appearing with much ingenuity in the different pieces. The
only modern instrument of similar style to the _king_, which is known to
American readers, is the glass-harmonica, where short strips of glass,
being struck by a mallet, give out a melodious, but not very manageable
tone, and any person performing on the _musical glasses_, not by
friction, but by percussion, can give a fair representation of the music
of the favorite instrument of China.


                         OF THE SOUND OF METAL.

Bells have been in China from the earliest ages the most esteemed of
instruments. At first their duty was to be a sort of tuning fork; one
bell being made for chief or fundamental tone, and eleven others giving
the various semitones. These bells were much different from our church
and tower bells; they rather resemble large hand bells, but were of
somewhat greater weight. The smallest bells were used in an instrument
called _Pien-tchoung_, which consisted of sixteen of them, tuned in
unison with the sixteen stones of the king. We have already spoken of
the efforts made to suppress the bells, and through them, the authentic
pitch of Chinese music, by one of the conquering emperors.


                      OF THE SOUND OF BAKED CLAY.

Of this the Chinese made a deep-toned whistle, with five to seven
apertures called _Hiuen_. This was probably the primitive instrument in
China, as it is mentioned as already existing before the reign of
Hoang-ty, about 2637 B. C. An ancient Chinese Dictionary speaks of the
two varieties of these, saying, “the larger hiuen should be of the size
of a goose egg, the smaller, of that of a hen.”


                         OF THE SOUND OF SILK.

Under this head come all Chinese stringed instruments, for where we use
catgut, the celestials use silken cords. Even in the semi-mythical age
of Fo-hi, they made a simple instrument by extending threads of silk
upon a board of light wood. Little by little the board was shaped to its
purpose better; gradually also, the strings were laid with more
precision and exactness, and the cords gave out tones deep or high,
according to the tension to which they were subjected, or the number of
threads of which they were composed; thus by insensible degrees came
into existence the _kin_, the leading stringed instrument of the Chinese
empire. In size, it is larger than all Eastern stringed instruments
except the harp, its length being five feet, six inches. It has seven
cords which are tuned as follows:—

  DO, RE, FA, SOL, LA, DO, RE,

giving it only five tones. The pentatonic character of this instrument
is observable in all Chinese music, and causes a slight resemblance
between that music and the Scotch. There are several varieties of the
_kin_. The large, medium, and small, only differ in their size, and have
each seven cords, but there is a much larger instrument of the same
species, which is called the _che_, which has twenty-five strings, and
is nine feet long; it is said that in ancient days there were _ches_
made which had fifty strings.

Both the _che_ and _kin_ were, in true Chinese fashion, made to convey
numberless morals and symbols. The breezes of Heaven, the four seasons,
the five elements, and the universe were all in some manner dragged into
the formation of these instruments. The _kin_ represented life, the
_che_ death, and before performing upon either, the player went through
certain ceremonies to fit himself for the task, and lighted some
perfumed tapers, which were kept burning throughout the performance. To
perform on the _kin_, the Chinese held that one must be well advanced in
wisdom and sagacity. Of the _che_, there exist four different kinds, the
great, medium, small and very small; all these differ in size but not in
their number of strings, each possessing twenty-five. Amiot[112] found
the _che_ to be a more agreeable instrument than any known in Europe in
his day (1750 circa), as the softer sounds of the silken cords were
preferable to the metallic sound of the wires of the clavichord.

We have no instrument in our music which corresponds to the _kin_, or
_che_; but the zither if trebled in length, and strung with silk instead
of wire would give a very exact idea of this finest of Chinese
instruments.


                           THE SOUND OF WOOD.

The Chinese have from remotest antiquity, used wooden instruments of
percussion; it is most natural that the earliest of instruments used by
man, should have been of wood, but it is also natural that most nations
should have laid aside these primitive and toneless instruments. Not so
the Chinese however; their wooden instruments are still used as they
were four thousand years ago; for the historians date their invention
from the mysterious reign of Fo-hi.

These instruments are the _tchu_, the _ou_, and the _tchung-tou_, all of
which celebrate and typify the most profound moral precepts, _a la
Chinois_.

The _tchu_ is a plain wooden box, about a foot and a half deep, in which
a hammer is fastened; by introducing the hand into a small aperture,
made for that purpose in the side of the instrument, the hammer is
agitated, and swaying from side to side, produces a sort of tattoo on
both sides of the box. This scarcely can be called _music_ for it is
doubtful if the sound is even rhythmic; but it is not the sound alone
which captivates the Chinese ear, the symbol attached to it moves the
Chinese heart, for the sages assure us that this clatter represents (in
some mysterious way) the advantages of the social intercourse of men,
and the mutual benefits of society. The _tchu_ is placed at the
_north-east_ of the other instruments and is played at the commencement
of a composition.

The _ou_ is an image of a sleeping tiger, and is a symbol of the power
which man has over all other creatures. It is placed at the _north-west_
of the other instruments, and is played at the close of a piece of
music. Along the back of this image is a row of pegs; when the
instrument is well played, six tones can be extracted from these wooden
pegs, but usually the performance is ended by the player running the
stick, by which the pegs are struck, swiftly along the whole row, and
finishing with a couple of blows upon the tiger’s head. This is repeated
three times as _finale_.

The _tchung-tou_ cannot really be classed among musical instruments,
since they are only the wooden plates upon which music was sometimes
written; their moral is obvious; they bring back to memory the great
invention of communication by means of written characters. But they also
participate somewhat in the general clatter produced by the other wooden
instruments; they are about fourteen inches long, and one inch wide, are
twelve in number, to commemorate the twelve sounds of the scale, and
serve to beat the measure of the music, by being struck lightly against
the palm of the left hand. The twelve pieces are attached to each other
by means of cords.

There is besides, a military instrument of wood (though also scarcely to
be classed as musical) which is carved in the form of a fish, and is
suspended in front of the general’s tent. When any person requires to
see that official, he has but to strike this fish with two wooden sticks
which are lying near by, and the audience is immediately granted; so
greatly have the Chinese reduced language to various musical sounds,
that by the mode of striking with the sticks, the applicant intimates,
in a general manner, concerning what description of business the
audience is requested.

There also exist in China a few other instruments of wood, from which
regular series of tones can be produced, and upon which tunes can be
played, but these latter seem not to be really Chinese in their origin,
and are spoken of by the musical commentators of the country, as
“strange instruments which have come into use in China.”


                          THE SOUND OF BAMBOO.

It seems, at first sight, as if this class of instruments should be
placed under the head of “wood;” but the Chinese draw a very wide
distinction between wood and bamboo, holding the latter in especial
esteem, as being of all vegetation, the most useful to man; and they
claim that nature in producing it, fitted it especially to the art of
music. It is true that it required no great inventive faculty to extract
tones from the hollow sticks of bamboo, and it is possible that music
drawn from the bamboo was the earliest of the Chinese empire. One of the
most famed of instruments made of this reed, is called the _Koan-tsee_.
This is simply a set of pan’s pipes, arranged according to Chinese
tonality; the superior (male) tones, called _yang_ being given to one
instrument, and the inferior (female) called _yn_ to another, so that to
have a melody in any modulations performed, two instruments and two
musicians were required. This arrangement was too awkward to last
forever; finally the two instruments were united in one, and instead of
being weakly bound together by cord, as were the twelve pipes of the
_koan-tsee_, two strips of thin board held the tubes in place; the
number of pipes was also increased from twelve, to sixteen, and the new
instrument called the _siao_.[113]

Of course the Chinese possess flutes, as well as other instruments of
bamboo. The _yo_ and _ty_ are in some respects similar to our flutes,
save that they have usually but three holes, and the tones have
therefore to be produced by a more skillful use of the breath than is
required on the European flute. An instrument of the flute family the
use of which has become somewhat obsolete, is the _tche_. This is
different from all other flutes, and is now but little played in China.
The _embouchure_ is exactly in the middle, both ends are stopped, and on
each side of the _embouchure_ are three holes. It was considered the
most difficult of all flutes to play.


                         THE SOUND OF CALABASH.

The calabash is a gourd of pumpkin shape, but somewhat smaller. In the
instrument which we are about to describe, we shall see that the
calabash (called _pao_ by the Chinese) really emits no sound, but serves
only as an air reservoir for one of the most wonderful instruments of
ancient times. The _cheng_, which is the only instrument in which the
calabash is used, is in fact a _portable organ_, and when we consider
that this intricate instrument was invented about four thousand years
ago, we are lost in astonishment that the invention did not lead to
greater results; yet the Chinese have frequently, in other sciences as
well, advanced to the threshold of great discoveries.

We will not detail to the reader, all the legends, symbols, and
mythology attached to the _cheng_; suffice it to say that animal,
mineral and vegetable nature is represented by it, and that to each part
of it is appended some mystical meaning. The gourd is pierced and
cleaned, and an aperture made for the air to enter, then the ends of
from thirteen to twenty-four pipes of bamboo are inserted into as many
holes cut in the gourd; each of these pipes contains in it a tongue of
copper or gold, the vibration of which causes the sound; beneath this is
a hole cut in the bamboo, through which aperture the air rushes without
giving any sound, but when the hole is stopped by pressing a finger upon
it, the air having no other outlet, is forced up the pipe, and striking
the metallic tongue, gives out an agreeable reed sound. A curved
mouth-piece through which the performer is to blow, is introduced at the
centre of the gourd. The _cheng_ contains all the elements of the reed
organ, and it would be a simple matter to produce harmonies with it, and
yet with this instrument in the world for four thousand years, it
remained for moderns (comparatively speaking,) to discover the art of
combining different sounds; but the invention of so well-conceived a
reed instrument in such remote ages, certainly entitles the ancient
Chinese to the utmost respect of their unconscious imitators, the
Europeans.


                       MISCELLANEOUS INSTRUMENTS.

There exist in China, some instruments which are not classed with either
of the above eight kinds of tone. These we have thought best to group
under the head of “miscellaneous,” though they are quite as important as
any of the preceding, except perhaps, the _king_, _cheng_, and _kin_.
The Chinese have long possessed a peculiar variety of fiddle, which at
first appearance much resembles a mallet with cords stretched from the
head to the handle; but the head of this primitive fiddle is hollow, and
holds a sounding board, though a very small one, of gazelle’s skin. The
sounds drawn from this oriental fiddle are said to set one’s teeth on
edge; it is said to be the most execrable of all Chinese instruments.
The invention of this fiddle cannot be ascribed to the Chinese, as it
probably came from India originally. There also exist several Chinese
instruments of a kind much resembling our guitars or banjos. The number
of strings on these are variable.[114]

From remote antiquity, the Chinese have understood the ductility of
metal, and it is not surprising that the trumpet is, with them, one of
the oldest of instruments. These trumpets are made of all sizes and most
peculiar shapes.[115] It appears that they are intended to give but two
tones each, although being made of all sizes, a complete scale can be
arranged by collecting ten or twelve of them. The music of them (as with
the ancient Greeks) is judged only by the degree of loudness with which
it is given, and even when several play together, there is no attempt at
harmony, but each trumpeter repeats his two notes with vigor and
persistency; the result is said to be most distressing to European ears.
Yet it is possible to extract beautiful music even from single-toned
trumpets, for in Russia, most exquisite melodies are rendered by bands
of trumpeters, each of whom performs but one note, in the same manner as
troupes of bell-ringers give whole pieces of music with small hand
bells.

Tom-toms and gongs also appear frequently in the music of the empire;
these are chiefly used to keep the time of the orchestra; there is also
an instrument analogous to these, which consists of a series of metal
basins, (usually of copper) from eight to ten in number, set in a frame.
The whole instrument looks not unlike a cooking range with all its
utensils. These basins are struck with a mallet, and produce sounds
similar to, but less harsh than the gongs. The name of this unique
apparatus is _yin-lo_.


                        THE SOUND OF THE VOICE.

Singular to relate, the Chinese have in their classification of eight
musical sounds, utterly omitted to make any mention of the sound of the
human voice. In all their great ceremonies, such as hymns of praise to
Heaven, and commemoration of the ancestors, songs are used, but never,
on these occasions are female voices allowed. In fact, the female, in
music, occupies about the same position in China, as she once did in
ancient Greece; the better class of respectable matrons do not study any
art whatever; and the less respectable and the slaves, are allowed to
perfect themselves in many arts of pleasing, among which a study of the
lower branches of music, as well as a certain degree of general
education is included. A slave is far more marketable with musical
talents than without. But women always participated in orchestral music,
and in a manner rather astonishing to us; they sometimes played the wind
instruments. The singular custom of allowing the weaker sex to play the
part requiring the strongest lungs was quite universal among ancient
nations, and the Chinese may be regarded as a nation who have kept their
ancient usages almost intact. It is seldom however, that women assist in
any concerts whatever; the instrumental playing as well as the singing
being almost always wholly rendered by men.

Few travellers have heard a musical Chinese lady sing, and those who
have enjoyed this rare event, say it is the most torturing of all
Chinese music; from the _nose_ and throat issue the most droning and
hideous sounds, and they seem to pile Ossa upon Pelion in the way of
unnatural tones.

Although the female voice is therefore lacking in the concerted music of
this singular people, the parts sometimes run very high for male voice
and the singers for these parts are procured in the same manner in which
the papal choir in the last century, procured its highest male
voices.[116]

Of the divisions of the vocal parts in singing, very little is as yet
known, although many books must exist upon the subject, which have
hitherto been inaccessible to foreigners. The natural voice of the
Chinese is rather high, and very high tenors are not at all rare in the
empire.

The voice in China is trained to much flexibility by the exigencies of
the language, for the Chinese is in one sense, the most musical of
languages, as a word acquires half a dozen different significations
according to the pitch of voice, or inflection with which it is
pronounced.

The number of different words in the whole Chinese tongue does not
exceed three hundred and fifty; all the additional ones, are simply
variations of these by lowering, or raising the voice. This leads the
foreigner into endless complications and misunderstandings; for example,
the word _tchu_ pronounced clearly with the vowel of medium length,
means “master,” but by extending the vowel a trifle it signifies “hog;”
it also means “column,” and “cookery.” The syllable “_po_” has eleven
different meanings—“glass,” “boil,” “captive,” “prepare,” etc., each of
which must be pronounced with a different pitch and inflection.[117]
Among the original words are some which decidedly are taken from nature,
such as “_tchung_,”—“bell,” “_miaou_,”—“cat,” but these are very few.

Some authors have endeavored to show from these facts, that the Chinese
is in all respects a musical language, but this can hardly be conceded,
for the inflections spoken of, are so slight as to escape the European
ear, which surely would not be the case if they were really musical
notes, since we have seen that Father Pereira, in the last century, was
able to note down at first hearing, and imitate any Chinese song. The
people in conversation give the voice a flute-like sound, but this has
scarcely arisen from any special musical quality in the language itself.




                             CHAPTER XIII.
              CHINESE MUSICAL COMPOSITIONS AND CEREMONIES.


The most ancient music with the Chinese as with all people, seems to
have consisted of hymns to the Deity, rendering thanks to Him for the
benefits given to man in the various departments of labor. These were
divided according to the class which used them, into agricultural,
military, piscatorial, etc. Very soon after these, there came into
existence that reverential ceremony in memory of the ancestors, which is
so characteristically Chinese, and which became, of all their festivals,
the most important and the most musical.

This ceremonial as conducted by the emperor is as follows. In the
vestibule of the hall are retainers who bear a particular kind of
standards, which show that the coming of the sovereign is expected. Here
also are seen bells, drums, and musicians, as well as officers of the
guards, all standing in symmetrical figure, and motionless in their
position. On entering the hall one sees, right and left, the performers
on the _cheng_ and _king_, and the minor instruments, all arranged in
their proper order. In the middle are placed the dancers, in uniform and
each holding in hand the instrument which they are to use in their
evolutions. Near the end are placed the players of the _che_ and _kin_
as well as the performers on the style of drum called the _po-sou_, and
the singers. Finally, at the lower end of the hall are seen the
representations of the ancestors themselves, either in the form of
portraits, or of simple tablets bearing the name of each. Before these
is a table on which stand flowers and libations. Each performer and
instrument is placed in an allotted position. For example, the bell is
at the south-west, the _cheng_ at the north-west, the drum at the
south-east, the flute at the north-east, and the table at the south; and
this arrangement is never departed from.

When the signal announcing the approach of the emperor is heard, the
singers and musicians, slowly and with great majesty, begin the hymn of
honor, while the emperor, with stately and dignified tread, advances to
the table at the south of the hall.[118] It is a moment of holy awe
(somewhat akin to the instant when the Host is elevated in Catholic
churches) for the spirits of the departed are supposed at this time to
come down from Heaven to their descendants. We give here an English
paraphrase of the words of part of this hymn, which we have translated
from the version of Father Amiot.


                      Hymn to the Ancestors.[119]

  When’er I think of you
  Oh ancestors so great,
  Then to the highest Heaven
  My soul I elevate.
  There in th’ immensity
  Of the eternal springs
  Of Fame which cannot die
  And constant happiness
  Are your immortal souls.
  The vision transport brings
  Your valor has reward
  Your virtues Heaven doth bless
  Around your joyous souls
  Each new delight it flings.
  Ineffable your joy
  Your constant happiness.
  If I in spite of faults
  And of insufficience
  Am called on by the high
  Decrees of Providence,
  To fill upon the Earth
  The very highest place
  ’Tis but because I am
  Descendant of your race.
  Although I never may
  In your great footsteps move
  Yet I will care display
  Throughout my life’s high course
  That every act of mine
  Shall to descendants prove
  That I lived not in vain
  And need not feel remorse.

In giving this, necessarily weak, translation of the opening part of the
hymn, we have endeavored to preserve the short Iambics of the Chinese
version; but in the Chinese there are only eight lines to the first
division, therefore four lines of the translation correspond to one of
the original. After the chorus has sung as far as this, which is only an
exordium, or manner of worthily preparing for the following exercises,
the emperor prostrates himself three times, touching his forehead to the
earth each time, and then taking the libations, offers them up to the
departed: meanwhile the chorus sing the second part of the hymn, still
in the name of the emperor.[120] In this he again alludes _per_ chorus,
to his noble descent, and thanks them for leaving their abode of bliss
to visit him, and humbly prostrated, begs to render homage to them, and
entreats that they will accept the libations offered, as a testimonial
of profound respect and perfect love.[121] After offering these, the
emperor prostrates himself nine times to the earth, and then resumes his
position in front of the table, while the chorus sing the third part of
the hymn. During this final division of the music, the spirits which
descended at the first part are supposed to be reascending to Heaven. In
the third part the emperor (still by proxy) states how mean and pitiful
he feels, after such illustrious predecessors, and tells how heavy the
burdens of state are to him, and thanks his ancestors for their
spiritual assistance. He concludes with the statement that he can do
very little to testify his appreciation of all their benefits, but what
he is able to do he has done.

“Three times with respect, have I offered the triple sacrifice; not
being able to do more, my vows are satisfied.” The hymn being finished,
the emperor retires with his ministers and _cortege_ in the same order
in which they entered the hall. The music continues until he has reached
his own apartments. Dancers participate in this ceremony and are
sumptuously clad and really assume a _role_ of much importance. As with
the ancient Greeks and Romans, they are not to be thought of as being
jumpers or twirlers; they express by their motions the sentiments which
actuate the emperor as he eulogizes his ancestors, expresses his own
unworthiness, his gratitude, pride, and other emotions. The music of
this august ceremonial, is entirely written in whole notes, without any
change of rhythm whatever. It is rather monotonous than distressing to
our ears.

This is not the case with other vocal compositions of the Chinese;
nearly all travellers agree in saying that their music, in this branch
especially, resembles far more the cries of the nocturnal cat than the
human voice. The composers seem to have an aversion to progression by
degrees, in their songs, and a decided _penchant_ for long skips. We do
not intend a slur upon the Scotch music when we say that there are
points of resemblance between the Chinese music and the former. Some
Chinese airs (given by Irwin and Barrow[122]) show this resemblance
startlingly. Although the Chinese understand the division of the
chromatic scale perfectly well, yet they never use it; five tones are
all they ordinarily employ; these are

  FA, SOL, LA, DO, RE,

omitting even the semitone of our diatonic scale. Some of their most
eminent theorists have maintained that the notes pienkoung (si) and
pienche (mi) are as useless to music as a sixth finger would be to the
hand.

It will be observed that the semitone progression is not used in China,
and though known, is universally proscribed and avoided; it is this
which occasions the peculiarities of Chinese music. On this subject we
cannot refrain from re-quoting an article on Chinese music, which
appeared in the “China Mail,” a Hong-Kong newspaper, in 1845.[123]

“One possessed of a musical ear, and at all conversant with the musical
art, cannot fail, on his arrival in this country, to be struck with the
peculiarities of what is esteemed music here. He notices at once, that
the characteristics of western melody, are almost wholly wanting. Nearly
every note seems out of place, and there is neither beginning, middle
nor end, to the airs he listens to. Instead of a theme which is
developed and embellished by the whole performance, he hears a
hurry-skurry of notes, apparently flung together without link or
affinity; and even the confusion of sounds to make it worse, instead of
finishing in a quiescing cadence, passes beyond what is looked for as
the last note, and sometimes ends with what we should call a flatted
keynote, leaving the listeners in a most uncomfortable state of suspense
and uncertainty as to what may follow. For my own part, I have not been
able as yet to discover whether the Chinese recognise such a thing as a
keynote among the parts of song, or whether their composers begin,
continue, and end their tunes _ad libitum_.”

We have inserted the above that the reader may judge how strongly the
music distresses the musical European at first hearing; but it is also
not to be forgotten that the Eastern, (Hindoo and Arabian) music had a
similar effect upon persons who a year later were obliged to acknowledge
that they had begun to find beauty, and take pleasure in it.

Of other court musical ceremonies, the emperor’s birthday, the harvest
sacrifice, the feast of agriculture, and the fifteenth day of the first
moon, are the most important. The first occasion is described by Lord
Macartney, who heard it on the 17th of September, 1793. It began with a
slow majestic sound of deep-toned bells and muffled drums, in the
distance. This impressive music was occasionally interrupted by sudden
pauses; with equal suddenness the whole force of singers and
instrumentalists would burst out with their utmost strength, while the
entire court bowed their faces to the earth as often as the refrain was
sung:—“Bow down your heads ye inhabitants of the earth, bow down your
heads before the great Kien-long.”

The emperor was not visible during these ceremonies.

Among the secular pieces, collected by Amiot, is one which demands
especial notice; it is an instrumental representation of a battle. It
will be recollected that fifty years ago, many popular European
compositions took this shape. “The battle of Navarino,” “the battle of
Prague,” “Waterloo,” etc., were the out-crops of this mania: the Chinese
certainly have better instruments than we had, wherewith to represent
the din of combat.

In the accompaniment of songs, the Chinese seem to stand, as regards
their harmony, about where Europe stood in the middle ages, for they use
as sole and only harmony, when playing on the _kin_, a succession of
_fourths and fifths_.[124]

The constant use of instruments of percussion, in slow and monotonous
songs, is one of the most tiresome institutions of the Chinese music;
almost all the tunes are taken at an _andante_ or _adagio_ pace, and it
is but just to say, that the Chinese chiefly dislike European music
because it is often played quickly.

“To what purpose” they ask, “should one dance and hurry in this manner,
and how can such things penetrate to the soul? With us” they add
proudly, “all is done calmly, and without precipitation.[125]”

It must be acknowledged, that the Chinese love, and take pride in music,
that is, in their own kind. In every great state ceremony, in theatres,
in religion, it everywhere plays the leading _role_.

One of the nine tribunals which have charge of the general affairs of
the empire, is charged with the care of music, rites, and ceremonies;
and the mandarins of music are considered of much higher rank than the
mandarins of mathematics, and have their college in the enclosure of the
imperial palace.

The fondness for the art is apparent in all classes, and music is used
on almost every occasion of festivity, high or low. The streets of the
cities are full of peripatetic musicians, who earn their living by
catering to the general public, somewhat as the organ grinders do with
us.

The feast of lanterns is the greatest of all popular Chinese festivals;
it takes place on the fifteenth day of the first moon, and corresponds
to a New Year’s feast. On this occasion every part of the immense cities
of the empire glows with the light of innumerable lanterns, while
fire-works and decorations are seen on all sides. In the streets are
seen large _Lantern Theatres_, that is to say, edifices made of paper;
on the inside, which is brightly illuminated, is a stage whereon actors
and singers give plays and concerts. Another great festival, where music
plays a leading part, takes place on the fifteenth day of the eighth
moon. On this evening the Chinese imagine that a _hare_ is seen in the
moon, and to the sound of many instruments, the entire population turn
out to look at it. It is customary for friends to send each other cakes,
on which the figure of a hare is moulded, in sugar. Concerts are an
important accessory to this festival with both rich and poor; the former
make every effort to secure the best singers and performers for their
entertainment on this holiday; the latter, not being able to have the
more delicate instruments content themselves with a clatter of basins,
pots and frying-pans, and make with these a sort of burlesque concert.

At each full moon there takes place a festival in which gongs and
cannons rather than musical instruments are heard. Besides these
festivals which are celebrated throughout the empire, there are also
local ones, which are numberless. The richest class generally keep their
private troupe of musicians, whom they own almost as slaves. Often also
they educate young children of both sexes, in the musical art with the
utmost care, in order that when grown up they may swell the ranks of
their musical retinue. Among these are often special artists whom they
will not allow to appear on ordinary occasions, but reserve to perform
before their own family, or intimate friends to whom they wish to show
especial honor; at such times, the ordinary performers are sent away.

Among the strolling musicians, there are many who make their living by
going to private festivals of the middle classes, such as weddings,
birthdays, and other rejoicings, even when uninvited; these are similar
to our ball room musicians, but also bear some resemblance to the
itinerant performers of early Eastern nations. In Poland there still
exists a similar class.

For the poorer class, there are also, numerous blind musicians, who
travel from house to house, sometimes in bands, sometimes alone. We have
already compared these to our own organ-grinders, but they differ from
them in one particular; they do not rely so much upon making music
indiscriminately, but go, with much tact, to those places where their
services are likely to be required.

In China the custom of celebrating the birthday anniversary is
universal; these wandering minstrels recollect the date of the birth of
each individual for miles around, with unerring exactness, and when a
birthday _fete_ occurs in any family, they may calculate with some
degree of certainty that the music will come without being sent for.

There are other occasions, where these shrewd disciples of the muses can
turn an honest penny; if a skillful physician has saved the life of the
wife or child of some rich man no higher compliment can be given to him
(besides his fee) by the grateful nabob, than to invite him to a great
feast, and to send an escort of eight musicians to convey him thither,
besides bringing him numerous presents.

Music is employed at funerals, but the friends of the deceased, are not
allowed to perform it; for months after, etiquette forbids their
touching any musical instruments.

The mourning for a parent, or grandparent is very strict and protracted.
In China filial love and obedience are the virtues most insisted upon.
If the descendants give forth any musical sounds at all it is only to
howl dismally a chant respecting the virtues of the defunct; there are
many of these compositions, or “lamentations” in existence, of which the
poetry is by no means despicable. When the funeral ceremony is taking
place, some trumpets and a drum placed at the door, announce the arrival
of visitors who come with their condolences to the afflicted family.
After the body is buried with the ancestors, the _bonzes_, (Chinese
priests) chant the office of the dead, for nine days, and in the
procession itself drums, trumpets, tam tams, flutes, etc., play a
discordant dirge.

We have already mentioned the wooden fish suspended at the tent door of
military commanders to summon them to audiences concerning public and
private affairs. Mandarins have, in like manner, a drum in the outer
hall of their palaces, by means of which they can be summoned to give
audience to any applicant; they are obliged to give immediate attention
to the complaint of any person beating the drum, but woe to the
audacious drummer who does not have some very especial wrong to complain
of; he is immediately soundly bastinadoed.

At eclipses of the moon, the Chinese use their musical instruments in a
purposely hideous manner. This is done to frighten away the dragon which
is supposed to be eating up the orb of night. Instruments of percussion
are chiefly used on this occasion. The same instruments (i. e. gongs,
drums, trumpets and tam-tams) are used to aid the marching of the army.

The _musical language_ such as we use in directing the movements of
cavalry and artillery, is much more extended, though differently used in
China; such musical signals are used in commanding civil as well as
military personages. Various trades have their especial songs also,
which they sing at their work.

But the music of China, although extending into every department of
social and official life, is totally incapable of any advancement.
Musical martinets are continually exclaiming against the changes in
style of composition, which innovators are constantly introducing into
_our_ art,[126] but it is these changes which give the surest signs of
real life and intrinsic merit to modern music.

In China, precisely as formerly in ancient Egypt, no such changes are
possible; the music for each and every event is as carefully mapped out
and adhered to, as is the cut of the garments, or the exchange of
civilities among this precise people.[127]

If ever change takes place in their musical system it will assuredly be
a gravitation towards the European, as they have in a certain measure a
comprehension, theoretically at least, of our system of semi-tones, but
could by no means conceive of, and accurately produce the third and
quarter tones of Indian music. We have already related the ineffectual
movement towards western style, made in the last century; during the
embassy of 1793, Macartney observed many indications of inclination for
our system, such as the use of the violin,[128] the notation of music
upon ruled paper, and interest in the band concerts given at his rooms
each evening. He also found in the emperor’s palace at _Yuen min-yuen_,
an English musical clock, made by Geo. Clarke, Leadenhall Street,
London, which played many selections from the “Beggar’s Opera.”[129] It
is certainly not too venturesome to predict, in spite of the jarring of
their music upon us, that they may yet develop a taste for some of the
coarser branches of ours.




                              CHAPTER XVI.
                    THE CHINESE THEATRE AND DANCES.


Although the Chinese are passionately fond of plays, yet they do not
possess a good fixed theatre in their chief cities; for those edifices
which are regularly used for this purpose are never of a good class, and
many of them are even considered disreputable. The cream of the
theatrical troupes are reserved for private entertainments; when a
number of people of the middle class desire a comedy, they club together
and engage a troupe. The upper classes, as already stated, have always
their private comedy company. They have also their private halls for
dramatic representations.

The Chinese, have like ourselves, Comedies, Tragedies, Farces, Ballets,
etc., and the music attached to them is always of the style of the play.
There is an excellent description of the ceremonies and social etiquette
used at a private dramatic entertainment, given by Du Halde.[130] He
says, ... “It was then, four or five of the principal comedians were
seen entering the hall, in rich costumes; they made a profound bow all
together, and struck the earth four times with their forehead.... They
arose and their chief addressing one of the principal guests, presented
to him a book composed of long tablets, on which were written, in golden
letters, the names of fifty or sixty comedies, which they knew by heart,
and any of which they were ready to perform on the spot if desired; from
this book they begged the guest to make a choice. The guest excused
himself and handed the volume politely to a second guest, with a sign of
invitation; the second guest passed it to the third with the same
ceremonies, the third to the fourth, etc. All excused themselves, and
finally the book was returned to the comedian, who yielded at last,
opened the book, and ran his eye over the list a moment, and then
decided upon a comedy which he thought would prove agreeable to all the
company. Should there be any inconvenience in producing any particular
play, the comedian-in-chief is expected to announce it; one of these
inconveniences would be, for example, that one of the chief characters
of the play bore a name similar to that of one of the guests. After the
choice the comedian shows to the guests the name of the play which he
has chosen, and each one signifies by a nod of the head, his approval.
The representation begins with some music which is essentially Chinese
and noisy. It is performed with metal basins, drums, flutes, fifes, and
trumpets. The play is often performed at a banquet, and after the guests
have finished their meal, the comedians take their places at the table;
after a short refreshment the guests are recalled and the play proceeded
with, or a new farce is chosen and performed as dessert.”

Many of the plays are not destitute of poetry and plot. It may not be
uninteresting to give a short sketch of the style of incidents woven
into their plays by Chinese authors.

The following is an outline of the plot of a play performed before the
English embassy, Lord Macartney’s, in the latter part of the last
century; it was given in a private theatre, by a private troupe.

“An emperor of China and his empress are living in supreme felicity,
when on a sudden his subjects revolt. A civil war ensues, battles are
fought; and at last, the arch-rebel, who is a general of cavalry,
overcomes his sovereign, kills him with his own hand, and routs the
imperial army.

The captive empress then appears upon the stage, in all the agonies of
despair, naturally resulting from the loss of her husband, and her
dignity, as well as the apprehension of that of her honor. Whilst she is
tearing her hair, and rending the skies with her complaints, the
conqueror enters, approaches her with respect, addresses her in a gentle
tone, soothes her sorrows with his compassion, talks of love and
adoration, and like Richard the Third with Lady Anne, in Shakespeare,
prevails, in less than half an hour, on the Chinese princess to dry up
her tears, to forget her deceased consort, and to yield to a consoling
wooer. The piece concludes with a wedding and a grand procession.”[131]

Engel, who quotes the above plot, well says[132] “how interesting would
it be to the student of national music, to possess an exact notation of
the music belonging to this scene ‘(the empress complaints)’ and to
ascertain in what manner the intense emotions and vehement passions
represented are expressed in the Chinese musical compositions.”

The above plot is curious in its Shakespearian resemblance, and seems to
be a drama of the superior order, for Lord Macartney was shown the
highest and best side of Chinese life and art; the comedies of the
people are less refined and of broader touches. We give as companion
piece to the above, a comedy plot which is a favorite one with Chinese
authors as well as the public.

The emperor Vouti, having lost one of his wives, whom he tenderly loved,
had recourse to a celebrated magician, who assured him that his spouse
was not dead as supposed, for she had bought of him the elixir of
immortality; she still existed, but lived chiefly in the moon from
whence the magician promised he could cause her to descend as often as
desired. The emperor caused to be erected, under the superintendence of
the magician, a very high tower, to facilitate her descent; he also
often assisted at the incantations of the wizard, but as the fair
immortal did not respond, the imposter, fearing the anger of his royal
master, invented a new stratagem to avert this unpleasant conclusion. He
wrote upon a piece of silk a counterfeit letter from the dear defunct
giving various pretended reasons as to why she could not return
personally to the royal lover; this letter is given by the sorcerer to a
cow, who is then led by him to the emperor to whom he confesses that
some involuntary crime has, for the present, interrupted his intercourse
and influence with the immortal beings, but that in the stomach of the
cow he has perceived something; Vouti commands that the animal be opened
on the spot, and the silken message is discovered; the magician is
already enjoying his triumph when it is perceived that the characters of
the communication are in his own handwriting. He is at once condemned to
death, and the emperor thenceforth renounces magicians, immortal
elixirs, etc., etc.[133]

It is well known that the Chinese often give, on the stage, a
representation of the life of the hero of the play from early infancy
(sometimes even _from birth_) to death, and these representations last
weeks in their performance; every action being done deliberately; for
example, if a performer smokes a pipe, he does not give a whiff or two
and then go on with the action, but calmly and placidly smokes it out to
the last puff.

Fairy spectacles, the Chinese also possess, in which Genii appear and
disappear, as well as birds and beasts endowed with the power of speech.
Their farces are of a much broader character, and often in these, the
clownish, awkward character is a European or an American; they heartily
enjoy all his mishaps, even his manner of lifting his hat and bowing,
being held up to ridicule; it is very much the same kind of pleasure as
we “western barbarians” enjoy in seeing such farces as “_Ici on parle
Francais_” or “The Perplexed Dutchman,” where the habits of a Frenchman,
and German, are the mirth-provoking element; or of a piece with the
character of Sir Hugh Evans and Dr. Caius, in Shakespeare’s “Merry Wives
of Windsor.”

There is another point of resemblance in Shakespeare, to the Chinese
drama: his following of the life of Henry VI. so closely and extensively
(through three parts) suggests the more extensive life-history-dramas of
the celestial empire. But the Chinese also give the “outside barbarians”
a thrust, _au serieux_; for in their plays the devil often appears,
dressed as a European.

In the music of their dramas, the Chinese are decidedly Wagnerian, for
not only do they use a great many loud instruments (chiefly of
percussion) but they illustrate with them the action of the drama; when
an actor enters into a combat at arms, the orchestra pound away at their
instruments with redoubled vigor. The characters often sing long _arias_
to the accompaniment of these voice-drowning instruments.[134] There is
much spoken action as well as song in these dramas, which therefore
approach more nearly to our _vaudevilles_ than any thing else.

Choruses are few in Chinese pieces, but sometimes the air is sung by
many voices, in order to emphasize it, and make it more plainly
perceptible above the racket of the orchestra.

The Chinese have also many tragedies and comedies wherein no music
whatever is employed. The actors in these, assuming the ordinary
conversational tone.

Conjugal infelicity and infidelity, form a staple plot with these, and
the same inappropriate and ludicrous entering into detail is apparent in
them.[135]

Movable scenes are not used, and the most infantile devices are used
when a rapid change is necessary; a general having to depart on a
distant expedition, mounts a hobby horse, or even a cane, and using a
small whip with one hand, imitates riding, (three or four times around
the theatre being sufficient) and then, announcing that he has arrived
at his destination, goes on with his speeches without any embarrassment.
This is but one example of the many where the dramatists draw heavily
upon the imagination of their audiences.

The actor on entering (in the play) begins by announcing his name and
telling the audience why and wherefore he has come; this is done to
simplify the following of the action, as in some dramas there are hosts
of characters and one player often assumes many _roles_.

Such puerility is caused partly by the small size of the stages, which
would not admit a host of performers, and partly by the fact that many
of the characters in a Chinese play are comparatively unimportant,
appearing once, and then vanishing forever; in fact at the end of some
of the Chinese dramas, one is considerably mystified as to the fate of
many of the characters, as the author, unlike the European and American
dramatists, who make everybody (except the villain) happy in the last
act, only deems it necessary to follow out closely the career of his
hero and heroine, and they being once dead, the other characters are
allowed to wind up in a very sudden and, to us, very unsatisfactory
manner. The musical part of these dramas is often quite long, and
whenever the actor desires to express much feeling, he falls into music.
Sometimes it is introduced in a most unnatural manner; in one tragedy, a
wife having murdered her husband is sentenced to be _flayed alive_;
after the execution of the sentence, she returns to the stage wholly
bereft of her skin, (this is depicted with true Chinese realistic
effect, the body of the performer being painted in exact imitation of
nature in such a hideous plight) and she then and there sings a song to
excite the pity of the infernal spirits. The song is full of screeches
and howls, and lasts half an hour.[136] Let us not be too hasty in
smiling at such absurd stage effects; there is an opera still performed
on our own stage, where an innocent Jewess is boiled in oil, as
_finale_, and as to the inappropriateness of a long song, under such
circumstances, there is a long chorus in a French opera of the last
century, where the mayor of the village having fallen into the water,
the anxious choristers sing for many minutes, that “he will he drowned
unless he is speedily helped out;” decidedly we must not smile too
broadly at the Chinese, as yet.

Sir John Barrow[137] speaks of the theatre, which he visited, as a mere
“Shed of Bamboo.” He says: “In the farther division of the building, a
party of comedians were engaged in the midst of an historical drama,
when we entered; but on our being seated they broke off, and coming
forward, made before us an obeisance of nine genuflexions and
prostrations, after which they returned to their labors, keeping up an
incessant noise and bustle during our stay. The heat of the day, the
thermometer standing at eighty-one degrees, in the open air, and at
least ten degrees higher in the building, the crowds that thronged to
see the strangers [this was in 1792, when Europeans were great rarities
in China] the horrible crash of the gongs, kettle drums, trumpets, and
squalling flutes, were so stunning and oppressive that nothing but the
novelty of the scene could possibly have detained us a moment.”

“The most entertaining, as well as the least noisy part of the
theatrical exhibition, was a sort of interlude, performed by three young
women, for the amusement it would seem of the principal actress, who sat
as a spectator, in the dress and character of some ancient queen, whilst
an old eunuch, very whimsically dressed, played his antic tricks like a
scaramouch, or buffoon in a Harlequin entertainment.”

“The dialogue in this part, differed entirely from the querulous and
nearly monotonous recitation of the Chinese, being light and comic, and
occasionally interrupted by cheerful airs, which generally concluded
with a chorus. These airs rude and unpolished as they were, appeared to
be regular compositions, and were sung in exactly measured time. One in
particular attracted our attention, whose slow, melancholy movement
breathed the kind of plaintiveness so peculiar to the native airs of the
Scotch, to which indeed it bore a close resemblance.” [We have before
spoken of this resemblance, which proceeds from both scales, Chinese and
Scotch, being pentatonic, or five toned.] “The voices of the women are
shrill and warbling, but some of their cadences were not without melody.
The instruments at each pause gave a few short flourishes, till the
music gradually increased in loudness by the swelling and deafening
gong. Knowing nothing of the language we were of course as ignorant of
the subject as the majority of an English audience is at an Italian
opera.” Thus speaks Barrow of his first impressions of a Chinese
theatre, but he probably fell into two errors; the _women_, whom he
mentions were in all likelihood, eunuchs; and the theatre itself, being
public, was of inferior style to those private establishments which are
the pride of the rich mandarin class.

It is singular, however, that the noise of the gong, tamtam, trumpet,
etc., are inseparable from all Chinese dramatic performances: although
the noise is deafening, and the voices of the actors are sometimes
drowned in spite of their shouting themselves hoarse, yet this
pandemonium only gives tranquil delight to the Chinese spectator whether
he be of high or low class. It is so extraordinary a fact that
physiologists and anatomists have endeavored to prove that the cause is
due to a peculiar formation of the Chinese ear.[138]

Certain it is that the Chinese are so passionately fond of the drama,
that they will sometimes pass many hours in succession in this noisy
entertainment.

There is a tremendous number of comedians in China; most of them are
purchased in early infancy by the chiefs of troupes, and by them trained
in music, singing, declamation, pantomime, and dance. It is a species of
slavery, not very unlike that of old Rome, but is not always life-long.

Some comedians, especially the chiefs, acquire large fortunes in the
exercise of their calling, but the caste is so looked down upon, by the
general public, and the facility of confiscating their fortune is so
great, that they seldom attempt to leave the profession, or make any
display of their wealth, lest it should be seized under any pretext by
some mandarin, in which case (in spite of the theoretical justice of
China) it would probably be beyond recovery.[139]

We may mention here, a peculiar mode of paying actors, in Cochin China.

The occasion described is an entertainment, the expenses of which were
borne by the Quong, or provincial governor. An Englishman who was
present, thus speaks of the affair,—“The Quong was there squatted on a
raised platform in front of the actors, with a small drum before him,
supported in a diagonal position, on which he would strike a tap every
time any part of the performance pleased him; which was also a signal
for his purse bearer to show a small string of about twenty _cash_ to
the actors. To my taste this spoiled the effect of the piece; for every
time the _cash_ fell among them, there would be a silence, and the next
moment a scramble for the money; and it fell so frequently as almost to
keep time with the discordant music of the orchestra.

The actors were engaged by the day, and in this manner received their
payment, the amount of which depended upon the approbation of the
_Quong_, and the number of times he encored them by tapping his drum. I
could see that many of them paid far more attention to the drum than
they did to their performance; though I suppose the amount thrown to
them is equally divided. Sometimes the string on which the _cash_ was
tied, unluckily broke, and the money flew in all directions; by which
some of the by-standers profited, not being honorable enough to hand it
up to the poor actors.[140]

This was a public performance and took place in a large shed, before a
numerous audience. Often the theatrical performances are allowed to take
place in the Joss-houses or houses of worship, the _bonzes_ or priests
being wise enough not to offer any obstacles to a mode of amusement so
thoroughly loved and appreciated by all the Chinese.

It is somewhat singular, and yet in keeping with the custom of the most
ancient nations, that the Chinese should at the same time enjoy the
drama so keenly, and despise the performers of it. The comedians are
kept as thoroughly within their caste as musicians were in Egypt, four
thousand years ago. Parents in China have almost unlimited power over
their children (filial love and obedience is the highest of Chinese
virtues,) they may sell them as slaves, or in some instances kill them,
but they are not allowed to sell them to the troupes of strolling
comedians, or to magicians. Any person so selling them is punished with
one hundred blows of the bamboo, and any go-between or middle-man, in
such transactions, receives a similar dose; any person of free
parentage, marrying an actor or actress, is punished in the same manner,
in spite of the precedent of several emperors. The crime of intimacy
with actresses is punishable with sixty blows, but this is easily
eluded, and the law seems to be obsolete. This punishment is not
attended with much infamy; the bastinado is in fact the lightest of
Chinese punishments. When the number of blows does not exceed twenty,
there is no disgrace whatever attached to the infliction: it is then
considered only a paternal chastisement; the emperor himself often
orders this correction to be administered to high officials for slight
faults, and afterwards treats them as if nothing had happened. After
such paternal punishment is inflicted, the victim goes on his knees to
the judge, bows his head three times to the earth, and _thanks him_ for
the care he has given to the education of his subject.[141]

It is significant that the “State Gazette” of Pekin, which will often
enter into details concerning the death of a private soldier, and give
eulogies to the military valor of the most humble, does not even mention
the decease of the most brilliant and well-known comedian, no matter how
much applause may have been accorded to him while living.

In such a country as China, it is easily imagined that there exists a
large troupe of “comedians to the emperor.” These although not more
superbly costumed than those of some rich mandarins, are clothed in a
peculiar manner. Of course it would not be allowable to turn their backs
upon the emperor, and yet often the action of the play, might demand
that they turn around. This dilemma is overcome by allowing them to wear
two masks, one on the face, the other at the back of their head, and
thus, Janus-like, they can always face the emperor. Their clothing is in
consequence different from that of ordinary actors, having two fronts
and no back.[142]

The _corps_ of singers, declaimers and musicians of all kinds belonging
to the Imperial court, is of course very large.

The dances of China, are as with all Eastern or ancient nations, purely
pantomimical, there are few pirouettes and skips as in our _ballet_. The
names and subjects of some of the earlier dancers, will show this
conclusively; “The labors of Agriculture,” “Joys of the Harvest,” “The
fatigues of War,” “The pleasures of Peace,” “The skill of Hunting,” etc.
These all show a primitive style of the art, and are not far removed
from the dances we shall find in vogue among the most crude children of
nature, such as the Australians, the Bushmen, or the Tasmanians. The
Chinese possess (as did the Egyptians) a number of gymnastic
performances similar to our clog, ballet, and comic dances, but these
come a long way after the dance proper, in the estimation of the people;
the word _ou_ which signifies dance, does not apply to them. We cannot
be surprised if from earliest times the regulation of the dance has been
a matter of State legislation.

The ancient emperor was allowed eight dances, with eight performers to
each, his full troupe containing sixty-four members. Kings of Provinces
had six dances of six performers, thirty-six in all; and thus through
all the upper ranks, literary doctors being allowed only two dances of
two performers each. Only certain instruments were allowed as
accompaniment, and the direction of the whole was always to be in charge
of various musical doctors. There also existed dances which were called
“little dances,” as they were taught to children at a tender age; the
names of some of these are interesting; “the Dance of the Flag,” danced
in honor of the spirits of earth and the harvests, so called because the
dancers waved small banners; “The Dance of the Plumes,” in honor of the
spirits of the four quarters of the world, in which the young dancers
carried a plume of white feathers, attached to a short stick; “The Dance
of the Foang-hoang,” which was danced to induce the assistance of the
mysterious bird (already described) in times of drought, and in which
the dancers held plumes of feathers of five colors; “the Dance of the Ox
Tail,” in which each dancer swings an ox tail; “The Dance of Javelins,”
where this weapon was brandished in honor of river and mountain spirits;
and finally, “the Dance of Man,” in which the hands were quite free, no
accessories being used.

The “Javelin Dance,” was not altogether pleasing to the great
philosopher Confucius. He condemns it as being too war-like, and the
gestures accompanying it, as too savage; as a whole he thought it liable
to inspire cruel sentiments. He preferred the “Dance of the Plumes,” as
containing all the chief elements of the “Javelin Dance” without
tendency to cruelty. In the palace, the sons of the emperor only, were
permitted to the “Dance of the Plumes.”

At the epoch, when these dances were at their zenith, the emperors had a
peculiar way of showing by them their approbation, or condemnation of
their viceroys. When the viceroy was presented at court, if his
administration seemed good to the emperor, he was welcomed by numerous
and lengthy dances; if, on the contrary his government seemed worthy of
censure, the dances were both short and few.

The following were the customs observed in presenting them:—Long before
the dance began, a drum was sounded “to dispel from the minds of the
spectators any thoughts unsuited to the occasion.” On the arrival of the
performers, they took three steps forward and put themselves in an
attitude, calculated to impress the beholders; a sort of _tableau
vivant_. The entrance was always accompanied with a slow movement of the
music, which gradually augmented both in speed and volume, until the
_finale_, when the climax having been reached, the music had attained a
presto movement, and the dancers retired with precipitation in order
that the interest might not have time to flag.

Sometimes the dancers carried a small shield with bell attached.

The Chinese sages deeply regret the loss of these ancient dances; (for
like all excellent customs the modern writers claim that they were at
their best in “the good old times,”) it seems that the ancient Chinese,
endeavored in the dance, to reproduce an easily-comprehended allegory of
the natural actions of men; the movements, gestures, attitudes, and
evolutions, all to be natural and easily understood by the spectators.
Since the days of Confucius, this simple style of dancing has fallen
greatly to decay.

In those days many of the emperors of China studied and understood the
art of dancing. History shows many such “Davids” (although not so well
known as Israel’s royal dancer) in the dynasties of the empire. Autumn
was the favorite season for the study of dancing, as the “feast of
ancestors” takes place in the Spring, and the pupils were ready to
exhibit their proficiency at that great event. The ancient practice of
imperial dancing, was continued even as recently as 1719, when one of
the sons of Kang-hi, of the age of twenty, performed before the emperor
and his court. There are also mandarins whose duty it is to dance before
the emperor; the pantomime of these is especially graceful and
dignified. They advance slowly two by two, their limbs and bodies moving
gently to the time of a tranquil music; they turn around without
quitting their relative positions, and after a series of gestures made
in perfect unison, and some symmetrical evolutions, they make the salute
of honor, and retire. This dance seems to be only a formal expression of
homage to the emperor. The dress of these officials is uniform, and
elegant, fine silk capes, caps, etc., the only difference of costume
being the buttons, with which the top of the caps are ornamented; the
different color of these being indicative of greater or lesser rank.
This _corps_ of dancers is recruited from the wealthiest and greatest
families of the empire.

In the dances, every detail is strictly systemized and observed; the
very positions are calculated according to the points of the compass;
thus one dancer is always placed at the north-west, another at the
north-east, the entrance is to be made from a fixed cardinal point, the
exit at another; all is rule and precision.

The number of dancers is not at present limited to that given above
(sixty-four for the emperor, thirty-six for viceroys, etc.) as the
ancient standard. At times of great festivity, the dancers of the
Imperial court are reckoned by hundreds. Such _grandes ballets_, are
almost always symmetrical and in concerted movements; but there are also
_solo_ dances; in these _pas seuls_ the dancer often accompanies himself
with both song and instrument. This proves how slow and majestic the
motions must be.

In dances, females very often appear, but in private only. Mandarins
frequently own female dancers and singers, whose performances are
reserved for their own families. It is but rarely, and as a mark of
especial honor, that they allow some intimate friend to view the dancing
of these slaves.

Spectacular pantomimes, such as delight the theatre-goers at Christmas
time in Europe and America, find also a congenial atmosphere in China; a
most beautiful one was performed in the presence of the emperor, and
Lord Macartney, in 1793. In this representation the object seemed to be,
to illustrate upon the stage, the wonders and fertility of the world, or
an allegory of the intermarriage of earth and ocean. The earth gave
forth in this pantomime, a large number of its animals, and products;
elephants, tigers, dragons, ostriches and eagles, as well as oaks,
pines, bamboos, and other specimens of vegetation appeared upon the
stage; while upon a lower stage, the ocean sent forth whales, dolphins,
porpoises, and also vessels, rocks, weeds, sponges, and coral. Each of
these creations was true to life, and in many of them were concealed
actors who represented the motions and habits of the animals in a manner
quite natural. After these products of earth and sea had performed
several evolutions separately, each division moving in a separate
circle, all united and came to the front of the stage, where a farther
series of movements was enacted; suddenly the entire mass of actors
divided, moving swiftly to the right and left in order to give place to
the whale, who seemed a sort of commander in chief. This immense fish
then advanced to the front of the stage, opposite the box in which the
emperor was seated; on arriving here, he lifted his head and spurted an
enormous mass of water, amounting to many barrels full, into the pit of
the theatre; where (holes having been bored to receive it) it swiftly
disappeared.[143]

This performance seemed to give the greatest delight to the Chinese part
of the audience. The music attached to this spectacle, was as usual of
the most deafening character.

Of the lower order of dances, such as tumbling, harlequinades, etc., the
Chinese have a vast variety; even puppet shows (_marionettes_) are
greatly used by them, and plays with simple plots, very skilfully given
by their means. This is the story represented at one of them;—An
unfortunate princess is kept prisoner in a castle surrounded by dragons:
to her comes a bold warrior, who after many combats with dragons, wild
beasts and other horrible creations, succeeds in killing, vanquishing
and dispersing them. He is recompensed by receiving the hand of the
grateful princess, and the whole concludes with processions, tournaments
and other festivities.[144]

As to the musical part of all these lesser performances, it is nearly
always present, and ever of the peculiar style which has filled every
traveller (so far as we know _without exception_), with utter distaste.
The juggling performances, of which there are many, both public and
private, are accompanied throughout with the above described orchestra.
Feats of skill, performed by troupes of children are especially admired
by the Chinese, and much sought for. The children begin their training
in these arts, very young.

Boat races have also their music, which is evidently intended to
inspirit the oarsmen. The following is a description of such an event,
(so far as it relates to music).

“On each side of the little mast that supports the national flag, are
two men, who leave off striking the tum-tum, and executing rolls upon
the drum, whilst the mariners leaning over their oars, row on
vigorously, and make the dragon junk, skim rapidly over the water.

Whilst these elegant boats are contending with each other, the people
throng the quays, the shore and the roofs.... They animate the rowers
with their cries and plaudits; they let off fireworks; they perform at
various points, deafening music, in which the sonorous noise of the
tum-tum, and the sharp sound of a sort of a clarinet, giving perpetually
the same note, predominate over all the rest. The Chinese relish this
infernal harmony.”[145]

We have dwelt with some detail upon the music of the Chinese, for we
consider these people, musically as well as ethnologically and
philologically a series of contradictions, and especially differing from
all our conceived notions of right and propriety: a nation where music
is heartily loved, and taught to youth,[146] and yet where musical
progress is almost unknown; where goodness and love are taught in the
most beautiful writings, and where greater cruelties are practised than
anywhere else on earth. They differ from us on almost every point. We
mourn in black, they in white; we respect crowns as badges of honor,
they the boots; we build solid walls, they make them hollow; we pull a
boat, they push it; we place the orchestra in front of the stage; they
behind it; with us children fly kites, with them, men; we scratch the
head when puzzled, they, the antipodes of it, etc, etc.[147]

A nation so strange cannot be judged flippantly or speedily; only a
short time since we held the Japanese in the rank of the semi-civilized;
now they are making giant strides on the highway of progress. Who dare
say that the Chinese may not yet experience a similar awakening? At
present their heaviest drawbacks, in music, as well as in all
civilization, seem to be, a senseless clinging to ancient usages; an
education of the head, and not of the heart; an etiquette which becomes
both ludicrous and burdensome in its requirements;[148] a totally false
position of woman; and a theoretically competitive, but practically
corrupt public service. There have recently been unmistakeable signs of
progress, and, once begun, it is more than probable that the reform will
be thorough and swift as it has thus far been with their neighbors. In
such case, China will be of far higher interest to the world than she
has been to us in our describing her as—a curiosity shop.




                             CHAPTER XVII.
                            MUSIC OF JAPAN.


It is a singular fact, that while the Japanese have in all ages given a
great deal of attention to poetry the kindred art of music has been
suffered to remain almost neglected. Their musical system has never been
carefully formed or elucidated, and although they may vie with the
Chinese in the beauty of their poetical effusions, in the field of music
their research is nothing, when compared with the immense patience and
study which the latter people have given to the subject.

Although there are few treatises on the art, yet the practice of music
is now deemed an essential part of the education of a Japanese young
lady, for contrary to Chinese custom, we find that in Japan, the female
sex are proficient in the art.

Although at first glance there seems to be much affinity between
Japanese and Chinese music, (so much so, that it seems natural to
suppose that the former was an outgrowth of the latter) yet, upon closer
analysis, these resemblances are found to be few, and the contradictions
many and irreconcilable.

The Japanese songs do not appear to have been founded on the Chinese
pentatonic scale, but rather upon the _chromatic_.

It is very possible, that the music of Japan had its rise long ago,
within the limits of the island. Unfortunately, in this branch of
history, we can as yet, come to no definite conclusion; the absence of
all knowledge of the system (if there be one worthy of the name) on
which their melodies are formed, and the very slight knowledge of the
ancient history of the people, confine us altogether to conjecture and
inference. That China exerted some influence upon the musical style of
Japan, is undeniable. In the year (A. D.) 57, an embassy was sent from
the island, to the Emperor of China, with presents. The return of this
expedition, brought to the (at that time) totally rude and uncultivated
people, the fruits of the older Chinese civilization, and it was
probably at that epoch, that the Chinese instruments, which still exist
in Japan, were introduced.

The instruments of Japan, though resembling, are much cruder than their
Chinese, prototypes. The _che_, of China, is found under the name of
_koto_. It is larger than the _che_, but has fewer strings; the latter
are of silk, lightly lacquered. The _sam-sin_ is a guitar, with a very
long neck, and has three strings. These instruments are among the
indispensable articles of the wedding outfit of every bride.[149]

Of wind instruments they have many styles of flutes and a trumpet, made
of a conch shell.[150] The _cheng_ (small mouth organ) is also possessed
by them. It is called in Corean dialect _saing-hwang_.[151] Gongs,
tamtams, and noisy instruments of percussion, the Japanese possess in
profusion; they have also a curious instrument, quite like the Egyptian
sistrum,[152] formed of two sonorous metallic rings upon a light frame
work, which give forth a tinkling and jingling upon being shaken, or
struck with a small stick.[153] The _ko-kiou_ is a kind of violoncello
played with a bow; the birva is a similar instrument, which is picked
with a _plectrum_. The same plectrum is used in performing upon the
_sam-sin_. The clarionet is used very frequently; it is made of bamboo,
like the flute. There is also an eight-holed flageolet. Among the
instruments of percussion, are wooden rattles; stone drums like bowls,
which stand on low frames; a musical drum made of leather; the
_tam-tam_, or portable tambourine; gongs of all shapes, such as shields,
fishes, tortoises, etc., producing all tones grave and piercing; bells,
and kettle drums.

The tambourines which accompany the character dances, are sometimes
played two at a time; one being held under the arm, the other in the
left hand.[154] There is a picture extant, representing a Japanese
concert, in which there is one melodious instrument (a flute) against
_six_ instruments of percussion, such as bells, cymbals and drums.[155]

The Japanese ladies not only play the various instruments, but study
singing, assiduously. The language is well adapted to vocal efforts,
being one of the most melodious and soft of the East; it approaches the
Italian in its smoothness; it is monosyllabic,[156] but not varying with
the pitch of the voice, as the Chinese does. (The written characters
have been derived from the Chinese.) The very alphabet, or the nearest
Japanese approach to it, is converted into a short song, which is
characteristic of the materialistic views of the people.

The poetic setting of the “Irova” (as this is called) runs thus:—

  “Color and light pass away
  In our world nothing is permanent
  The present day has disappeared
  In the profound abyss of nothingness.
  It was but the pale image of a dream;
  It causes in our bosoms no regret.”[157]

Nothing can give a stronger picture of the philosophy of Buddhism and
its influence upon the Japanese mind.

Buddhism was so well suited to the temper of the people, that upon its
introduction into the country (A. D. 552) it almost absorbed the ancient
style of worship (Sintuism), and has, at the present time, so altered
that superstition, that the prevailing aspiration of one branch, even of
that creed, is an escape from trouble into nothingness. The mode of
worship is exceedingly simple, and in the main, joyous; there is no
thought of supplication to their deities; for as they regard these as
being in a state of bliss, they deem that the sight of any person in
distress, must be painful to them, and therefore, when in trouble, they
avoid going to religious exercises. In fact on the days of religious
festivals, they behave in a manner which we should call decidedly
immoral, but they do it with the best of motives, for they argue that
nothing can please the gods more than to see mortals enjoying themselves
heartily; and on this plea, both Buddhists and Sintuists indulge in all
kinds of excesses on holidays.

Music does not play a very important part in the religious ceremonies of
Japan. The Sintuists, who worship the Kami, or demi-gods, employ choirs
on some occasions, and bear in all their ceremonies, some resemblance to
the Catholic rites; this resemblance is yet more striking in the
Buddhist religion; so much so, that a pious divine[158] on beholding
their customs, came to the conclusion that the whole was a parody by
Satan, upon the Catholic church.

The annual _fetes_ instituted in honor of the chief Kami, consist almost
wholly in ceremonies of purification. On the day before the chief
solemnity, the priests march in procession, with tapers, to the temple
where the arms and other objects which belonged to the demi-god, are
kept in a reliquary called _mikosi_. According to the priests, the
_mikosi_ is the earthly dwelling place of the _Kami_; a sort of
terrestrial throne, for occasional inhabitance; and each year it must
undergo a thorough purification, in order to be acceptable to the hero.
The reliquary is emptied and brought to the river; a certain number of
priests carefully wash it, while others kindle a series of huge fires,
to keep away the evil _genii_. The _kagoura_, or sacred choir, play soft
and pleasant music, in order to appease the Kami, who is temporarily
deprived of his earthly dwelling; they make as much haste as possible to
restore it to him, which is done by placing the relics again in the
reliquary.

The temple itself undergoes a purification lasting several days, at the
same time. Sometimes the Buddhists send out collectors for their
temples, who sing and play, quite musically, in front of the doors of
persons from whom they expect to obtain a gratuity; they continue at
each door until the heart of the proprietor is softened, or his patience
gone, when the door is opened and the singers rewarded civilly.[159]

In order that the similarity of the Buddhist and Christian rites may be
remarked, we give the description of the interior of a temple during
worship, as seen by a European traveller.[160]

“A hundred kneeling devotees were present; a large shrine, with a gilt
image in its recess; two large globular lamps, and two burning candles,
immensely long and thick; as also numerous gold and porcelain vases,
holding lighted tapers, and surrounded by a forest of artificial
flowers, were the objects that most riveted his attention. On both sides
of this magnificent and richly gilded shrine were two smaller ones, each
illuminated with lighted candles and perfumed tapers, burning with
colored flame; the effect of which was very beautiful. In front of the
principal altar, within an enclosure, knelt six shaven-headed priests
(the latter, and physicians shave the whole of the hair off their
heads), robed in crimson silk, and white crape; the centre and chief of
whom engaged himself in striking a small saucer-shaped bell, while four
more of the number performed a similar duty with padded drumsticks on
hollow vessels of lacquered wood, which awoke a dull, monotonous sound.
They kept good time, playing in unison, and toning their prayers to
their music in chanting. At the conclusion of this singing and drumming
they bent their foreheads to the floor, after which they arose and
repaired to the smaller shrines, where a ceremony made up of
gesticulation and a solemn reading of prayers, took place. In the
meantime, the audience knelt, with their eyes directed to the ground,
and gave some time to silent prayer.”

Music bore a part also in the funeral ceremonies of some sects in Japan.
The priest sang a eulogy of the dead, just before the funeral pile was
set on fire.[161]

The order of “mountain priests” use a few instruments of sound (rather
than music) in their wanderings. They have a staff with a copper head,
to which are fastened four rings, also of copper, which they shake on
uttering certain words in their prayers. They also carry a shell called
_forano-kai_, to which a tube is attached, and which they use as a
trumpet. They blow a blast upon this instrument (which in tone resembles
the horn of a cowherd) whenever they see any travellers approaching, as
a summons to them to give some charity to the order.[162]

There also exist several orders of a semi-ecclesiastical character;
among which may be mentioned the society of blind men. One branch of
this society gives the following legend as to its origin. Kakekigo, a
general much renowned for his valor and supernatural strength, fought
under a prince, named Feki, against the famous hero, Joritomo. In a
great battle Feki was killed, and Kakekigo taken prisoner. Joritomo, far
from desiring to put him to death, sought by every means to attach him
to his own army. One day, when he was pressing him very close to enter
into his service, upon whatever terms he pleased, the captive general
returned him the following resolute answer:—“I was once the faithful
servant of a kind master. Now that he is dead no other shall boast of
possessing my faith and friendship. I owe even my life to your clemency;
and yet such is my misfortune, that I cannot set my eyes on you, but
with a design, in revenge of him and me, to cut off your head.
Therefore, these designing instruments of mischief, I will offer to you,
as the only acknowledgement of your generous behavior towards me which
my unhappy condition will allow me to give you.” Saying this, he plucked
out his eyes, and presented them, on a salver, to Joritomo; who,
astonished at so much magnanimity and resolution, instantly set him at
liberty.

Kakekigo then retired into the province of Fiuga, where he learned to
play upon the birva (a musical instrument mentioned above), and founded
the society of the Feki-blind, of which he himself was the first head.
Many of the members of this society apply themselves to music, in which
capacity they are employed at the courts of Princes and great men, as
also upon public solemnities, festivals, processions, weddings, and the
like. The society does not solicit charity, but its members all strive
to be self-supporting, as well as of mutual assistance to each other.
Whoever is once admitted as a member, must remain so for life.[163]

The Birva, mentioned above, is a great favorite with the masses,
especially when played by the Feki musicians, who still make it their
chief instrument. It has been known in Japan for twelve hundred
years;[164] and one of the most beautiful lakes in Japan, near Kiota is
named Birva Lake, from its shores resembling the outline of that
instrument.

The religious chanting of some of the larger sects, is quite impressive.
Mr. Sile, Professor of History and Philosophy at the Imperial University
of Yeddo, says:—“Some of the chants are very impressive; especially
those of the Buddhists; they have a kind of sepulchral solemnity about
them, and when performed responsively by large companies of Bonzes, on
either side of a gloomy temple, in front of a shadowy half-illumined
shrine, they sound like the mournful wailings of prisoners, not of hope,
but of despair.”[165]

The peculiarity of the performance lies in this: every man chants, not
on a given key, but on that which best suits his natural voice. The time
is well kept, but the key notes are as various as each voice that sings;
as each one is allowed to choose his own pitch. The effect is good; it
giving that blurred and massive sound, which is observed when a large
congregation repeats the “Lord’s Prayer” together; but the inflections
and intervals are more marked and effective. Instrumental music is also
sometimes present. The bonzes clad in heavy, sacerdotal vestments,
officiate to an accompaniment of gongs and tambourines.

The solemn entry of the high priest into the choir, makes an immediate
diversion in the monotony of the service. This grand dignitary is clad
as richly as the bishops and arch-bishops of the west; red cloak, green
silk stole, and white embroidered robes. He is followed by a young
acolyte, dressed chiefly in white, who accompanies his master, step by
step, to offer to him, at an understood signal, a cup of tea from a
portable vessel which he carries with both hands.[166]

Some of the Buddhist bonze-houses are celebrated for their luxury, the
number of their priests, their magnificent attire, and the theatrical
grandeur of their religious ceremonies. There are also endless numbers
of retainers, heralds, grooms and porters, attached to the monasteries.
The bonzes often give theatrical spectacles, in which dancers and
comedians appear. A very curious piece is given on the fifteenth day of
the sixth month. It is a sword dance, or military pageant, performed
entirely by the priests. Buddhism in Japan has been a most flexible and
conciliatory religion. It has succeeded so easily against the older
Japanese religion of Kami, or hero-worship, because its introducers saw
what customs had become rooted in the Japanese heart, and retained them.
Thus we find the worship of heroes, tolerated in the Buddhist faith, as
well as every spectacle and sound, calculated to please the senses of
the people. It also steered clear of the rock upon which Christianity
split (in Japan), that is, the alienation of the people from their
rulers or sovereign.

Players of secular music, are numerous everywhere in Japan, but few of
them have any idea of time or notation. Blind musicians (of the
fraternity above mentioned, and of another called the Buffetz) are
numerous and much encouraged by the people, probably on account of their
infirmity. Women and girls form the bulk of the secular players and
singers. Most of these have been brought up to this from childhood, and
(as with the ancient Greeks,) the possession of a musical and literary
education often goes hand in hand with considerable laxity of morals.

The practice of music is, therefore, not held in any great esteem among
men, as the few males who devote themselves to it are chiefly
itinerants. The secular songs are often plaintive in character, but at
times also quite stirring and fiery.

In Japan, as in some other Eastern countries, it is not unusual to find
persons among the upper classes, who, while disdaining to study the art
themselves, yet are very fond of listening to the performances of hired
musicians. The taste seems to run entirely in the direction of melody,
and not at all towards harmony; although they have a knowledge of a rude
kind of harmony, consisting of melodies played upon two or more
instruments tuned a fifth apart, thus forming an endless succession of
consecutive fifths. This harmony, or a plain melody played in unison,
they prefer to the finest (or, in fact, any) European music. Our readers
will recollect the answer made by the Chinese mandarin to Pere Amiot,
relative to his opinion on the respective worth of Chinese and European
music. A similar reply was given by a Japanese nobleman to Dr. Müller,
when asked to give an opinion on our music,—“European music may please
women, children, and common people, but Japanese gentlemen may not
endure it.”

In singing, the Chinese custom of using falsetto tones, obtains also in
Japan. One peculiar taste for Western music exists among the Japanese;
they like, and purchase many of our music boxes, and many are made in
Switzerland especially for the Chinese and Japanese market. These
contain two Chinese airs; but it is said that the people would enjoy
them even more, if there were no harmonies attached. The entire
instrumental music of Japan, partakes of a tinkling character,
suggestive of a music box.

Secular singing is an indispensable adjunct of banqueting and feasting.
These are frequently enlivened by songs and the sound of stringed
instruments.[167]

The Japanese have a great _penchant_ for excursions, banquets and lively
enjoyments; they have been, not inaptly, called the “Parisians of the
West;” hence it is not surprising to find houses of entertainment
scattered broadcast throughout the realm. In these tea houses, every
kind of dissipation, from the most innocent, to the reverse, is found,
often under the same roof. The most aristocratic of these resorts, have
a numerous staff of attendants, among which are singers, dancers, and
guitar-players. Although these establishments appear disreputable in
European eyes, yet the Japanese gentleman does not hesitate to take his
wife and children thither, for a pleasure jaunt. When we consider that
the Japanese are the most careful people in the world regarding the
education and behavior of their wives and children, we cannot attribute
this seeming incongruity to negligence.

In tea houses of an inferior rank, when female dancers and musicians are
not among the assistants, they may be sent for, and engaged by the hour.
These women never enter the lower class of tea-houses, unless thus sent
for. In this respect, as well as by the correctness of their behavior,
they are to be distinguished from the lower order of street musicians
and dancers at fairs. These are not allowed to perform in private
houses; the law compels them to confine their music to such places as
are subject to police regulations. Theatres being included in this
category, they often appear there, at the request of performers in the
plays, in order to figure in the ballet.[168]

In Yeddo, many of the tea houses are built along the banks of the river;
and in this case, they have large family boats or gondolas attached,
which they let out by the hour, to such parties (and there are many) as
desire to take their recreation upon the water. Guitar players and
refreshments are furnished with these boats.

The lower classes are passionately fond of listening to story tellers
and singers, and these, as in other Eastern countries, give open air
performances, trusting to their ability to delight their audience, for a
voluntary recompense.

Every day at the close of working hours, one may see groups of artizans,
and laborers, as well as many women of the working classes, either at
the door of the workshop or at a street corner, arranged in a
semi-circle around the story-teller.

National legends and romances are usually given only by those women who
have made a profession of music and singing. This branch of street
singers forms a large class; they are less roving than the others, and
sometimes of rather a high order of talent, as compared with their more
itinerant associates. The most distinguished of them have three or four
musicians as accompanists, and do not themselves play upon any
instrument. The effect of these combinations is said sometimes to be
very charming, when heard and seen on a summer’s evening, in a light
bamboo frame work, hung round with vines, and lighted with paper
lanterns.

Humbert has given the subject of some of these legendary songs, and they
are found to be of a most sensational description. A few examples will
suffice to prove this.

“Asahina-Sabro charges a troop of enemies, and passes through them,
lifting with his right hand, a soldier wearing a casque and cuirass, and
spinning him round in the air, while with the left hand he kills two
equally redoubtable warriors with one blow of his mace.”[169]

“Nitan-nosiro, the dauntless hunter, astride on the back of a gigantic
wild boar, which has flung down, and trodden under its hoofs, all the
companions of the hero, holds the furious monster between his knees, and
plunges his cutlass into its shoulder.”

“Sonsige, one of the horsemen of the Mikado, finds his comrades
squatting around a checker board; he spurs his horse, and with one
bound, it stands in the centre of the board, as motionless as any bronze
equestrian statue.”

“Tame-tomo desired to conquer the island of Fatsisis. As he mercifully
desired to avoid bloodshed, he set about convincing the islanders that
resistance was useless. He therefore summoned the two strongest men of
the race of the Ainos (the ancient inhabitants of Japan) and, seated
calmly upon a mass of rock, he presented his bow to them, holding it by
the wood and ordering them to try and bend it. Each seized it with both
hands, and setting their heels against the wood of the bow, they leaned
back with all their weight, and pulled the string with all their
strength. Every effort was in vain; the bow only yielded when Tame-tomo
took it delicately between the finger and thumb of his right hand, and
shot an arrow which was immediately lost in the clouds.”

It must be remembered, however, that these highly spiced romances are
the especial pabulum of the lower classes; and it may be ranked
considerably higher than the musical recreation of the working classes
of China.

The laborers of Japan, sometimes sing while at their toil, in a measured
but cheerful manner.[170] Before leaving the subject of Japanese songs,
it may be interesting to note that in the days of Kæmpfer, the Japanese
were as curious about our songs, as we are to hear those of barbaric
nations; for the emperor and his court, insisted upon that grave
historian dancing, and singing before them.[171] On one of these
interesting occasions the historian basely deceived the imperial
Japanese searcher after knowledge; for on being commanded to sing, he
sang to the emperor, a love ditty, which “he had formerly composed for a
lady, for whom he had a particular esteem;” and upon the emperor
inquiring the meaning of the song, he answered that it was an ode of
praise, in honor of the emperor and his court.[172] Let us hope that the
Japanese will not lead our investigators astray in such a manner.

The court of Japan had, at that era, musicians attached to its service,
though by no means on the grand scale of the Chinese court. The empress
had her private band, consisting of players upon the birva, the koto,
and the samsinn. Theatrical representations were sometimes added to
music. A corps of young comedians played little operas, or executed
character dances, some grave and slow, in which a long mantle was worn;
others lively and playful, the dancers appearing suddenly and with
appropriate movements, in the disguise of birds or butterflies.

The court ladies had their private boxes at the theatre and at the
circus of wrestlers; many of these customs still exist at the Japanese
court but not with the spirit and life of former days.

Processional music is, in Japan, similar to that described in “Chinese
Music,” noisy and distressing; but it is by no means so generally used
as in China. In some processions it is not present at all. The emperor
formerly appears to have had no music in his pompous cavalcades, for a
description of one of these pageants (written in the seventeenth
century), thus concludes:

“It is at the same time in the utmost silence that the procession
proceeds. No one is heard to speak a word. Neither the spectators in the
streets, nor those who form the procession, make the least noise. It can
only be perceived by the sound of men’s footsteps, and the tramping of
horses.”[173]

At the ecclesiastical processions, which take place on days devoted to
special _Kami_, (similar to the saints days of Europe), and called
_Matsouri_, the music consists of the fifes, drums, and gongs of the
bonzery. Of course these processions vary in proportion to the
popularity of the special Kami or saint. The greatest _Matsouri_ which
takes place at Yeddo, is that given in honor of Zinmou, the founder of
the empire. Even those who do not believe in Kami-worship, attend this
feast to show respect to their country, and it has become a patriotic as
well as religious occasion. Over a million of spectators, annually view
this procession. In the ranks appear an image of the patron of sacred
dancing, borne on a large drum; and the sacred gong of the priests. The
band on this occasion is large, and flutes, trumpets, big drums,
cymbals, gongs, and tambourines are among the instruments carried. The
expenses of the lesser _Matsouri_ are often defrayed by the people of a
street or quarter which is specially devoted to the _Kami_ in whose
honor it is held.

Many of the customs above alluded to are sensibly losing their hold on
the populace, since the recent introduction of our civilization; this is
especially the case with such customs as come under government
surveillance. The military music for example, has been remodelled on the
European plan; regimental bands in French style (that is with a
preponderance of drums), are now attached to the Japanese national army.
The trumpet calls are said to be played with much aptitude by the
Japanese performers, but in the matter of time-keeping by the band, and
keeping step to the music by the soldiers, exactness is yet far from
being attained.[174] In the theatre and its music, there is, as yet, not
so great a change from former days, yet there are many European customs
to be found there (though probably not all derived from Europe), and the
theatre differs from that of China, in having a curtain in front of the
stage; in being often built upon a permanent site; and in other
particulars.

The plays although sometimes quite as minute in details as the Chinese,
are much shorter, lasting usually about two hours; and are often much
wittier.

There has been a peculiar manner of presenting these plays; if five
plays are to be performed in one day, the following mode has sometimes
been adopted.[175]

The performers go through the first act of the first play, then the
first act of the second play, and so on until the five _first acts_ have
been given. They then take the _second_ act of each play in succession,
and so on, until all the last acts are given. The object of this custom
is to enable spectators to see one act, go away, and come again in time
for the next act.

Often, however, the spectators remain throughout the entire day, and in
that case refreshments are openly consumed. It is also thought correct
for ladies to change their dress as often as possible during the day, so
that there is as much change of costume, in front of the stage as upon
it. In the Japanese comedies there is generally a large amount of love
making. The tragedies deal chiefly with the exploits of the mythological
heroes, and are expressed in verse, sometimes declaimed, sometimes
sung.[176] The terrific combat is an acknowledged essential of this
order of plays.[177]

The effect of the martial scenes is much increased by a bass drum,
called “taiko” (after a celebrated ancient warrior), which is sometimes
played with a smaller one called “kakko.”[178]

The building where these plays take place is very plain. The theatre at
Matsmai, the capital city of the Island of Jesso, is thus
described.[179]

“It is a large and pretty high building; at the back is a stage which
with us, has a raised floor. From the stage to the front wall, where the
entrance is situated, two rows of seats are placed for the spectators.
In the middle where we have the pit, there is a vacant space in which
straw mats are laid down for the spectators. As this space is much lower
than the stage, those in front do not intercept the view from those
behind. Opposite the stage, where in our theatre the galleries and chief
boxes are situated there are only a bare wall, and the door for
entrance.

There were no ornaments in the interior; the walls were not even
painted. The dresses and decorations are kept in a separate building.”

In Yeddo this is far different and keeps more pace with civilization,
and, as Yeddo supplies the surrounding provinces with both actors and
plays, the change is spreading throughout the empire. The plays begin at
six or seven, P. M., and last (without the before-mentioned
alternations) until one or two o’clock in the morning. Theatres are
exceedingly numerous in the city; each has its own arms or design, by
which it is called; and these are painted upon banners and lanterns,
which are hung from a tower upon the roof of each establishment. We give
as complement to the above description of the Matsmai theatre, the
following picture of a leading theatre at Yeddo.

“The interior of the theatre forms a long square. There are two ranges
of galleries, the upper containing the best places in the theatre.
Numbers of ladies are to be seen there in full dress, that is to say,
covered up to their eyes in crape dresses and silk mantles.[180] The
whole of the remainder of the house is occupied exclusively by men.

The floor of the house as seen from a distance, resembles a draught
board. It is divided into compartments containing from eight to twelve
places each, most of which are hired by the year by the citizens who
take their children regularly to the play. There are no lobbies. Every
one walks to his place on the planks which enclose the compartments at
the height of the spectators’ shoulders, who squat on their heels, or
crouch on little stools. There is neither a ladder nor staircase, by
which to get down into the midst of them. The men hold out their arms to
the women and children. The settling of the audience in its place forms
a very picturesque part in the preliminaries of the representation.
Tobacco and refreshments are served during the whole evening by koskeis,
or servants, along the before-mentioned gang planks. On two sides of the
pit are two bridges of planks, which also communicate with the boards of
the stage; the first is nearest to one of the doors; the second, which
is four planks wide, forms an angle with the extremity of the boxes. On
this bridge certain heroic or tragic comic personages perform their
part, and the ballet is danced. The house is lit by paper lanterns tied
to the galleries; there is no chandelier from the roof, which is
perfectly flat, the cupola being unknown in Japanese architecture. Large
lanterns are however, sometimes held up to the roof, in order to light
up the performance of the acrobats, especially that of the ‘flying men,’
who cross the theatre by means of cleverly contrived mechanism.

The curtain which hangs before the stage, is ornamented by a gigantic
inscription in Chinese characters, and surmounted by a target with an
arrow in the centre. This is a symbol of the talent and tact which the
actors are about to display, and signifies that they expect to ‘hit the
bull’s eye’ of the audience’s wishes.”[181]

The performance generally lasts till one o’clock A. M., and usually
consists of a comedy, a tragedy, an opera with a ballet, and two or
three interludes of acrobats, wrestlers and jugglers.

The tragedy we have already partly described as of a mythological
sensational type. In the comedy it is often customary for the audience
to address the actors, and the latter answer in kind; thus frequently a
brisk fire of _repartee_ is kept up which delights the audience far more
than the play itself. It is very rare in any of these pieces that more
than two actors are upon the stage together. In the ballet the
performers are richly attired, and sometimes wear several dresses of
light silk, one above the other; as they dance they detach a few of
these vestments and allow them to hang from their waist, a cloud of airy
texture seemingly voluminous, but in reality very light.[182] The
Japanese plays are sometimes preceded by a prologue in which much of the
action is described (_a la_ Greek chorus) but not the _denouement_.[183]
The performance of the jugglers is most to the popular taste, for it is
not unusual to find the restaurants (with which each theatre is
surrounded, and which cater to the same class of custom) quite crowded
during the entire performances, but the moment that the gong gives the
signal for the commencement of the juggling, they are at once deserted,
every one hastening back to his seat in the theatre. The principal parts
of the performance are announced not with a bell or with music, but by
striking a small wooden stick upon the stage.

Sometimes the actors pass through the audience on their way to the
stage, in order to give the spectators an opportunity to admire their
appearance and costume, as closely as possible.[184] The appearance of
infernal personages on the stage is always accompanied with lightning.

The principal characters of the drama are accompanied on the stage by a
couple of attendants, each carrying a long stick at the end of which is
a lighted candle. The use of these candles is amusing; they show to the
audience what they ought to admire. If the actor’s facial expression be
peculiar, his attitude graceful, his dress fine, or his weapons elegant,
the candle is at once held to the part, to attract attention.

With regard to the literary merit of the Japanese drama, not enough is
yet known whereon to base a detailed analysis, but it is safe to say
that the art is yet in its infancy. It is singular, that, while we
regard some of the situations in their plays as exceedingly indelicate,
they, on their part, condemn our drama as totally immoral, and would not
tolerate such plays as “Hamlet,” “School for Scandal,” etc.

The key to the enigma is this,—they allow every license to unmarried
ladies, but the married state is with them inviolable. They therefore
tranquilly witness plays which would put “Camille” to the blush, but
allow nothing which involves post-marital intrigue. Some of their actors
are quite skillful; there is one at present upon the Yeddo stage, who
performs the part of a man possessed with the soul of a cat, and the
blending of human and feline character is said to be marvelous.

The caste of actors, as in China, is rather low; the comedians being in
least repute. Although the theatre is so well patronized, yet it is only
by the middle and lower classes; very few aristocrats even of the lesser
nobility ever attending, and these even disguise themselves.

Of course, it was to be imagined that the Jesuits would not (at the time
of their mission in Japan) neglect so straight a road to the popular
attention, as the drama. In their church at Nagasaki (more than two
centuries ago), they represented a play in the style of the mediæval
miracle plays, representing the birth of Christ. The parts were taken by
the neophites and native students at the college of the order.
Everything passed off in the best possible manner, as well in the
appointments of the theatre, as in the ease and smoothness of the
acting, and it would have been applauded in any European theatre.[185]

It may be interesting to the reader to peep into the green room of a
Japanese theatre, during performance. It is thus described,—

“In these places none but men are to be seen, excepting from time to
time some servants, or the artists’ wives who bring refreshments to
their husbands, or come to give the last touch to their toilet before
they go on the stage in the costume of either sex. In the midst of the
general disorder we find some very characteristic groups. Here are
musicians occupied in refreshing themselves, and indifferent to
everything else until the signal to return to their posts shall reach
them; there, two actors are rehearsing together the attitudes and
gestures which in a few moments are to delight the spectators; and
another sitting on his heels, before a looking glass placed upon the
floor, is painting his face and adjusting his feminine head-dress. A
young devil beside him, has thrown back his mask, with his horns and
mane over his shoulders and is fanning himself, while the chief of the
wrestlers, is tranquilly smoking his pipe, in the midst of the acrobats.

Among the crowd, carpenters are coming and going, carrying the screens
and partitions for the next scene; the machinist is working a trap
through which a whirlwind of flame is about to escape; and the piece is
going on outside to the accompaniment of drum beating, amid the
conversation of the public in the house, and that of the disengaged
actors.”[186]

Such briefly, is the condition of music and the drama in Japan, but such
astounding changes are taking place throughout every part of the life of
this enterprising people, that a description which is appropriate at
present, may be a record of past customs, ten years hence. Already there
is a tendency in upper circles towards Western music, but this may be
rather a result of fashion (which is being rapidly _Europeanized_)
rather than of genuine appreciation; even the present empress of Japan
has, it is said, a real taste for European music and instruments. She is
a good performer upon the piano-forte.

As with the Chinese, the customs in general of the Japanese are at total
variance with our own; to show respect we take off our hat, they their
shoes. We get up, they sit down, (it is the height of impoliteness to
receive a visitor standing.)[187]

We turn the back as a mark of incivility, they as a token of
respect;[188] their mixture of the truest modesty with the greatest
license, must ever remain an enigma to us. Since then, we cannot in
other respects, judge this remarkable people, it behooves us, in the
field of music, to study them without preconceived ideas of the art.
That music is in an undeveloped state with them, is undoubtedly true;
the absence of treatises and system proves it; but what direction the
art will take in its development can only be settled by time. That it
will not remain stationary in the midst of change, is a foregone
conclusion.




                             CHAPTER XVIII.
                        MUSIC OF SAVAGE NATIONS.


The music of savage tribes, should properly begin a chronological
account of the music of the world. It can scarce be doubted that the
strains which to-day delight the ears of the rudest peoples, were
similar to those which gave pleasure to the uncultivated denizens of the
earth in pre-historic times. The scientific inquirer, even to-day, finds
unexpected points of resemblance in music of nations and tribes,
separated from each other in distance, custom, climate and religion;
resemblances which are so numerous that they can only be accounted for
by the hypothesis that the strains have come down from an earlier,
homogeneous race. Of course the earliest efforts of primitive man were
rather rhythmical than musical, and even at present the music of the
least civilized races is altogether rhythmical. The ease of the
discovery that a regular clapping of the hands, or stamping of the feet,
or striking two pieces of wood together, could produce a pleasing
effect, is so apparent that it puts all discussion as to the origin of
music, out of sight; a fortunate occurrence, since there are enough
points of dispute yet left for our wiseacres to contend over.

The discovery of drums and horns also came almost directly from nature;
and here the musical instruments of primitive man stopped; and here also
(in drums, clappers of wood, and trumpets) the catalogue of musical
instruments, of the more savage peoples, of the present, ceases.

But among the more advanced tribes of savages, we shall find instruments
that will cause us to coincide with Solomon’s opinion, that “there is
nothing new under the sun.”

With these, who did not stop contented at the rude percussion and
trumpet instruments, the next step was probably to cut reeds of various
lengths and to discover that the length regulated the tone. Here was the
first real discovery in music, for no sooner were high and deep tones
known than pleasant alternations would suggest themselves, and as a
consequence, melodies (however uncouth) sprang into being. Possibly at
the same mystic era, the tension of the sinews of some animal, left
exposed to the breeze, would fore-shadow string music. Then a thought
was required to find that the sounds varied with tension of the sinews,
and that a frame on which several threads and sinews were extended in
different degrees of tension, could be made to give the same variety of
tones, but of different quality of sound (_timbre_) from the reed pipes.
This already made demands upon the inventive faculties, and in the
infancy of music, as in the modern orchestra, stringed instruments take
the lead.[189]

It is improbable, however, that all nations went the same road in these
discoveries. Accident had much to do with it. The conch shell, among a
tribe near the sea, the horn, with a hunting people, and, with people
situated near the bamboo forests, the “pans pipes,” would be the first
of instruments. Instruments of the order of flutes, were also of easy
fabrication, and the knowledge that they are so wide-spread among
savages all the world over, is internal evidence that they were
“natural” instruments.

Without sketching further the probable progress of musical invention, we
shall now describe some of the instruments and songs used by the people
of the world who are yet in a state of nature. But first let us mention
some instruments, which have been handed down to us from an immensely
remote and ante-civilized period.

The antiquarians in classifying the progress of pre-historic races from
their earliest emergence from barbarism, have called that age, when the
use of metal became first known,—the Bronze Age; as at that time
smelting not being known, the use of iron was not understood, and metal
implements were fashioned of copper, which could be beaten by the hammer
(of stone) into the required shape, even when cold.

Of this mysterious epoch, a most interesting relic has been discovered,
in the shape of a musical instrument. In a sepulchre, in a deep ravine,
in Schleswig, were found very recently, a number of ornaments of bronze
and gold (silver as well as iron, was not then used), and also the horns
of many oxen. In the midst of this, lay a very large _trumpet_ of
bronze; a sure token of the existence of manufactured musical
instruments, thousands of years ago. This unique instrument when blown,
gives forth a deep, grave, and sonorous tone. In common with all the
barbarian trumpets, it has but one tone. It is at present in the Museum
of Copenhagen, but was exhibited at the Paris Exposition of 1867.[190]

The second of these instruments is more ancient still. The age preceding
the knowledge of the uses of metal by early man, is called the Stone
Age. At this period the rude implements of use and ornament were made
either of soft substances, such as wood, ivory, and horn, or else of
stone. Even in this crude epoch, instrumental music seems to have
existed, and not in its rudest form, for a specimen has fortunately been
preserved, which, if authenticated fully, will show a degree of musical
taste at a most unexpected period. In an ancient _dolman_, or sepulchre
near Poictiers was found a partly completed _flute_ made of a stag’s
horn. The distances of the holes, and shape of the mouth-piece, show an
aptitude of construction and an experience in acoustics; but the
instrument evidently belongs to the later period of the Stone Age.

But the third instrument is more interesting yet. It was discovered by
M. Lartet in a ravine, along with bones of animals now extinct in
France. It is also a flute (straight, and with mouth piece), with finger
holes.[191] It is made of the bone of a reindeer, which seems a proof
positive of its being made at a time when the climate and zoology of
France were totally different from the present. From the skulls found in
tombs and caves of this period, it appears impossible that man could
have been developed sufficiently at that time to construct an article of
pleasure, such as this. The skulls are said to greatly resemble those of
the present natives of Australia. Yet their possessors must have had a
vastly superior intelligence to the latter.

It is no great leap in fact, although it may be in time, to leave the
savages of our own ancient race, and describe the musical customs of the
savages of another, and inferior one. Therefore, we will leave the
discussion of the above three instruments and their makers to
Anthropological and Ethnological societies, and pass on to the
examination of the barbarian of the present age.

One of the most curious facts in savage music is to be found in New
Zealand. It is almost universally conceded that harmony was unknown to
Europeans until the tenth century; yet in New Zealand for unknown ages,
a combination of simple thirds in a short vocal strain[192] has been
known. It only illustrates the assertion of the force of accident, in
the rise of music.

Here was a savage tribe of cannibals who came upon a most important
musical idea (to be sure, in a crude state, but still the germ of the
Harmonic theory) probably long before its acceptance among civilized
nations.

Another strange savage song is that which was sung by the aborigines of
Canada, at the time of Cartier’s taking possession in the name of the
King of France (A. D. 1537). The curious fact here, was not in the
music, but in the words, in as much as the word “Alleluia” occurred in
it. This strange coincidence made some early writers conclude that the
inhabitants were Hebrews,[193] probably the lost tribes; it is needless
to say, that the surmise, was not borne out by any further researches.

In describing the music of barbarian races, we find that its sister art,
dancing, is closely connected with it, and that it is impossible to
separate the two. In the lowest tribes, the dance is the most prominent
part of the musical efforts of the people. The Australians, who are
considered, from the conformation of their skulls, and legs, to be
nearest to the brute creation, have many interesting dances. The most
important of these is the “Cobbongo Corrobboree,” or great mystery
dance. It is performed by the inhabitants of the far interior of the
island. We subjoin the account of a witness of this event.

The time selected for this great event is every twelfth moon, and during
her declination. For several days previous, a number of tribes, whose
territories adjoin one another, congregate at a particular spot,
characterised by an immense mound of earth, covered with ashes (known
amongst the white inhabitants as “a black’s oven”), and surrounded by
plenty of “couraway” or water holes.

To this place, they bring numbers of kangaroos, possums, emus, and wild
ducks, and a large quantity of wild honey, together with a grass from
the seed of which they make a sort of bread.

“Upon the evening on which the ‘corrobboree’ is celebrated, a number of
old men (one from each tribe) called ‘wammaroogo,’ signifying
medicine-men, or charm-men, repair to the top of the mound, where, after
lighting a fire they walk round it, muttering sentences, and throwing
into it portions of old charms which they have worn round their necks
for the past twelve months.”

“This is continued for about half an hour, when they descend, each
carrying a fire-stick, which he places at the outskirts of the camp, and
which is supposed to prevent evil spirits from approaching. As soon as
this is over, during which a most profound silence is observed by all,
the men of the tribe prepare their toilets for the ‘corrobboree,’
daubing themselves over with chalk, red ochre, and fat.”[194]

“While the men are thus engaged, the gentler sex are busy arranging
themselves in a long line, and in a sitting posture, with rugs made of
possum skins, wound round their legs, and a small stick called ‘mulla
mulla’ in each hand. A fire is lit in front of them, and tended by one
of the old charmers. As the men are ready, they seat themselves,
cross-legged, like tailors, and in regular serried file, at the opposite
side of the fire to the women, while one of the medicine-men takes up
his position at the top of the mound, to watch the rising of the moon
which is the signal for ‘corrobboree.’”

All is now still; nothing disturbs the silence, save the occasional
jabber of a woman or child, and even that, after a few minutes, is
hushed. The blaze of the fire throws a fitful light along the
batallion-like front of the black phalanx, and the hideous faces, daubed
with paint and smeared with grease, show out at such a moment to
anything but advantage. As soon as the old gentleman who has been
“taking the lunar” announces the advent of that planet, which seems to
exercise as great an influence over the actions of these people, as over
many of those amongst ourselves, the “corrobboree” commences.

“The women beat the little sticks together,[195] keeping time to a
peculiar monotonous air, and repeating the words, the burden of which
may be translated in this manner,—

  ‘The kangaroo is swift,
    But swifter is Ngoyulloman;
  The snake is cunning,
    More cunning is Ngoyulloman, etc.’

Each woman using the name of her husband, or favorite in the tribe.”

“The men spring to their feet with a yell that rings through the forest,
and brandishing their spears, and boomerangs commence their dance,
flinging themselves into all sorts of attitudes, howling, laughing,
grinning, and singing; and this they continue until sheer exhaustion
compels them to desist, after which they roast and eat the product of
the chase gathered for the occasion, and then drop off to sleep one by
one.”[196]

We have already expressed our opinion that the dance (pantomimic) first
sprang into existence when some savage finding his own limited language
(perhaps even, he had none) inadequate to describe to his companions,
some deed of hunting or war which he had performed, reproduced the feat
in actions, to give a more perfect understanding of it. If song be as
old as speech, dancing may be said to be as old as gestures.

We are not surprised, therefore, to find among the Australians, dances
which represent such events. In the “frog dance,” the performers paint
themselves as usual, and then, squatting upon their haunches, jump
around in a circle imitating the motions of the frog. The “Emu dance”
represents the chase after that swift running bird. The performer who
takes the part of the Emu, imitates its fleet, long strides, and gives
out the low rattling drumming sound which is the bird’s only note.

In the “canoe dance” men and women stationed in two lines, imitate the
graceful motions of paddling a canoe.

There is a dance “with partners” prevalent in the southern part of
Australia. Both sexes participate in it. Each man carries a belt of
possum skin, or human hair, which he keeps stretched tight, holding one
end in each hand. The men all sit down in a circle while a woman takes
her place in the middle; one of the men then dances up to her, jumping
from side to side, and swaying his arms in harmony with his movements.
The woman also begins swaying and jumping in time with him, as he
approaches her, and after a short _pas de deux_ they dance back to their
places, while the centre is occupied by a fresh couple.

A strange dance was celebrated by the Tasmanians at each full moon. The
various tribes assembled at some trysting place, and while the women
prepared the fire, and fenced off a space for the dance, the men retired
to adorn themselves with paint, and to fasten branches of bushy twigs to
their ankles, wrists and waists. The women being seated at the front of
the space, one of the oldest among them, strode forward, calling by
name, one of the performers, whom she reviled as a coward, and
challenged to come forward and meet her charge, and answer it.

The warrior was swift enough in his response, and, bounding through the
fire, into the circle, he recounted his deeds of valor in both chase and
war. At every pause he made, his female admirers took up the list of his
praises, vaunting his actions in a sort of chant which they accompanied
with extemporized drums, made of rolled kangaroo skins.

“Suddenly upon some inspiring allegro movement of the thumping hand,
thirty or forty grim savages would hound successively through the
furious flames, into the sacred arena, looking like veritable demons on
a special visit to _terra firma_; and, after thoroughly exhausting
themselves, by leaping in imitation of the kangaroo, around and through
the fire, they vanish in an instant. After this, the old lady who was
the origination of all the hubbub, gave a signal, upon which, all the
females rose, and quite unadorned, gave a series of acrobatic
performances around the fire, that were strange and wonderful to behold.
The main point being however, with each of them, to outscream her sister
singers.”[197]

In the dances of Australia and Tasmania, only the rudest instruments of
percussion are used, and the chants are not musical, though sometimes
(rarely) the attitudes are graceful. A far more musical and poetical
people, are the New Zealanders who as we have already mentioned,
intuitively knew of harmony before the Europeans. Many of their love,
war, and religious songs have real sentiments of beauty in them, and the
gift of improvising poems and songs is much prized among them. Singular
to state, they (unlike all other savage races) do not use the drum in
their accompaniment. The _pahu_ (drum) is only used by them to give
military signals.[198] Their chief instrument is the flute, which is
usually made from a human thigh bone; often that of a fallen enemy. When
this is the case, the instrument is more than ordinarily prized, and is
worn around the neck. It is played through the nose, by placing the
nostril against the aperture, and blowing; stopping the other nostril
with the finger.

The native New Zealander sings in all his sports and labours, and in
spite of his _penchant_ for human flesh, is of a light and joyous
temperament. Every incident of war, chase or love is commemorated by an
extemporized song. Sometimes these songs live for generations after
their signification has passed away; and thus it is, that in many of the
songs of this people, words are found, of which, neither the singers nor
audience understand the meaning. One song (_E’Haka_) is accompanied with
much mimicry; when giving this, the performers sit down in a circle,
throw off their upper mats, and sing in concert, making meanwhile the
wildest of gestures, and turning up their eyes so that only their whites
are visible.

Their canoe song is very animating, and is often accompanied by the
primitive nose flute mentioned above.

The words (improvised) are such as “pull away! pull away! pull away.”
“Dig into the water.” “Break your backs,” etc., and are shouted with
stentorian lungs, but not unmusically.

But their greatest song and dance is the war-dance. In this they far
excel all other savage tribes the world over. Their movements although
extremely violent, are made with a precision and unity, to which all
other races are strangers. A description of this unique performance
speaks of it as follows.

“They begin by smearing the whole of their clothing and painting their
faces with scarlet ochre, so as to make themselves as hideous as
possible. When they assemble for the dance they arrange themselves in
lines usually three deep, and excite their naturally passionate
dispositions to the highest pitch by contorting their faces, and
thrusting out their tongues as an act of defiance, interspersing these
gestures with shouts, yells and challenges to the enemy. The dance
itself begins with stamping the feet in perfect time with each other,
the vigor of the stamp increasing continually, and the excitement
increasing in similar proportion. Suddenly with a yell, the whole body
of men leap sideways into the air, as if actuated by one spirit, and as
they touch the ground, come down on it with a mighty stamp that makes
the earth tremble. The war song is raised, and in accordance with its
rhythm, the men leap from side to side, each time coming down with a
thud, as of some huge engine.”[199]

The New Zealander often entertains himself with sham fights,[200] but
nothing has so intense an effect upon him as the music and action of
this rhythmic war-dance. Even when actual war is not impending, he will
enter into it with a vigor that is terrible. It transforms him for the
time into a monomaniac, and absorbs his whole nature; even when the
dance is given in honor of a stranger, it is dangerous to go too near
the Maori (native New Zealander) until he has become more tranquil.

On one occasion a party of New Zealanders, visiting a European ship,
were requested to give an exhibition of their war-dance on board. They
did so, beginning without much excitement, but gradually their leaps
became so fierce and powerful that the captain was afraid that they
would break the deck; he begged of them to desist, but in vain; he might
as well have spoken to a whirlwind. His voice was drowned in the shouts
and singing of the frenzied warriors. The chief of the party, showed the
influence of its charms, in a ludicrous manner:—

He had been presented on his arrival, with a full suit of naval uniform,
and he stalked around the deck, in all the dignity of new clothes. He
cheerfully allowed his followers to begin the war-dance, but he himself
looked on with conscious dignity; but after the excitement had continued
a few minutes, he too was drawn into its vortex. At first a gentle
swaying of his body, in time with the music was all: then a little
_sotto voce_ singing, then he joined in the rhythm stamping, and
finally, forgetting his new finery, he sprang into line and danced more
enthusiastically than any of them; so much so, that the clothes soon
split, and at the end of the dance he presented a very seedy appearance.
It is needless to say that the dance could not in any way be checked,
and found its conclusion only when all the dancers were reduced to a
state of complete exhaustion.

With all savage people, song, dance and poetry are indissolubly united;
a fact which goes far to prove the “naturalness” of the old Greek music.
In the Malaysian archipelago we find a similar style of music, to that
described above; but we find the natural instrument of barbarians, the
drum, far more plentifully used.

The Javanese have two kinds of drums, both made of copper, but differing
in size and pitch. The sound is like that of a distant bell, and as they
are used in sets, the compass often reaches an octave. The larger set,
called _Salendro_ contains but five tones in this interval; the general
effect of this set is _major_. The smaller set, called _Pelog_, contains
seven drums to the octave, and is minor in style. The natives themselves
speak of the _Salendro_ as being masculine, and the _Pelog_ as being
more tender and feminine in its _effect_.

The songs of Java (as also of other islands in the Malay archipelago)
are strongly suggestive of the Scotch popular ballads, and can readily
be reproduced in our scale.

It is not customary to sing the written poems, with an instrumental
accompaniment unless there is dancing simultaneously. As in French
poetry and song, many letters, usually mute, are sounded, so in the
Javanese much license of pronunciation is allowed in song, which would
be condemned in prose. There are some traces of inflection and accent,
altering the meaning of a word; thus “_boten_” signifies “_no_,” but
when the accent is placed on the first syllable, it signifies a haughty
or peremptory refusal, but when on the latter, a mild and regretful one.

The Javanese have three styles of musical compositions, the great,
medium, and lesser. The latter is used for the popular songs, the former
for the higher flights of poetry.

Very often one can hear an old native, on a holiday occasion, singing of
the great deeds of the ancient princes; the subjects of his ballads, are
often borrowed from the _babads_, or popular legends of the country, and
he accompanies himself with a species of stringed instrument. He sings
of the glories and fall of the kingdom of Pad-jad-jaran, and praises and
laments those royal heroes. Many of the love songs of the Malays are
written in the form of question and answer, as follows,—

  “Where do the swallows go to bathe?
  They go to bathe in the forest brook.
  What has my loved one promised to me?
  She has promised to chat a little with me,” etc.

This questioning and answering is not confined to their music, for the
Javanese are passionately fond of conundrums.[201] The imagery of their
poems and songs is of the simplest and most natural description, fields,
flowers, trees, rivers, etc., appear _ad infinitum_ in their
literature.[202] Their early historical legends are full of Gods in
human form, of giants, and miracles; somewhat resembling in this the
Hindoo allegories.

Theatrical representations, of course form a large part of both
Malaysian and Polynesian popular amusements. In Java, national history
is preserved not only by the ballads, but by pantomimic representations;
in the latter, little puppets made of leather, wood, or paper, and
sometimes masked performers, appear. The performance is accompanied by
orchestral music, certain stringed instruments of which are only played
by women. Some of the representations are given at night behind a white
curtain, and resemble what, with us, are called, “shadow pantomimes;”
these are performed mostly by females, and often last all night,
breaking up, at times, as late as six in the morning.

At all Javanese _fetes_, music is played, and every native is expected
to entertain such wandering musicians as apply to him. A refusal is apt
to cost dearly, as the irate musicians stone the dwelling of the
obdurate one.[203]

M. Scherzer, connected with the Austrian Round-the-world expedition in
1857 (in the frigate Novara), was not highly delighted with the Javanese
pantomime dancing and music;[204] he says:

“Conversation was carried on with difficulty, for an incessant and
stupefying noise was kept up with the _gammelong_, or orchestra of
bells. Bayaderes, very scantily clothed, and excessively ugly, executed
sentimental and religious dances of a most tedious description.

Stiff, slow, and thin, these damsels jumped like forks, with motions as
graceful as those of old semaphores. The governor was kind enough to
explain to us, that the dance was meant to represent the touching
history of four sisters, who, lost in the forest, implored from the
divinity the return of their mother.

This was followed by another choregraphic entertainment, a dance of
eight warriors, accompanied by the perpetual _gammelong_. The same
delectable music, delighted the ears of those who were without in the
court-yard. Hideous masks, on foot and on horseback, circulated there
amidst the crowd; a Mussulman priest was also howling fearfully, as he
danced on hot ashes, near to a mass of burning wood; others jumped in
and danced away frantically. At last the priest himself joined them, and
the shouts and gesticulations became furious. This representation had
probably some signification of religious expiation, at least it would
have been deemed as such in ancient mysteries.”

After this followed conjuring tricks of a wonderful, though sanguinary
description, “and then the infernal _gammelong_ began again.” Then came
excellent fireworks. “At last the _gammelong_ ceased its stunning
noise.”

During Captain Cook’s voyage round the world, Banks and Solander, two of
his best associates witnessed (A. D. 1769) a pantomime in one of the
Society islands. It was of a comic nature, and contained music and
dancing. The subject was the adventures of a thief, including his
capture.[205] In Cook’s second voyage, Forster observed a comic opera in
the Society islands, which appear closely allied to the above. Actors
and actresses appeared in this play, the first act of which concluded
with a burlesque beating of three of the participants. The commencement
of the second act was announced by the musicians beating their
drums.[206]

In the Tonga islands, the actors of these musical dramas recite
sentences which are answered by a chorus of singers. There is a great
variety in their movements and groupings. Occasionally they sing slowly,
and afterwards quickly for about a quarter of an hour. Sometimes they
form a semi-circle, assume a bending position, and sing in a subdued
tone of voice, a soft air, which is soon followed again by a loud and
vehement declamation.

It is a singular fact that some of the races most addicted to
cannibalism are also much addicted to music. We have seen this already
in the case of the New Zealanders; it will be fully as apparent with the
most cannibalistic race of the globe,—the Fiji Islanders. With them,
music teaching is a remunerative art, and any one who has composed a new
song or dance, can earn a large quantity of goods by teaching it. Their
musical instruments are poor and few; they consist of pipes, flutes,
drums, and trumpets. The trumpets are merely conch shells, blown through
an aperture in the side.

The flutes are nose-flutes, played by putting the aperture under one
nostril, closing the other with the thumb of the left hand, and blowing.
The pipes are a species of pandean pipes made of bamboo.

The dances are very carefully got up, and more resemble military
movements than dances, the similitude being increased by the martial
array of the dancers, who are all dressed as if for war, their faces
painted with scarlet, their bodies powdered black, and their best clubs
or spears in their hands. They execute intricate manœuvres, marching in
various figures, wheeling, halting, and stamping their feet in exact
time to the rhythm of the song, and the beat of the drum.

Sometimes several hundred men are engaged in the dance, while the
musicians are twenty or thirty in number. The scene at one of these
dances is very picturesque, but it wants the furious energy, which gives
such fiery animation to the war-dance of the New Zealanders; the
movements, though correct in point of time, being comparatively dull and
heavy. In order to enliven it a little more, a professional buffoon is
usually introduced upon the scene, who performs sundry grotesque
movements, and is usually applauded for his exertions. Music and dancing
are always used at the celebration of a marriage.[207] Mr. Seeman in a
recent work[208] says of the entertainment called _Kalau Rere_, that,
“with its high poles, streamers, evergreens, [these cannibals are very
tasty in their personal adornments, wreaths of flowers, evergreens,
etc., being much used], masquerading, trumpet shells, chants, and other
wild music, is the nearest approach to dramatic representation, the
Fijians seem to have made, and it is with them, what private theatricals
are with us. Court fools, in many instances hunchbacks, are attached to
the chief’s establishment.”

The music of the remaining races of Oceanica, does not differ very
materially from the above-described forms. Many of the instruments found
in use among the Malays, have had their origin in China and India,[209]
and therefore the description of them has not been made so minute as
that of the instruments of those countries. Summed up briefly, we find
that the taste for rhythm is _every where_ prevalent; for instruments of
percussion, almost so, (the New Zealanders forming a notable exception
here), and that the prevailing impulse of these races, on hearing
rhythmic music, is to dance.

We now proceed to the examination of the music of another large division
of the human race.




                              CHAPTER XIX.
                             AFRICAN MUSIC.


In describing the music of the natives of Africa, we will place in
contrast the modes of the two extremes of the scale of intelligence.

The Kaffir is certainly as far in advance of the Bushman, as we are in
advance of the native Indian. The Kaffir is peculiar in music; very
deficient in melody, he is almost perfect in rhythm and time-keeping. He
is fond of singing in company, and in fact is a rather convivial person
altogether. At social meals, while the food is cooking, the guests often
amuse themselves by singing together until the repast is in readiness.
The subjects of the songs are various; love songs, and war songs being
held in equal favor, but the Kaffir is always specially pleased with any
song that relates to the possession of cattle; and being a cattle-owning
people, they have many songs celebrating their favorite subject.

Many of the Kaffir’s musical effects would seem most ludicrous to us.
Sudden contrasts, have, to him, a special attraction, and it is not
unusual to hear him give the highest squeaks of falsetto, and the
deepest bass grunts, alternately.

Loudness in singing is his great end and aim, and to effect sudden
_sforzando_ effects, he has a peculiar method, i. e.—the choruses of the
songs are usually meaningless, being often a mere reiteration of the
words e-e-e-_yu_ (which may be called the African “fol de roi de ray”),
and when, after shouting with full lungs on the _e-e-e_, the singer
desires more power on the _yu_, he effects it by giving himself a sound
thump in the ribs with his elbows; this produces a marked emphasis on
the syllable, and the result, when two or three hundred singers do this
simultaneously is startling. The Kaffir, contrary to our practise, _sits
down_, when he sings.

One of their favorite songs, is used at husking festivals. “The dry
heads of maize are thrown in a heap upon the hard and polished floor of
the hut, and a number of Kaffirs sit in a circle round the heap, each
being furnished with the ever useful _knobkerry_ (a stick or club, very
like a _shillelagh_, but with a knob at one end). One of them strikes up
a song, and the others join in full chorus beating time with their
clubs, upon the heads of the maize. This is a very exciting amusement
for the performers, who shout the noisy chorus at the highest pitch of
their lungs, and beat time by striking their knobkerries upon the grain.
With every blow of the heavy club the maize grains are struck from their
husks, and fly about the hut in all directions, threatening injury, if
not absolute destruction to the eyes of all who are present in the hut.
Yet the threshers seem to enjoy an immunity which seems to be restricted
to themselves and blacksmiths; and while a stranger is anxiously shading
his eyes from the shower of hard maize grains, the threshers themselves
do not give a thought to the safety of their eyes, but sing at the top
of their voices, pound away at the corn cobs, and make the grains fly in
all directions, as if the chorus of the song were the chief object in
life, and the preservation of their eyesight were unworthy of a
thought.”[210]

The war-songs of the Kaffirs are fiery and exciting, though in a less
degree than those of New Zealand.

Their poetry is full of metaphor, and alliterative enough to be admitted
into the opera of the future. The participants sit in a circle,
sometimes three or four deep, with their knees well drawn up, and sing,
beating rhythmic accompaniment upon the ground, twirling their
_assagais_ (javelins), and occasionally enlivening the proceedings with
an ear-piercing whistle, or deafening shout.

We give an English version (Mr. Shooter’s) of two of these, merely
premising that much of the native beauty is said to be lost in the
transposition to a foreign tongue.


                           PRAISE OF DINGAN.
                        A VERY CELEBRATED CHIEF.

      “Thou needy offspring of Umpikazi
      Eyer of the cattle of men,
      Bird of Maube, fleet as a bullet,
      Sleek, erect, of beautiful parts.
      Thy cattle like the comb of bees.
      O head too large, too huddled to move,
  Devourer of Moselekatze, son of Machobana,
  Devourer of Swazi, son of Sobuza,
      Breaker of the gates of Machobana,
      Devourer of Gundave of Machobana
      A monster in size,[211] of mighty power,
    Devourer of Ungwati of ancient race,
    Devourer of the kingly Uomapé;
    Like Heaven above, raining and shining.”

The other is an Alexandrian lament of the lack of nations to conquer. It
is in honor of Tchaka, (a renowned warrior and chief).

  “Thou hast finished, finished the nations!
  Where will you go out to battle now?
  Hey! Where will you go out to battle now?
  Thou hast conquered kings!
  Where are you going to battle now?
  Thou hast finished, finished the nations!
  Where are you going to battle now?
  Hurrah! Hurrah! Hurrah!!
  Where are you going to battle now?”

From the extracts it will be seen that flattery is not confined to
European courts; the Kaffir carries it still further, for in addition to
his own proper name (which it is deemed ill omened to speak) everybody
of any rank, receives a number of _isi-bonges_ or praise-names, alluding
to some action or peculiarity. It is customary on all formal occasions,
to recite several of these _isi-bonges_, just as a European nobleman on
official ceremonies desires to have all his titles proclaimed. In songs,
of course, the invention of these is unlimited. Thus the great Panda, a
renowned ruler of enormous fatness, is spoken of as,—

  “A swallow which fled in the sky,”
  “A swallow with a whiskered breast,”
  “Ramrod of brass,”
  “Thigh of the bullock of Inkakavini.”
  “Thou art an _Elephant_.”
  “Monarch who art black,” etc., etc.

Such songs of praise are sung with great relish by full choruses.
Violent gestures are used to heighten the effect. The songs are in
unison, no harmonic divisions being attempted.

The instruments of the Kaffir are few and crude; the whistle before
mentioned, although giving but one tone, is a great favorite. It is so
shrill that it can be heard above the wildest din of the _ensemble_.

A rude flute or flageolet is also sometimes used; but the most-used
instrument, is a primitive harp with _one string_ only, and whose tones
though light and sweet can scarcely be heard at six yards distance. It
is an ordinary bow with a string of twisted hair, and a hollow gourd
attached at the centre of the wood to give resonance. A ring is passed
along the string, to raise or lower the tone, which is produced by
striking the cord with a short stick, or _plectrum_. The bow is about
five feet long, and exactly resembles the usual weapon, which however is
not used in war by the Kaffirs.

Although the resources of this instrument are so extremely limited, the
musicians of this people are content to sit for hours, listening to its
monotonous sound.

Let us now turn to the degraded black brother of the foregoing race, the
Bushman. His amusements are two;—singing and dancing.

The dance of the Bushman is to European eyes a most uninteresting one;
as there is scarcely any motion or gesture at all in it, save that which
is made by _one leg_. Standing on one foot, the performer shakes the
other, (to which a string of rattles, made from the ears of the
spring-bok are attached) occasionally giving his body a twist, and
singing vigorously all the while, changing the foot, however, from time
to time.

The spectators keep the rhythm by a constant and regular clapping of
hands and a monotonous singing.

A water-drum, which is merely a wooden bowl, into which a little water
has been poured, and over which a skin is tightly drawn, is struck
regularly in time with the movements of the dancer; the latter when
partially exhausted, falls upon the floor, but still singing and kicking
in time with the music; after a short rest of this description, he jumps
up and continues as at first. When utterly exhausted, he retires among
the spectators and unfastening his leg-rattles, hands them to the next
dancer. The music to this odd performance is _not_ in unison; the dancer
sings one air, the spectators another, and the drum gives a species of
“ground bass” to the whole.

While engaged in this interesting occupation of shaking one leg, the
Bushman is completely oblivious of all other considerations, as if he
were entranced. Discordant as the music seems to us when annotated by
the travellers who have heard it, yet these same authorities are almost
unanimous in declaring that the effect is extremely pleasant.

The most peculiar instrument of the Bushmen, is the _goura_, which is
shaped like a bow, but has at one end of the string, a piece of quill
inserted; this quill is blown upon in the same manner that we use a
jew’s-harp. Women play upon this instrument, but hold it
perpendicularly, and do not breathe upon it, but strike it with a stick,
and then catch it up, quickly to their ear, to listen to the tones. When
thus played, it is called, a _joum-joum_.

All the airs played upon this primitive instrument seem to come by
chance rather than skill, and the performer never seems able to play the
same tune twice. But the same or better music could be drawn from a much
more compact and portable instrument; therefore the _goura_ has now been
almost superseded by a European competitor, and the favorite instrument
of the African Bosjesman now is the _Jew’s-harp_.

They also possess a rude banjo-like instrument from which comparatively
fair music could be produced, but the Bushmen are content to strum it
without method, and take the music as fortune sends it. A drum completes
the list of Bushman instruments; it is sometimes played with sticks and
sometimes with the fist. It can be heard at a considerable distance.

In contrasting these two extremes of African races, it is singular to
remark, that the superiority in music, if there be any, must be conceded
to the lower race.

We find much that is curious and worthy of note in the music of those
mysterious tribes of central Africa, who have so recently become known
to us through the researches of Schweinfurth, Stanley, and Baker.

Among the best known of these tribes, may be mentioned the Nyam-Nyams, a
set of most inveterate cannibals, whose very name comes from the sound
of gnawing at food, and was given them on account of their man-eating
propensities. Their chief musical instruments are mandolins or small
harps of four strings each, drums (mostly of wood,) bells of iron,
whistles and pipes. Many of these instruments are very symmetrically
formed, and tastily carved, for in wood, iron, and clay designing the
Nyam-Nyams are very expert. Schweinfurth thus describes their
music,[212]—“They have an instinctive love of art. Music rejoices their
very soul. The harmonies they elicit from their favorite instrument, the
mandolin, seem almost to thrill through the chords of their inmost
nature. The prolonged duration of some of their musical productions is
very surprising.” Piaggia has remarked that he believed a “Nyam-Nyam
would go on playing all day and all night, without thinking to leave off
either to eat or to drink,” and although quite aware of the voracious
propensities of the people, it seems very probable that he was right.

One favorite instrument there is, which is something between a harp and
a mandolin. It resembles the former in the vertical arrangement of its
strings, whilst in common with the mandolin, it has a sounding-board, a
neck, and screws for tightening the strings.

The sounding board is constructed on strict acoustic principles. It has
two apertures; it is carved out of wood, and on the upper side it is
covered with a piece of skin; the strings are tightly stretched by means
of pegs, and are sometimes made of fine threads of bast, and sometimes
of the wiry hairs from the tail of the giraffe.

The music is very monotonous and it is difficult to distinguish any
melody in it. It invariably is an accompaniment to a moaning kind of
recitative which is rendered with a decided nasal intonation.

“I have not unfrequently seen friends marching about arm in arm, wrapt
in the mutual enjoyment of the performance, and beating time to every
note by nodding their heads.”

“There is a singular class of professional musicians who make their
appearance decked out in the most fantastic way, with feathers, and
covered with a promiscuous array of bits of wood and roots, and all the
pretentious emblems of magical art, the feet of earth-pigs, the shell of
tortoises, the beaks of eagles, the claws of birds, and teeth in every
variety. Whenever one of this fraternity presents himself, he at once
begins to recite all the details of his travels and experiences, in an
emphatic recitative, and never forgets to conclude by an appeal to the
liberality of his audience, and to remind them that he looks for a
reward either of rings of copper, or of beads.”[213]

With some slight differences these men may be found throughout Africa;
almost everywhere they are sought for and their talents enjoyed, but
they themselves held in contempt. Among the Nyam-Nyams, their
appellation in itself (“Nzangah”) implies contempt, being similar to
that which is applied to despised and outcast women.

Contrary to the custom of almost all other savages, the Nyam-Nyams
delight most in gentle music; some of the minstrels sing so softly that
it is impossible to hear them a few yards off. The light Mandolin
accompaniment is in good accord with this _pianissimo_ style of music.

Their dances, given by male and female performers, are wonderfully
swift, intricate and pleasant.

A great “Congo” or dance was given by some of these people to Col. C.
Chaillé Long, an American officer on the staff of the Khedive of Egypt,
who made a very interesting expedition to the Makraka Nyam-Nyams, and
Lake Victoria Nyanza in 1874. He thus describes the scene:—[214]

“Invitations had been sent to all the Nyam-Nyam lasses, who came even
from as far as Parafio, and did honor to the occasion by brightening up
their copper and iron fastenings, and in putting on fresh fig leaves.
The loose bands that encased their ankles, kept perfect time in loud
clanking sound to music really euphonious, and of a symphony that my
unmusical ear I regret cannot translate here, evoked from a Sinon-like
wooden horse, that was beaten on its sides with drum-sticks, or by
parallel banana trees that were traversed by different sized pieces of
dry wood, upon which several performers beat successively.

This musical instrument, as well as drums and horns, the latter made of
Elephants’ tusks, were very similar to those I had seen at Ugunda....

The Sheik, a robust, powerfully developed man, led his brave warriors in
the dance, holding in his hand, a curiously-shaped sword, his insignia
of office, whilst the round little forms of hundreds of Nyam-Nyam
maidens followed, each with giddy swiftness as the “cancan” fantasia
became fast and furious. The festivity continued until the ‘wee sma
hours’ of the morning.”

The trumpets of the Nyam-Nyam are more generally used as war signals
than as musical instruments; they are blown through a hole in the side,
and not at the end; therefore the mode of performing upon them, rather
resembles our style of flute playing.[215]

Another musical nation of Central Africa is the Karague; travellers who
have visited them have given more or less detailed accounts of their
instruments and festivities. Capt. Speke had the unusual honor of a
serenade from the royal court band. The king after receiving a present
of some beads, cloth wire, and a tin box, was so delighted that he sent
his own band to give Speke a tune.

The performers used reed instruments (made in telescopic fashion) and
marked the time by hand-drums. At first they marched and countermarched,
playing meanwhile much in the manner of Turkish regimental bands; but
this was soon changed to a species of “horn-pipe,” which all the
musicians danced, playing furiously meanwhile.[216]

Another bit of musical ceremony which Speke witnessed, will at once
remind the reader of the great “Zapfenstreich” or grand tattoo practised
sometimes in the German army. At the new moon the king surrounds himself
with numerous drummers (Speke saw thirty-five); these strike up
together, gradually increasing to a deafening noise; this is followed by
a milder kind of music, similar to that described above. The object of
the ceremony is to call in all the king’s warriors to renew their oath
of fealty.[217] The time keeping is said to be very exact, and the
drummers burst forth again and again during the night. The war drum of
the Karague is beaten by women.

A kind of guitar exists among this people, and six of the seven strings
which it possesses accord perfectly with our own diatonic scale, the
seventh string only, being discordant. Their wind instruments are
flageolet and bugle, or at least similar to them.

Among the nations adjacent to those already mentioned are the Bongo.

We again quote from the valuable work of the most musical traveller who
has visited this section,—Schweinfurth.[218]

“The Bongo, in their way are enthusiastic lovers of music; and although
their instruments are of a very primitive description, and they are
unacquainted even with the pretty little guitar of the Nyam-Nyams, which
is constructed on perfectly correct acoustic principles, yet they may be
seen at any hour of the day, strumming away and chanting to their own
performances. The youngsters down to the small boys are all musicians.
Without much trouble and with the most meagre materials they contrive to
make little flutes; they are accustomed also to construct a monochord,
which in its design reminds one of that which (known as the Gubo of the
Zulus) is common throughout the tribes of Southern Africa. This consists
of a bow of bamboo, with the string tightly strained across it, and this
is struck by a slender slip of bamboo.

The mouth of the player performs the office of sounding board; he holds
the instrument to his mouth with one hand, and manages the string with
the other. Performers may often be seen sitting for hours together with
an instrument of this sort; they stick one end of the bow into the
ground, and fasten the string over a cavity covered with bark, which
opens into an aperture for the escape of the sound. They pass one hand
from one part of the bow to the other, and with the other they play upon
the string with the bamboo twig, and produce a considerable variety of
buzzing and humming airs which are really rather pretty. This is quite a
common pastime with the lads who are put in charge of the goats. I have
seen them apply themselves very earnestly and with obvious interest to
their musical practice, and the ingenious use to which they apply the
simplest means for obtaining harmonious tones testifies to their
penetration into the secrets of the theory of sound.

As appeals however to the sense of sound, the great festivals of the
Bongo abound with measures much more thrilling than any of these minor
performances. On these occasions the orchestral results might perhaps be
fairly characterised as cats’ music run wild.

Unwearied thumping of drums, the bellowings of gigantic trumpets, for
the manufacture of which, great stems of trees come into requisition.
Interchanged by fits and starts with the shriller blasts of some smaller
horns, make up the burden of the unearthly hub-bub which re-echoes miles
away along the desert; meanwhile women and children by the hundred fill
gourd flasks with little stones, and rattle them as if they were
churning butter; or again at other times they will get some sticks or
faggots and strike them together with the greatest energy.

The huge wooden tubes which may be styled the trumpets of the Bongo, are
by the natives themselves, called “manyinyee;” they vary from four to
five feet in length, being closed at the extremity and ornamented with
carved work representing a man’s head, which not unfrequently is adorned
with a pair of horns. The other end of the stem is open, and in an upper
department, towards the figure of the head, is the orifice into which
the performer blows with all his might.

There is another form of manyinyee, which is made like a huge wine
bottle; in order to play upon it, the musician takes it between his
knees like a violincello, and when the build of the instrument is too
cumbrous he has to bend over it as it lies upon the ground.

“Little difference can be noticed between the kettle drums of the Bongo,
and those of most other North African Negroes. A section is cut from the
thick stem of a tree, the preference being given to a tamarind when it
can be procured, this is hollowed out into a cylinder, one end being
larger than the other. The ends are then covered with two pieces of goat
skin, stripped of the hair which are tightly strained, and laced
together with thongs.

At the nightly orgies a fire is invariably kept burning to dry the skin,
and to tighten it, when it has happened to become relaxed by the heavy
dews.”

A short description of the signal horns of the Bongo is also given by
our musical traveller; some of them resemble fifes, and many are made of
antelope horns.

Regarding the singing of the Bongo, Schweinfurth is quite descriptive
and as the deductions he arrives at are very similar to those we have
ascribed to primitive or natural men, we introduce the passage without
alteration.[219]

“Difficult were the task to give any adequate description of the singing
of the Bongo. It must suffice to say that it consists of a babbling
recitative, which at one time suggests the yelling of a dog, and at
another the lowing of a cow, whilst it is broken over, and again by the
gabbling of a string of words which are huddled up one into another. The
commencement of a measure will always be with a lively air, and every
one without distinction of age or sex will begin yelling, screeching,
and bellowing with all their strength; gradually the surging of voices
will tone down, the rapid time will moderate, and the song be hushed
into a wailing melancholy strain.

“Thus it sinks into a very dirge such as might be chanted at the grave,
and be interpreted as representative of a leaden and a frowning sky,
when all at once, without note of warning, there bursts forth the whole
fury of the negro throats; shrill and thrilling is the outcry, and the
contrast is as vivid as sunshine in the midst of rain.”

“Often as I was present at these festivities I never could prevent my
ideas from associating Bongo music with the instinct of imitation which
belongs to men universally. The orgies always gave me the impression of
having no other object than to surpass in violence the fury of the
elements: adequately to represent the rage of a hurricane in the
tropics, any single instrument must of course be weak, poor, and
powerless, consequently they hammer at numbers of their gigantic drums
with powerful blows of their heavy clubs. If they would rival the
bursting of a storm, the roaring of the wind, or the plashing of the
rain, they summon a chorus of their stoutest lungs; whilst to depict the
bellowing of terrified wild beasts, they resort to their longest horns;
and to imitate the songs of birds, they bring together all their flutes
and fifes.

Most characteristic of all, perchance is the deep and rolling bass of
the huge ‘manyinyee’ as descriptive of the rumbling thunder. The
penetrating shower may drive rattling and crackling among the twigs and
amid the parched foliage of the woods; and this is imitated by the
united energies of women and children, as they rattle the stones in
their gourd-flasks, and clash together their bits of wood.”

The dances of these people are similar in wildness to their music. The
performers wear iron rings, with balls attached, around their ankles,
and clash these together with such energy that their feet are often
bathed in blood.

The Mittoo tribe rank very high among the African tribes, in their
musical attainments; their melodies are quite agreeable to the
cultivated ear and the pains which they take in mastering the
intricacies of a musical composition, recall to the mind the
difficulties which beset the path of the civilized musical student.

We have seen a transcription of one of their songs, which would require
but little alteration to transform it into a very fair “slumber song.”

Many of them are quite skillful upon the flute, and have been described
by Nubian travellers as equal to the best Frankish (European) performers
who reside in Cairo.

The Monbuttoo also have a strong passion for music, so much so that the
king sometimes dances before his wives and subjects, to the
accompaniment of the royal band.

In his court concerts he has horn-men, who can modulate their tones from
infinite tenderness to the sound of a lion’s roar; and can perform upon
a horn so cumbrous that it can scarcely be held, passages of runs,
trills and shakes, which would be even difficult upon a flute.

Court fools, jesters and mimics also appertain to the King of the
Monbuttoo—Munza; they have also a sort of national hymn, more noisy than
musical. The words are monotonous and much repeated,—

“Ee, ee, tchupy, tchupy, ee, Munza, ee!” will do as a sample line. The
king stands up and _beats time_, with all the gravity of a musical
conductor. His _baton_ is made of a wicker worked sphere filled with
pebbles, and attached to a short stick, in fact exactly what we should
call a baby’s rattle. When he approves the performance or gets excited,
he joins in the chorus with a stentorian “B-r-r-r-r——” which shakes the
house.

It is singular that music boxes should be popular with Africans who
indulge in such noisy effects, yet such is the fact; there is no present
so desired by Negro potentates as a music box with bells and drums.

Explorers can find no surer road to the heart of an African chief than
by a present of one of these mechanisms. Sir Samuel Baker had great
trouble with King Kabba Rega (of the tribe of the Unyori,) about a music
box.[220] Speke and Schweinfurth both found them among the most
treasured possessions of the savage chieftains. Kabba Rega’s reason for
prizing the box above all other musical instruments, is unique; on
hearing it play, for the first time, he remarked,—“It is more convenient
than an instrument which requires study, as you might set this going at
night, to play you to sleep, when you were too drunk to play it yourself
even if you knew how to do it.”[221] The national hymn of this monarch,
bears considerable resemblance to the first part of the well known
air—“Three Blind Mice.”[222]

We have not space to describe fully the rites and music of that curious
people, the Abyssinians; two examples of their musical ceremonies must
suffice.

A funeral procession (reported by an American eye witness) consisted of
about one hundred and fifty people, old and young, preceded by a few
priests; every few minutes the _cortege_ would halt to shriek and howl.
The priests (clad in cotton robes with broad scarlet bands) were acting
in a frantic manner; tearing off their turbans, pulling their hair, then
folding their hands on their breasts and looking inexpressibly
miserable.

They carried Arabic parchment books, illuminated with quaint figures and
devices, and now and then chanted prayers to some favorite saint,[223]
very dolefully, though with strong lungs and nasal intonation. Numerous
genuflections were made, always accompanied with long drawn howls of
extreme agony. At the lowering of the body into the grave, they chanted
a prayer, of which the following is a translation,—

“Werkena, son of Yasous, who was the son of Tekee, is dead. Rejoice, oh
ye people! He has gone to his rest with Abraham, with Isaac, and with
Jacob. Let us pray for those who still live, and pray for the soul just
gone to doom. From vengeance and stern judgment, pray that his soul be
delivered. How can the souls be delivered from tribulation? By long
prayers. Pray, then, that he be sheltered by Father Abraham, that he may
walk in safety by the side of Moses and the prophets, Amen, and
Amen!”[224]

After the grave was closed, the major part of the mourners followed in
the train of a musician, who was discoursing lively tunes on an oboe,
and one of the priests, who had been mourning so vigorously, offered to
show strangers over his cathedral for the consideration of one dollar.

A fitting contrast to this, is the musical ovation tendered to the
British Army, after the conquest of King Theodore, April, 1868. The
natives came in great numbers to sing praises. They chose for the
subject of their psalm, the twenty-second chapter, of the second book of
Samuel, (David’s song), beginning:—“The Lord is my rock, and my
fortress,” and they sang it with David’s own fervor; and, to make it
quite realistic, in imitation of his dancing before the ark, the
Abyssinian clergy brought out an imitation of an ark, five yards in
length, one yard in breadth, and a foot in height. It was covered with a
scarlet cloth, embroidered with gold, and above it was a representation
of a mercy-seat of crimson silk, surmounted by a canopy of similar
stuff; candlesticks, lavers, priests’ robes, hyssops, communion cups,
pixes, chalices, crosses of brass, silver and gold, mitres, etc.,
figured in the religious paraphernalia employed. The Neophytes kept up a
deafening, jingling clang; or, with instruments of wood and brass, one
stringed banjoes, clanking brass cymbals kept a rhythmic time, which
swelled louder and louder as they drew near the headquarters of the
army.

“The priests (out of respect for their office) took the front position,
and one of them, with a semi-ludicrous air, struck up the first note of
the impromptu stanzas which were to celebrate the British conquest of
Abyssinia.”

“As he warmed to his theme, and his voice rose to enthusiasm, the motley
assembly, at the waving of a crucifix, chimed in with chorus, which,
sung with stentorian lungs, had a tremendous effect. After the chorus,
six priests clad in cotton stoles headed by the sub-hierarch, took the
eulogy up at a very low key, which soon, however, rose so high and
shrill in a protracted continuity of sound, that one momentarily
expected to hear their lungs crack, ending with a stormy chorus as
before. Then, forming themselves into a circle, a hundred of them
commenced a dignified sailing round their neighbors, to the right and
left, their togas getting inflated with the movement, weaving each into
another, until it might have been imagined that they had manufactured
some complicated knot, on the gordian principle; but, soon taking the
reverse method, they reached their former positions in time. The singing
went on louder and louder, and the choragus giving the warning clap, the
whole multitude clapped their hands; the women and children struck up
the silver-toned ‘li, li, li,’ performing a dance similar to the Chinese
hop and skip.”

“They then formed triplets and massed themselves together, when a shrill
note from the boys, sent them into a confused whirl, round and round,
the sub-hierarch and his six assistants going faster and faster, as they
acquired momentum, clapping their hands, singing louder than ever, the
head priest ducking his body lower and lower, and more energetic, until
the dance and the excitement which they all labored under, assumed the
appearance of a jubilee medley, composed of waltzes, Dervish-dances,
sarabands, fandangos, pirouettes and chasses, the three latter performed
by the most youthful of the assembly.”

“It must not be forgotten, that all this time the ark and
mercy-seat—minus the cherubim—(which was totally omitted from this
Abyssinian imitation), stood on the ground near the priests, while a
choice number of infantine neophites, manfully rang the merriest chimes,
and the instruments of Juniper-wood, the one-stringed banjos, and
cymbals, made as much discordant music as was possible under the
circumstances. The Ethiops before concluding the entertainment,
raised[225] once again the Canto Trionfale.”

The effect Mr. Stanley says, had a wonderful charm, and the blending of
the mass of women’s and children’s voices with the larger and deeper
tones of the bass, was like the whistling of a gale in a ship’s shrouds,
blending with the deeper roar of a tempest.

We cannot give a better idea of the hold which music has upon the
average native Negro, than by narrating an incident which befell Sir
Samuel Baker, in the Shooli country.

He held a review of his troops March 8, 1872, and after a sham fight,
firing of rockets, etc., the troops marched up and down a hill, with the
band playing. The natives assembled in considerable numbers and viewed
the manœuvres with much delight; but the brass band music was the
crowning point of their enjoyment. We sub-join his description of its
effect upon these children of nature.

“The music of our band being produced simply by a considerable number of
bugles, drums, and cymbals, aided by a large military bass-drum, might
not have been thought first-rate in Europe, but in Africa it was
irresistible.”

“The natives are passionately fond of music; and I believe the safest
way to travel in these wild countries, would be to play the cornet, if
possible, without ceasing, which would ensure a safe passage. A London
organ-grinder would march through Central Africa, followed by an
admiring and enthusiastic crowd, who, if his tunes were lively, would
form a dancing escort of the most untiring material.”

“As my troops returned to their quarters, with the band playing rather
lively airs, we observed the women racing down from their villages, and
gathering from all directions towards the common centre. As they
approached nearer, the charms of music were overpowering, and halting
for an instant they assumed what they considered the most graceful
attitudes, and then danced up to band.”

“In a short time my buglers could scarcely blow their instruments for
laughing at the extraordinary effect of their performance. A fantastic
crowd surrounded them as they halted in our position among the rocks,
and every minute added to their number.”

“The women throughout the Shooli are entirely naked; thus the effect of
a female crowd, bounding madly about as musical enthusiasts, was very
extraordinary; even the babies were brought out to dance; and these
infants strapped to their mothers’ backs, and covered with pumpkin
shells, like the young tortoises, were jolted about, without the
slightest consideration for the weakness of their necks, by their
infatuated mothers.”

“As usual among all tribes of Central Africa, the old women were even
more determined dancers than the young girls. Several old Venuses were
making themselves extremely ridiculous, as they sometimes do in
civilized countries, when attempting the allurements of younger days.”

“The men did not share in the dance, but squatted upon the rocks in
great numbers to admire the music and to witness the efforts of their
wives and daughters.”[226]

Sir Samuel Baker also once used music for quite a different purpose. He
was quartered near the town of Masindi, where dwelt Kabba Rega, King of
the Unyori, when one evening, he noticed a most unusual stillness in the
town, where ordinarily drunken songs and horn-blowing were the rule.
Suddenly there sounded the deep tones of a _nogara_, or drum. This
ceased in a moment; and then came a burst of terrific noise, which
caused every man in camp to rush to his post. It was a din, caused by
many thousands yelling and shrieking like maniacs. At least a thousand
drums were beating; horns, whistles, and every instrument which could
add to the confusion, was blowing and sounding, yet no human being was
visible.

The dragoman, on being questioned by the commander, laughed, and said it
was “to make him _afraid_, and exhibit the large number of people
collected in the town.”

Gen. Baker on ascertaining this determined to act as though it were a
compliment which he felt bound to return. He ordered the regimental band
to strike up, and play their loudest. This nonchalance had its effect,
for, after a short time, the bugles, drums, and clashing cymbals of his
own band, were the only sounds heard; the tumult in Masindi had
subsided, and soon Gen. Baker ordered his own musicians to cease
playing, and all was again perfectly still.[227]

We close this account of the music of some of the savage tribes of the
earth, with a description of a farewell dance, given to Stanley, by the
Wanyamwezi of Singiri, which is well worthy of a place, as showing the
powers of improvisation of the Africans.

“It was a wild dance, with lively music, four drums giving the sonorous
accompaniment, being beaten with tremendous energy and strength.
Everyone (even Stanley himself) danced with great fervor, and combined
excited gesticulations, with their saltatory efforts. But after the
close of this war-like music, came a total change; all dropped on their
knees, and in sorrowful accents sang a slow and solemn refrain, of which
the following is a literal translation,—

  _Solo_:—‘Oh, oh, oh! the white man is going home.

  _Chorus_:—Oh, oh, oh! going home! going home! oh, oh, oh!

  _Solo_:—To the happy island on the sea,
        Where the beads are plenty, oh, oh, oh!

  _Chorus_:—Where the beads, etc.

  _Solo_:—While Singiri has kept us, oh, very long
        From our homes, very long, oh, oh, oh!

  _Chorus_:—From our homes, etc.

  _Solo_:—And we have had no food for very long,
        We are half-starved, oh, for so long Bana Singiri.

  _Chorus_:—For so very long, oh, oh, oh! Bana Singiri, Singiri,
              Singiri! Oh! Singiri!

  _Solo_:—Mirambo has gone to war
        To fight against the Arabs;
        The Arabs and Wangwana
        Have gone to fight Mirambo.

  _Chorus_:—Oh, oh, oh, to fight Mirambo,
        Oh! Mirambo, Mirambo, etc.

  _Solo_:—But the white man will make us glad,
        He is going home! For he is going home,
        And he will make us glad! Sh, sh, sh.

  _Chorus_:—The white man will make us glad! Sh, sh, sh.
        Sh——sh-h-h——, sh-h-h-h-h-h
        Um-m—mu——um-m-m—sh!’”[228]

Mr. Stanley says that the rhythm and melody were beautiful, and the
general effect fine.

It is curious to contrast this quiet and pathetic farewell with the
bombastic “Where are you going to battle now?” previously given; and it
is also noticeable, that the power of improvisation which is so well
developed in the African Negro, is fully sustained by his descendents in
America.

It will be an interesting task to the student to compare the
slave-music, especially the camp-meeting songs of the American Negroes,
with the various descriptions of songs given above. The same fervor of
expression, and gradually growing excitement, and the same exaggeration
of feeling will be perceived at once.

It is not too much to say, that the Negro race may be, when refined and
toned down, the most universally and thoroughly musical race on the face
of the globe.




                               CHAPTER XX
                  MUSIC OF THE EARLY CHRISTIAN CHURCH.


We now resume the chronological chain of musical history, from the
termination of “Ancient Greek music;” for the music of the Christian
church took its rise, from the melodies of Ancient Greece. Yet it is
probable that the earliest Christian melodies were not according to the
classical Grecian type, but rather conformed to the popular in style.
This has always been the case in the rise of a new sect with sagacious
leaders. The Jews on leaving Egypt, yet sang the popular melodies dear
to their hearts, by association of childhood and youth; only at a later
period, only when these songs were no longer so endeared to them did
David introduce such reforms, as gave to the Hebrew music a distinctive
style. So, also, it was with the Christian church in its earliest days;
it would have been positively injudicious, at first, to have attempted a
reform; and therefore, the old popular melodies of Greece and Rome, were
set to new words and exerted a new influence.

Music has been, with every religion, the most powerful accessory of the
Faith; but with none more than with Christianity. It had the additional
advantage, of being in an advancing state (under the charge of able
directors, who fully saw the power of the art when made popular) while
the music of the Pagan church was greatly declining. The great emperor
Julian, foresaw the result, and used great efforts to secure a better
class of music for the Roman sacrifices, but without avail.

With regard to the Christian music of the time of the apostles, we have
only tradition, but these traditions have so much probability, that they
acquire some degree of authority.

Eusebius assures us that St. Mark taught the first Egyptian Christians
how to chant their prayers: St. John Chrysostom affirms (in his sixth
homily) that the Apostles wrote the first hymn. In Rome (according to
Tertullian) the chants were given in a deep tone, and not in a sustained
manner, at one part of the service, and with strong accents, and
flexible voice at another. The Fathers of the church almost all bear
testimony that the music of the service generally partook of the
habitual style of singing of each nation.

Kiesewetter, one of the most careful of the students of Ancient Greek
music, maintains that, while the early Christians borrowed much from
Greece, yet from the first, the tendency was rather away from, than in
the path of the Greek style. Brendel in his essays coincides with this
opinion.[229]

The cause of this, so far as Rome and Greece are concerned, is very
apparent. The apostles and their followers, started unencumbered in the
musical field. The theory of Greek music was a most difficult one to
master, and the converts were at first almost wholly among the humbler
classes. It would have been impossible to have trained them in the
elaborate Hellenic school, therefore, the more ear-catching melodies
were at first used, combined probably with a simple chant. The same
cause operated in the foundation of a newer and simpler theory of music;
hence, although our modern music is the child of the ancient Greek
school, yet it did not go in the same course, or arrive at the same goal
which would have resulted, had the old Greek civilization been continued
two thousand years longer.

We hold that the Greeks were too much devoted to the plastic arts, ever
to have brought music deeply into the inner life.

Before the liturgy had been well established, improvisation was much
employed; a result always to be anticipated when uncultivated persons
become musical. At the evening meal, the twenty-third Psalm was usually
chanted.[230] Other passages of scripture were also used, such as Exodus
XV., and Daniel III.

When the water was passed around for the washing of hands, each one of
the company was asked in turn to praise God in song, and the selection
might either be taken from Scripture, or improvised, according to the
taste or ability of the performer.[231] Some of the best of these
effusions were unquestionably preserved and possibly even admitted into
the regular service of the church. The songs may have been rough and
uncouth, but they were given with a fervor which compensated for any
short-comings. They were unaccompanied, for two reasons; first, it would
have been difficult to have formed an instrumental accompaniment to such
variable and primitive songs, (sometimes a mere intonation of the voice,
scarcely to be called music or even chanting); and second, because all
the instruments of the heathen were in daily use at the sacrifices and
theatres; and it would have seemed sacrilegious to have used them in the
celebration of a Christian festival.[232]

The summing up of the legends, surmises, and few statements concerning
the music of the earliest Christians, are well expressed in Ambros.[233]

We can conclude regarding the music of the earliest Christian times,
that it was at first a species of Folk-song, founded upon the school of
music then in vogue, but elevated and impregnated with a new religious
spirit. But this simplicity soon was changed: profiting by the
experience of the Romans in uniting all art and beauty in their
theatres, (whereby the theatre grew, and the church declined;) the early
Christians soon found it wise to unite every art, in the service of
their church. It is also probable that much of the music was borrowed
from that of the Hebrews. This is more natural when we reflect that
Christianity was at first a continuation (or reorganization) of Hebrew
rites and the apostles were all well acquainted with the ceremonies of
the Jewish church.

The chanting of the scriptures which took place in the latter worship,
was undoubtedly transplanted into the Christian service.[234] Many of
the early psalms and canticles were sung in caves and subterranean
retreats in which places the proscribed and persecuted worshippers were
obliged to seek refuge, and where they still kept, up with undeviating
regularity the practice of their ceremonies.

Pliny the younger on being made pro-consul of Bithynia was especially
charged by the emperor Trajan, to find accusations against the
Christians there, the number of whom was augmenting daily. A letter of
his, supposed to have been written in the third year of the second
century of our era,[235] contains the following regarding the new
religion.

“They affirm that their fault, and errors have only consisted of
this;—they convene at stated days, before sunrise, and sing, each in
turn, verses in praise of Christ, as of a God; they engage themselves,
by oath, not to do any crime, but never to commit theft, robbery, or
adultery, never to break faith, or betray a trust. After this they
separate and afterwards reassemble to eat together innocent and
innocuous dishes.”[236]

At a later period (the fourth century) all proselytes and new converts
were not admitted to sing in the church with the baptized. The new
converts presented themselves before the hierarch, (a dignitary who was
charged with the duty of classifying the catechumens in different
orders) and expressed to him the desire of joining the church. If the
questions of the priests were satisfactorily answered, he placed his
hand on the head of the applicant and gave him the benediction with the
sign of the cross, and afterwards inscribed his name among the number of
candidates for baptism. The catechumen had not the right to enter the
church. He might linger around the porticos, but was on no account
allowed to join in the prayers, except in a low voice, and in the hymns
not at all, until he had received the rite of baptism.

The candidates for baptism were divided into various classes. Even after
baptism there were three orders of Christians, and those who had fallen
into disgrace with the church, were sometimes disciplined by being
reduced for a few years to the rank of auditors at the services. These
were not allowed to join in the congregational singing, and were
sometimes not even admitted to the body of the church edifice unless
called there.

It is presumable that the right to join in the singing was, during the
first two or three centuries, highly prized.

Little by little the spirit of improvement crept into the unskilled but
soul-felt music of the early Christian church. It seems rather strange
to find in the very germs of the religion, a silent, yet real contest
between congregational and paid singing; and to find the same evils
creeping in with the employment of singers in those early times, that we
see in the present days of quartette choirs. In the days of Origen
(about the middle of the second century) all the congregation sang
together.

St. John Chrysostom says,—

“The psalms which we sing united all the voices in one, and the
canticles arise harmoniously in unison. Young and old, rich and poor,
women, men, slaves and citizens, all of us have formed but one melody
together.”[237]

A better picture of the full congregational singing of the primitive
Christians cannot be given. The custom of allowing both sexes to sing
together, was abolished by the Synod of Antioch in A. D. 379, and it was
then decided that the men only should be allowed to sing the psalms.

In A. D. 481, the council of Laodicea ordained that the clerks only
(called canonical singers “_Canonicos Cantores_,”) should be allowed to
sing during the service.[238] The abuses which accompany paid singing,
appeared even in the second century. Singers found themselves sought
after in proportion to their talents, and therefore (in the absence of
an exact method of notation) sought to make those talents more
conspicuous by an introduction of florid ornaments and cadenzas into
their music; they gradually forgot, or disregarded the old traditional
style of singing, and sought only to excite the admiration of the masses
by exhibiting to the best advantage the power and agility of their
voices.

It was, without doubt, to remedy this abuse that Pope Sylvester I, who
occupied the pontifical chair, A. D. 320, founded a school in Rome for
the formation of singers.[239] At this time also, the choir had its own
gallery or place in the church assigned to it, and every art was called
into play to impress and enthrall the worshipper. Sculpture, Painting,
Architecture and Music combined, as they had previously done for Pagan
theatres and amusements, to render the church a beautiful as well as
holy resort. Charity combined in some instances with policy; for we
learn that a singing school founded in A. D. 350, by pope Hilary, was
called an orphan asylum (orphanotrophia), and here the education of
clerks for the church, was commenced at a very tender age.[240]

These schools did much to re-establish a dignified and worthy style of
sacred singing. Yet there was great need of a sweeping reform; for as
there existed no really fixed system, the differences in singing were
almost as numerous as the various existing churches. Before speaking of
this reform, we will briefly outline the progress of music in Christian
communities outside of Rome.


                             GREEK CHURCH.

The Greek church, from the very beginning, paid great attention to music
in all its details. The first institution of the mass, is attributed to
St. James the lesser, first bishop of Jerusalem, who died a martyr in A.
D. 62. This mass is still in existence. There are also existing, masses
by the two great luminaries of the Greek Church, Sts. John Chrysostom
and Basilius, who flourished in the last half of the fourth century.

Although there are doubts expressed as to whether St. John Chrysostom
wrote the one attributed to him, yet it is certain that the mass was
used in Constantinople (of which city he was the Patriarch) as long ago
as the end of the fourth century, and was not materially changed until
the eighth century. It is entitled “The mystery of the divine
Eucharist.”[241]

The _hymns_, which at first were not used at all in the Roman church,
were one of the brightest ornaments of the Greek. The verses and ancient
tunes of these hymns were at first well adapted to each other; but, by
the constant introduction of embellishments, shakes, and cadenzas, the
connection was soon lost.

This taste for ornamentation in sacred music was driven to far greater
excess in the Greek church, than even in Rome; the taste _fioritura_ is
to-day, and always has been, a characteristic of most Eastern nations.
This is driven to such excess in the Greek church, that (in the churches
of the Orient, at least), the hymns are executed by two singers, one of
whom sings the hymns, while the other sustains the key note or principal
tone only.

This note the singer gives out with regularity and monotony, its only
object being to keep the principal singer in bounds and to prevent him
from straying away from the key on account of the numerous trills and
_fiorituri_ which he is expected to introduce into the song.

It may be well to mention here, as we shall not recur to the music of
the Eastern Greek church again, that its style of notation, and singing
has altered very little, in the course of centuries; it is totally
different from that of all other countries, and consists wholly of
signs, which are not in any manner measured off into bars, but somewhat
resemble the chants of the Catholic church. The notes are only relative
in value, and the scale on which the melodies are founded, may be
represented thus,—

  Re,   Mi,   Fa,   Sol,  La,   Si,   Do,   Re.
  Pa,   Bou,  Ga,   Di,   Ke,   Zô,   Ne,   Pa.

Every embellishment is represented by a character; rising and falling
inflections by others, and comparative length of notes by yet others.

It will therefore be seen that although the notation is decidedly
complicated, there is a comprehensible system followed, by consulting
which, we attain certain information as to one branch of the early
church.[242]

The works found in the old monasteries of the Orient are almost
invaluable to the musical antiquary. We believe that many more will yet
be discovered among the monks of Mt. Athos, those strange and illiterate
custodians of some of the rarest manuscripts in existence, relative to
this subject.[243]

We are sorry that a thorough description of this subject (though full of
interest) would demand much space and many engravings. The effect of the
singing of this church in its oriental branches is very similar to that
of the Hebrews in their services of the present day.


                             SYRIAN CHURCH.

We now turn to the early Christian church of Syria, founded by the
Apostles Paul and Barnabas.

One of the earliest in existence, the church of Antioch soon became the
metropolis of Syrian Christianity. Yet it was in this church also that
the first heresy took place, by the rise of the Gnostics (disciples of
science); one of this sect, named Bardesanes, founded a separate
denomination of these, and was the first who composed hymns in the
native tongue, and adapted them to melodies. He composed one hundred and
fifty psalms in imitation of David.

But greatest of all the musicians of the Orthodox Christian church of
Syria, was Ephraem Syrus. He is still called “Harp of the Holy Spirit”
in many churches who yet honor him and celebrate his feast.

He was a monk of Syria, born of poor parents, in a village of
Mesopotamia. At eighteen years of age he was converted and baptized, and
soon retired to a desert spot to practice penitence and piety. It was in
this retreat that he composed his voluminous sermons, hymns, etc., all
of which have much poetic beauty and oriental imagery.[244] He wrote
fifteen hymns on the “Nativity,” fifteen on “Paradise,” fifty-two on
“Faith,” and “The Church,” fifty-one on “The Virginity,” eighty-seven
against “Heresy,” and “The Arians,” eighty-five “Mortuary,” fifteen
moral hymns, etc. His writings on the _Peshito_ or Syriac version of the
scriptures are still of use to the theological student.

He arranged the music to his hymns, and he himself speaks of having
arranged sixty-six of them in the style of Bardesanes.

Many of the songs and prayers in the Syrian liturgy, ascribed to St.
Ephraem are spurious. It is related that at the first interview between
him and St. Basilius, the former was endowed by the Holy Ghost with
sudden power to speak Greek, and the latter Syriac, thus giving them a
choice of languages in which to converse.

It is impossible to give a thorough account of the music of the Syrian
Church, as although the first instruments mentioned in the Bible (the
taboret, a tambourine held in one hand and struck with the other, and
Kinnor, a seven stringed triangular harp) are Syrian, yet the people
have never, from time immemorial, written down their melodies, but
always handed them down orally, father to son, or teacher to pupil.

The mass in Syrian liturgy, is very different in its form, from the
Catholic: there is neither _Kyrie Eleison_, _Gloria_, nor _Epistle_,
contained in it.

There are two distinct sects in the Syrian church; the first
Ephraemitic, or followers of the Orthodox saint; the second, heretical
and followers of Jacob Baradaeus, a Syrian monk of the sixth century.
These are called Jacobites, and hold Eutychian doctrines.

The music of the latter is ornamented to excess; that of the Ephraemitic
rite nobler and plainer.


                          THE ARMENIAN CHURCH.

The rise of Christianity among the Armenians, goes back to the third
century, but they early developed the doctrines of Eutychius, and the
Monophysites. At times, portions of the Armenian church have adhered to
the Western church, but in its rites it far more resembles the Eastern
Greek church. The language is well adapted for song.

Their most ancient religious songs were written by _Sahac_, the great
_Katholicos_, or patriarch of the church; the psalms were sung by them
to popular melodies.


                        THE CHURCHES OF AFRICA.

St. Mark is considered as the Apostle of Egypt and founder of the church
of Alexandria; the liturgy used by this church is said to have been
written by him; but many manuscripts exist which point to St. Basilius
as its author, and it bears internal evidence that St. Mark could not
have written it, for among the prayers for the dead, it names many
saints, martyrs, bishops, etc., _including St. Mark_.

The songs of the early Christians here, as throughout the Orient, were
hymns, psalms, and anthems of which the melodies were taken from the
popular music of the day.

The Coptic church in its liturgy entirely resembled the Greek church of
Egypt, and in looking over its ritual, one continually meets with
translations of the liturgies of St. Basil, St. Cyrille, or St. Gregory
Nazianzen. In the National Library, of Paris there is also a Coptic
translation of the Liturgy of St. Mark.

The music of the Coptic church is very much embellished, and of
inordinate length; for, owing to the practice of the singers to vocalise
upon one syllable sometimes to the length of _several minutes_[245] the
vespers alone, often attain the length of _four or five hours_.

As the rules of worship of the Copts do not allow them either to kneel
or to sit down during services, they are obliged to support themselves
by placing under their arm-pits, a long crutch, in order not to drop
from fatigue.

This race is degenerating fast, and will soon disappear under the
despotic sway of the Arabs. Their number is about one hundred and fifty
thousand. Few of them understand the Coptic language, and although part
of the service is sung in that tongue, it is usually afterwards
explained in Arabic. Their modulations in singing are very bold,
constant, and fatiguing; so much so, that long before the end of the
song, all remembrance of any key-note, is lost.

All writers agree in speaking of their music, as tiresome in the
extreme. This proceeds from three causes;—their extraordinary length,
their insignificant melody, and the constant repetition of the syllables
and vowels of a single word, whereby it is made almost impossible to
follow the sense of the text. This fault is not confined to the Coptic
sect only, but is largely found in the Greek church throughout the
Orient. Fetis gives a strong example of one case, taken from an Eastern
Hymnal, it runs as follows,—

Aga-a-a-a-a-a-aate-e-e-e-e mara ky-y-y-ri-i-i-i-i-ou.

Each of the vowels is given separate from the others, and the effect is
ludicrous in the extreme. The Copts do worse than this; after mincing a
word into such minute fragments, they go back and re-mutilate the first
syllable, then again the second, then perhaps the first two, and so on
for a long time before they give the word complete like the Syrians.

The Copts have no musical notation whatever, and it is a most curious
fact in music, that they should be able to recollect such lengthy songs,
devoid of any apparent melody, or sequence, and hand them down
traditionally, from generation to generation; they must possess either
phenomenal memories, or an insight to a connection of ideas in their
songs, which has escaped European perception. These remarkable
descendants of the ancient Egyptians, hate other Christian sects with
much more fervor than they do the Mohammedans.

Of the Abyssinian Church we have already spoken, (see chapters on
“African Music”);—there is little more to add. They have different modes
of singing for different grades of sacred festivals. Responses made by
the people or the choir, enter largely into their mass. The number of
choristers is from eight to twelve, and they have all powerful voices;
this is in fact a prime necessity, as at the door of the church, during
service, a constant din of drums, cymbals, and sistrums is kept up.

On certain days, the priests and people have a grand religious dance, to
the sound of these instruments, while the chorus sing a litany and all
mark the time by a clapping of hands.


               GENERAL SYNOPSIS OF EARLY CHRISTIAN MUSIC.

That the art of music was esteemed among the more educated of the early
Christians is very strongly shown by a fresco in the cemetery of
Domitilla (in Rome). This painting which seems to be of the first or
second century of our era, represents Christ as Orpheus, charming all
nature by his music.[246] It is probably only an allegorical figure,
representing his divine gifts, but the figure must be a shock to all who
are accustomed to see the face of Jesus, as drawn by the Leonardo da
Vinci. Instead of the meek and beautiful form, we see here a lank
loosely-built young man, sitting in a very uncomfortable attitude, on a
rock, and twanging away at a four-stringed lyre.

Regarding the origin of the present pictures of Christ (although not
strictly belonging to our subject) we are tempted to make the following
remarks.

It is believed by some scholars that the head of Christ was first copied
from the statue of Jupiter (or the Greek Zeus), which was, in the early
centuries regarded as the most perfect model of manly beauty. It is
scarcely to be doubted that the general model of the Pagan sculptures
was followed in the early representations of the Saviour. But the style
of portraits was altered in consonance with the description handed down
by good authorities.

A brass medal with a head of Christ on one side, was discovered in 1702,
in some Druidical ruins, at Aberfraw, Wales, which although of a later
era than that assigned to it, is of great antiquity, and coincides with
the pictures of to-day.

There exists a letter ascribed to Publius Lentulus and directed to the
emperor Tiberius, which describes Jesus. Although it is apocryphal, yet
it was certainly written in the days of the primitive Christians. It is
translated as follows,—[247]

“There hath appeared in these, our days, a man of great virtue, named
Jesus Christ, who is yet living among us, and of the Gentiles, is
accepted as a prophet, but his disciples call him the Son of God. He
raiseth the dead, and cures all manner of diseases; a man of stature
somewhat tall and comely, with very reverend countenance, such as the
beholders both love and fear; his hair the color of chestnut, full ripe,
plain to his ears, whence downward it is more orient, curling and waving
about his shoulders.”

“In the midst of his head is a seam or partition of the hair, after the
manner of the Nazarites; his forehead plain and very delicate; his face
without a spot or wrinkle, beautified with the most lovely red; his nose
and mouth so formed that nothing can be reprehended; his beard thickish,
in color like his hair, not very long but forked; his look innocent and
mature, his eyes gray, clear, and quick. In reproving he is terrible; in
admonishing, courteous and fair spoken; pleasant in conversation mixed
with gravity.”

“It cannot be remarked that any one saw him laugh, but many have seen
him weep. In proportion of body, most excellent; his hands and arms most
delicate to behold. In speaking, very temperate, moderate and wise. A
man for his singular beauty, surpassing the children of men.”

From this letter of the predecessor of Pontius Pilate (?) the two
earliest known portraits of Christ (in the Calixtine and Pontine
catacombs at Rome) were probably sketched and the model has been
followed up to our day.

But there is another description, by St. John of Damascus, which is much
more in keeping with the Jewish type, of which he supposes the Saviour
probably may have had some trait.

According to him, Christ had beautiful eyes, but the eyebrows meeting; a
regular nose, flowing locks, a black beard, and a straw colored
complexion, like his mother.




                              CHAPTER XXI.
                   THE AMBROSIAN AND GREGORIAN CHANT.


St Ambrose, the first real reformer in the music of the Christian
Church, was born A. D. 333, probably at Treves, where his father who was
prefect of Gaul, often resided. He is said to have received an
auspicious omen even in his cradle; a swarm of bees alighted upon him
during his slumber, and the astonished nurse saw that they did not sting
him, but clustered around his lips; his father, remembering a similar
wonder related of Plato, predicted a high destiny for his son. He was
therefore, thoroughly educated in his youth, and soon was sent with
Satyrus, his brother, to Milan to study law.

He soon became so eminent in this profession, that he was appointed (A.
D. 369) prefect of upper Italy and Milan. In A. D. 374 he was
unanimously, and against his will, chosen bishop of Milan.

Once in the chair, however, he ruled with vigor and great sagacity,
making numerous and necessary reforms in church regulations and
discipline.[248]

We shall only follow his musical career. Unfortunately, although there
are some remains in the Milanese church-chant of to-day, we have but
little proof of the nature of his reforms. That it was deeply impressive
we have the testimony of St. Augustine who eulogises, without accurately
describing it,[249] but it is certain that his reforms were founded in
part upon the Greek music, and that in the Gregorian and Ambrosian
chants of the church, we have a legitimate descendant of the ancient
Greek music. The reader must remove one impression from his mind; the
music of the early Christians, though certainly crude, was by no means
simple; on the contrary, it contained many flourishes and rapid
embellishments, most of which were of oriental origin. The reform was in
the nature of simplicity, and added dignity to a service, which already,
in its words, possessed beauty and poetry.

He cast aside much of the cumbrous nomenclature of the Greek modes, and
retained of them only what was beautiful and easily comprehended. He did
not aim at any sweeping reform, as is evident from his letter to his
sister St. Marcellina, wherein he says that he is endeavoring to
regulate the mode of singing the hymns, canticles and anthems in his own
church,[250] and St. Augustine[251] says that it was done after the
manner of the churches of the Orient.

The modes which he chose for his compositions were the following:—

  First mode:—       D,    E, F,     G,      A,    B, C,     D,
                     re    mi fa    sol      la    si do     re
  Second do.       E, F,     G,      A,    B, C,     D,      E,
                   mi fa    sol      la    si do     re      mi
  Third do.          F,      G,      A,    B, C,     D,    E, F,
                     fa     sol      la    si do     re    mi fa
  Fourth do.         G,      A,    B, C,     D,    E, F,     G,
                    sol      la    si do     re    mi fa    sol

It will be seen that the semi-tones are immovable, and therefore occur
in different positions in each mode, by the change of the key-note;
being respectively,—

  First mode, semitones              2-3,        6-7
  Second ”    ”                      1-2,        5-6
  Third ”    ”                       4-5,        7-8
  Fourth ”    ”                      3-4,        6-7

It was this distinction which gave to each mode its peculiar character.

Not only did St. Ambrose reinstate these modes, but he composed many
beautiful compositions in them. Many of the so-called Ambrosian chants
and hymns, were not written by him, but after his manner; but some ten
of the ancient hymns, including “_Veni Redemptor Gentium_,” “_Eterna
Christi munera_,” etc., are from his own pen.

The Cathedral of Milan still uses _Aeterne rerum conditor_; _Deus
Creator omnium_; _Veni Redemptor omnium_; _Splendor Paternæ gloriæ_;
_Consors paterni luminis_; and _O Lux Beata Trinitas_.[252]

Some of these are of rare beauty, and remain as monuments of the
cultivated taste of this pioneer in church music. The composition of the
“_Te Deum Laudamus_,” has been ascribed to St. Ambrose, and St.
Augustine; but it was composed nearly a century after their death. Among
other persons to whom this beautiful production has been assigned, may
be mentioned St. Hilary, St. Abundius, St. Sisebut, and St. Nicat; but
it may be safely affirmed that its real author has never been
discovered.

The greatest boon bestowed on the church by St. Ambrose was the
rhythmical hymn, mentioned above, all of which, and many others he wrote
for the Cathedral which he built at Milan.

“The entire accent, and style of chanting as regulated by him, was
undoubtedly an artistic and cultivated improvement on that of preceding
church services, such as would naturally result from the rare
combination of piety, zeal, intellect, and poetical and musical power by
which he was distinguished.” The Ambrosian chant was eventually merged,
but certainly not lost in that vast repertory of plain song, (whether
then ancient or modern,) which we now call Gregorian, from the name of
the next great reformer of church music, St. Gregory the Great.[253] St.
Ambrose died A. D. 397; it was but a short time afterwards that the
great invasion of the northern barbarians took place. The history of the
vicissitudes of the ecclesiastical music, during the general disruption
of Europe and the western civilization, which followed, can only be
imagined; but scarcely had a calm been re-established, when, at a period
when the reforms and inventions of St. Ambrose had not been vitiated or
lost, the great reformer of church music arose, and re-instated the art
upon a firmer pedestal than ever.

Gregory, the Great, born about A. D. 540, and pope from September 3,
590, to March 12, 604, was of an illustrious Roman family. His father
Gordianus, was a senator, and Felix III., one of the early pontiffs, was
among his ancestors. He was one of the most remarkable, zealous, and
intelligent of the fathers of the church.

We have here only to follow his musical work, but in every branch of
work connected with his church, he was most eminent. He founded six
monasteries in Sicily alone. He voluntarily resigned an honorable
office, to leave the world, and seek retirement in the monastery of St.
Andrew, which he himself had founded at Rome. On this occasion he gave
to the poor all his wealth, and declining the abbacy of his own convent,
began with the ordinary monastic life, about 575.

He wished to attempt the conversion of the Britains, (moved thereto by
the well known incident of seeing some beautiful Anglo-Saxon youths
exposed for sale in the Roman market place), but was prevented by the
clamor of the populace who refused to lose him. Like St. Ambrose, he was
called to office entirely against his will, and, on being made pontiff,
he seems to have excelled in every department of his administration;
thus much, to show that music was but one of the fields in which this
wonderful man exercised his talents.

He collected the available church music, he added to it by composing new
hymns and anthems, he arranged them for the various special days of the
year, he invented or amplified the system of ecclesiastical composition,
and took care that the reforms should be permanent, by having most
things relative to his musical labors, written out in a lasting
manner.[254]

These reforms he began about A. D. 599. He did not discard the four
modes of St. Ambrose, but rather extended them; and yet (through the
great personal popularity of St. Ambrose), the Milan Cathedral kept the
Ambrosian chant unadulterated, for centuries after the establishment of
the Gregorian.

As late as the latter half of the fifteenth century, Franchinus Gafor
speaks of the Gregorians and Ambrosians as partizans. Of course, in
order to secure uniformity, the rulers of Europe, sought to dwarf the
workings of the Ambrosian system, and Charlemagne even ordered the
Ambrosian books to be burnt. Although, as above stated, there was
nothing antagonistic in the two systems, yet their musical results seem
to have had a material difference, for Radulf of Tongern an
unimpeachable witness of the fourteenth century, who heard both methods
in their purity, says that he found the Ambrosian chanting, widely
different from the Roman (Gregorian); the former being strong and
majestic, while the latter was sweet-toned, and well arranged.[255] This
distinction is utterly meaningless to us, for the Gregorian chant is
certainly majestic and strong, at least to our ears.

Gregory also founded a singing school in Rome, which was large enough to
occupy two good-sized edifices. In this he probably taught personally.

There have been shown as relics of his instruction, the couch on which
he sat while teaching, and the rod with which the boys were corrected,
or awed into giving proper attention to their studies.

The amplification which he made in the Ambrosian scale was the addition
of four tones or plagal modes, and also that he totally abolished the
difficult Greek nomenclature, such as _para-mese_ and
_proslambanomenos_, and gave the names of the first seven letters of the
Roman alphabet, to the seven notes, A, B, C, D, E, F, G, in the same
manner as used to-day. There is no question but that the scale founded
by Gregory, had a diatonic character, but as to the number of systems of
tones employed, authorities differ, and even the books of music of
Gregory’s own compilation (one of which was chained to the altar at St.
Peters, to fix the standard of tone for ever and ever) do not clear up
the difficulty, for the number differs.

But the system gradually settled itself, and eight tones only (our
ordinary diatonic scale tones) were found practicable for composition
and singing.

Gregory’s system was founded on the division of the octave into two
intervals; a perfect fifth and perfect fourth. The fifth was, next to
the octave, the most important interval.

The added modes (called plagal, signifying “oblique, sideways”), were so
called to distinguish them from the authentic tones or keys (D, E, F, G,
A), a synopsis of the entire set of tones would be as follows,—

  A,   B,   C,   D,   E,   F,   G,   A,   B,   C,   D,
      plagal 4,
                      authentic 5,
                                         plagal 4.

There were four authentic modes, viz.,—D, E, F and G, and four plagal,
as follows,—A, B, C and D.

To give a description that would be at all adequate, of the system of
Gregory, would require much space, and many plates and engravings. We
shall therefore touch but lightly on the tone systems and notations of
the early and middle ages. The founding of the scale from a fifth and
fourth, led to one grave mistake; these intervals were supposed to be of
prime importance, and more perfect than others, and finally were
employed in harmonies which were decidedly harsh. But to such an extent
did the evil spread that no composition (in the dark ages) was thought
to be pure or classic, without containing a series of fourths, fifths,
and octaves, and an invariable close upon an empty fifth. Thirds were
rejected as totally impure. But these faults are not of Gregory’s
origination, and he must ever stand as the man who made the connecting
link between the old Greek music and our own.




                             CHAPTER XXII.
                MUSIC IN EUROPE FROM THE FIFTH CENTURY.


In proceeding to briefly sketch the curious facts of musical history in
the dark ages, we shall necessarily confine ourselves to pointing out
only what is chiefly remarkable, and shall not enter into the field of
dispute regarding systems and notations, for this period of Musical
History is a very hazy one. It is but natural to suppose, that when
general barbarism spread over Europe, music was not likely to be either
much practised or written about. The last writer on the previous systems
was Boethius (the last of old Roman writers), who lived at about the
same epoch as Gregory (he was put to death by Theodoric, the Goth, A. D.
525).

In his work, he uses the letters of the alphabet, to designate musical
notes, but does not repeat the letters at the octave; his nomenclature
therefore does not end at G, but continues on, to _N_, _O_, and
_P_.[256]

Musical progress was at a stand still from the time of Gregory, until
the reign of the Carlovingian kings. Charlemagne at the end of the
eighth, and beginning of the ninth centuries, took all art and music
under his powerful protection. He loved to compare himself with King
David, and had in many respects, good reason to, for he possessed both
the virtues and the failings of that ancient monarch.

He gathered about him a number of musical and literary friends, and we
can judge of the pleasant manner of their intercourse by the names of
antiquity which each one was known by. Alcuin, was dubbed Flaccus
Albinus; Riculf, Archbishop of Mayence,—Damoetas; Arno,—Aquila;
Angilbert,—Homerus, etc.[257]

In addition to the literary and musical schools founded throughout his
empire, in his own palace was one devoted to the education of the
children of his servants. Books were read, and music sung to his
courtiers, during the hours of dining or other leisure.

The singing at his court, he often conducted himself, and every one was
obliged to participate. If a stranger arrived, he was also obliged to
stand with the chorus, and even if he could not sing, at least to make
the semblance of doing so.

In the conservation of ancient legendary songs Charlemagne was very
active, and many which have come down to our day, owe their existence to
his wise and thoughtful care.[258]

In church music he was, most of all, interested, and remarked with much
concern, the variations between the Gregorian and French singing. To put
an end to the matter, he sent to Stephen IV., the reigning pope, for
ecclesiastical singers; the latter responded by sending, (in imitation
of the twelve apostles,) twelve clerical singers to teach his empire.

But these twelve apostles, turned out to be _all_ Judases, for jealous
of the rising civilization of France, they agreed among themselves, not
to aid in its rise. When therefore, they had been received at the French
court with every honor, and were sent to their various fields of labor,
it is said, they began to sing in a most wretched manner, and not
content with that, they _taught_ this abomination to their pupils. But
when Charlemagne celebrated Christmas at Tours that year, and in Paris
the succeeding year, he heard other Roman vocalists sing in a manner
totally different, and lost no time in making complaint to the pope,
who, calling back the untrustworthy teachers, punished them, some with
banishment, and some with perpetual imprisonment; and in order that a
similar deceit might not again be practised, he persuaded Charlemagne to
send two French Ecclesiastics to Rome, where under Papal supervision
they learned the true Gregorian style of song.[259]

There also exists another anecdote of the ruling of Charlemagne in
church singing, which will show how high partizan feeling ran in musical
matters at this era. It is as follows,—

“The most pious King Charles having returned to celebrate Easter at Rome
with the apostolic Lord, a great quarrel ensued during the festival,
between the Roman and Gallic singers. The French pretended to sing
better and more agreeable than the Italians; the Italians, on the
contrary, regarding themselves as more learned in Ecclesiastical music,
in which they had been instructed by St. Gregory, accused their
competitors of corrupting, disfiguring, and spoiling the new chant. The
dispute being brought before our sovereign lord the king, the French,
thinking themselves sure of his countenance and support, insulted the
Roman singers; who, on their part, emboldened by superior knowledge, and
comparing the musical abilities of their great master, St. Gregory, with
the ignorance and rusticity of their rivals, treated them as fools and
barbarians.”

“As their altercation was not likely to come to a speedy issue, the most
pious King Charles asked his chanters which they thought to be the
purest and best water, that which was drawn from the source at the
fountain-head, or that which after being mixed with turbid and muddy
rivulets, was found at a great distance from the original spring?”

“They exclaimed unanimously, that all water must be most pure at its
source; upon which our lord the King, said, ‘mount ye then up to the
pure fountain of St. Gregory, whose chant ye have manifestly corrupted.’
After this our lord the king, applied to Pope Adrian (the first) for
singing masters to convert the Gallican chant; and the pope appointed
for that purpose Theodore and Benedict, two chanters of great learning
and abilities, who had been instructed by St. Gregory himself; he
likewise granted to him _Antiphonaria_, or choral-books of that saint,
which he had himself written in Roman notes.”

“Our lord the King, on his return to France, sent one of the two singers
granted him by the Pope, to Metz, and the other to Soissons; commanding
all the singing masters of his kingdom to correct their _antiphonaria_,
and to conform in all respects to the Roman manner of performing the
church service.”

“Thus were the French _antiphonaria_ corrected, which had before been
vitiated, interpolated, and abridged at the pleasure of every choir man,
and all the chanters of France learned from the Romans that chant which
they now call the French chant, which is entirely as the Roman except
that the French do not execute the tremulus and vinnulas, the bound and
staccato notes (_collisibiles vel secabiles voces_), with facility, and
give a rather rude and throaty manner of singing. The best style of
singing remained in Metz, and as superior as Rome is to Metz, so
superior is Metz to the rest of France, in its school of singing.”[260]

Both the above anecdotes, although quoted very frequently, must be taken
_cum grano salis_, for as Ambros and Fetis well observe, the two
singers, if they had received instruction from Gregory, and also taught
in the era of Charlemagne, must have been about _two hundred years of
age_, which is certainly too old for active service. Another historian
gives the names of the envoys as _Petrus_ and _Romanus_, and it is
certain that one of these did go to Metz, and that a famous school of
singing was founded at Soissons about the same time. Both the teachers,
also must have instructed the French, in the musical characters then
used in notation, and known by the name of _Neumes_.

The _Neumes_ which were in use for musical writing from the eighth to
the twelfth century were short lines, twirls, and hooks, which were
written above the words of a song to denote the melody.

The origin of these marks, is buried in oblivion, for they seem to have
been developed, not at one time, but gradually, and from the simplest
beginnings. Although we have not space to describe the theories
concerning them, a short explanation of them is necessary, for from
these Neumes gradually came our modern system of notation. At first
these marks were only meant as guides to memory; to aid the singer to
sing an air which he had previously learned. Thus the first bar of “Home
Sweet Home,” would be represented by a _Scandicus_ signifying three
upward moving tones, the first two short, the last one long.

The exclamation and interrogation point, are in language, what _Neumes_
were at first in music, they roughly sketched out the inflection of the
voice. The connection between them, and our modern notation is very
evident; in our musical notation the requirements of the eye, have been
well attended to; not entirely perhaps, as regards the length of notes,
but certainly in the matter of ascending and descending passages,
etc.;[261] the old Greek notation, with its upturned and fragmentary
letters, meant nothing to the untutored eye; but the _Neumes_ of the
middle ages, were the first attempt to express a meaning _by their
arrangement_. Thus the _tripunctum_ ({tripunctum}) would denote three
notes ascending, though not which ones; it might mean

   C,    D,    E,    or     E,     F,    G,    or     F,     G,    A,
  do,   re,   mi,          mi,    fa,   sol,         fa,    sol,  la,

etc., the _bipunctum_ ({bipunctum}) two ascending, or ({bipunctum})
descending notes; the _plica ascendens_ ({plica ascendens}) an upward
spring of a third, etc.

It being a system which was evolved by slow degrees, it is not
astonishing that there are various signs, about which opinions differ.
The system though seemingly barbarous, was in reality an improvement;
although not developed so extensively as the Greek notation which
preceded it, it bore the germ of a more natural style of musical
characters.

But the constant change of, and addition to the _Neumes_, bore evidence,
that it was but a pathway to a more complete system. The next great
reformer in music gave his attention to abolishing the uncertainty which
clung around the _pneumata_.

Hucbald, Monk of St. Amand, in Flanders, (born about 840, died 932,)
made the first practical effort to fix notes permanently. To him is due
the germ of the idea which afterwards culminated in the modern clefs and
staff.

He took (unfortunately) the Greek system for his starting point, and
this led him into many errors, and much lessened the permanent value of
his work. He took the tetrachord (or succession of four notes) as the
foundation of music, but he applied it in a most strange manner; his
scale was as follows:[262]

  G, A, B flat,
  C, D, E, F,
  G, A, B natural,
  C, D, E, F sharp,
  G, A, B, C sharp,

it will be readily seen that the above scale contains some
incongruities, which are precisely similar to those noticed in the music
of the Hindoos; that is the octave comes out a semi-tone sharp; B
natural being octave to B flat, F sharp to F, etc.

Naturally, in singing it is not to be conceived that the singers took
any such outlandish system as to substitute this for an octave, but it
must have allowed great license to the singers, and the whole must have
given rise to much ambiguity.

His improvement in the method of notation consisted (a perfect
anticipation of clef and staff) in placing the letters of the notes
employed, before each line of the words, and then writing each syllable
of the song, opposite to (and level with) the note to which it belonged.
As he adopted the clumsy Greek method of lettering (using only four
letters, and placing them upright, reversed, backwards, and sideways) we
will give an example with English letters.[263]

  A  _______a-________________________
  G  ____da-__te_______num____________
  F  Lau-___________mi-____de-________
  E  ____________do-__________e_______
  D  ___________________________cœlis

The words being “Laudate Dominum de cœlis.”

The harmony of Hucbald was as peculiar and barbaric as his scale system.

He followed the principle of the ancients in treating intervals of
thirds and sixths as _dissonances_, and therefore did not allow them to
appear in his works. In common with some of his predecessors, he held
that the only pure intervals were fifths and fourths. To us this
succession of discords appears most appalling, but it is probable that
in the practical use of music it was ameliorated somewhat. At this time
when the organ was in such a primitive state that the organist struck
the keys heavily with his _fist_ in playing, the left fist was sometimes
allowed to hold a tone (in the manner of an organ point), while the
right played a succession of tones with the singers. The constant
rejection of sixths and thirds as impure intervals, must ever remain a
mystery to us; yet the effect of even this harsh and uncouth singing was
deep on those who heard it. History tells us that King Canute was deeply
impressed on hearing the monks chant, while being rowed in his boat,
near a monastery, and a lady upon hearing the music of the first organ
erected in France, went raving mad, from excess of emotion.

We will leave the rude harmonies of Hucbald, with a final example
showing the succession of fourths used in his _organum_ (or art of
composing).

The letters T, and S, signify tone and semitone.

  _______________Do-_____________________________
  T_________________mini_________________________
  T_Sit_____oria_________in_____cula________bitur
  S_____glo-_____Do-________sae-_________ta______
  T_________________mini_____________lae-________  } etc.
  T_Sit_____oria_________in_____cula________bitur
  S_____glo-________________sae-_________ta______
  T__________________________________lae-________

Sometimes four voices were thus written on a staff of fifteen lines.
Although this system was so cumbrous, yet the right path had been
attained, and the progress was continual; little inventions followed one
upon the other, and many of the modern usages in music date their rise
to this obscure age of Musical History.

The next great name, in the art, is that of Guido Aretino, or of Arezzo,
a monk of the Benedictine order, born at Arezzo. He flourished about A.
D. 1030 though the date of his birth and death, is not accurately known.
His work has had more influence in shaping modern music, than that of
any one before him. Yet much of his life and work belongs to the hazy
realm of legend. He attained such celebrity that every invention to
which his successors could not find a father, was attributed to him.

Guido’s great success lay in the fact that he was a _specialist_. He did
not undertake, like Gregory and Ambros, to shine in all art, science,
and enterprise; his position precluded that; he says “The ways of
Philosophers are not mine, I only occupy myself with what can be of use
to the church, and bring our little ones (the scholars) forward.”

There was need of such a man; for though music teachers were sought in
every country at this time, and those from Italy, Greece, France and
even Germany, were highly prized, yet there were many who presumed on
this state of affairs, and the consequence was that incompetent teachers
were the rule. To remedy this great evil was the aim of Guido’s life.

He says some of these would-be teachers, “If they sang in their aimless
manner, every day, for a hundred years, they would not invent even the
slightest new Antiphon, and he who cannot easily and correctly sing a
new song, by what right can he call himself a musician or singer?

“At the service of God, it too often sounds, not as if we were praising
Him, but as if we were quarrelling, and scolding among ourselves.”

He devoted himself greatly, to the teaching of a most important branch
of singing, i. e., _sight reading_, and soon brought his cloister class
to such perfection in this that they astonished all beholders. He was
not however, as mild-mannered a reformer as his predecessor in art,
Hucbald. His bitter sarcasms on his brother monks, soon brought a
result, and he found himself though not actually chased from his
convent, yet ostracized in it.

But he was well able to sustain such a strife, and continued his work
with zeal unabated. His style of teaching sight reading was far in
advance of his competitors, for he taught his scholars to sing
intervals, not by referring to the monochord, but instead of it to think
of some similar interval in any hymn well known to them, thus combining
thought, memory and musical ear, in a practical manner.

He was struck with the regularly ascending intervals of the first
syllables of each line of the hymn in honor of St. John, and with the
inspiration of genius attached the syllables ut, re, mi, fa, sol, la, to
the notes, and caused his scholars to memorize each interval, thus
forming a new and easily comprehended system of _Solfeggio_. The hymn
which inspired this wonderful stride in music runs,

  _Ut_—queant laxis.
  _Re_—sonare fibris.
  _Mi_—ra gestorum.
  _Fa_—muli tuorum.
  _Sol_—ve polluti.
  _La_—bia reati.
  Sancte Johannes.

The fame of his wonderful results in choir-training, soon reached Rome,
and the Pope, John XIX.,[264] sent an invitation to the still ostracized
monk, to come to Rome.

Guido is credited with having made many changes in the notation and
harmony of his day. The hexachord system is attributed (justly or
unjustly) to him. He also is said to have introduced lines of different
colors into the staff, for the purpose of aiding the singer to recognize
certain notes with more facility. He says in his _Micrologus_[265] “In
order that sounds may be discerned with certainty, we mark some lines
with various colors, so that the eye may immediately distinguish a note,
in whatever place it may be. For the third of the scale [C] a bright
saffron line. The sixth [F] adjacent to C is of bright vermilion, and
the proximity of others to these colors, will be an index to the whole.
If there were neither letter, nor colored lines to the Neumes, it would
be like having a well without a rope—the water plentiful, but of no use
to those who see it.”

While Guido does not lay claim to having invented the colored lines, it
is probable that he brought them, by his influence into much more
general use.

He certainly invented a modification of the line system of Hucbald.
Instead of the inverted letters, and fragments of letters which the
latter used, he employed the vowels only, to designate the pitch, thus,—

  ________________________________________________
  ____________________________________tu-____|_u_|
  ______________so-______________________os__|_o_|
  F__ri-_____ri____lis________u-_____________|_i_|
  ________ve-_____________ter___ber-_________|_e_|
  Ma-___a______________Ma-__________a________|_a_|

“Maria, veri solis mater, ubera tuos.”

Guido, altered Hucbald’s _Organum_ in so far, that he rejected
consecutive fifths, as being too harsh, and substituted a series of
consecutive fourths as being milder.

It may not be out of place to remark here, that the present scrupulous
avoidance of all consecutive fifths, in modern composition of strict
school, is simply a reaction from the rude taste of past centuries,
which employed them _ad nauseum_; there is no valid reason for their
complete ostracism, any more than there was cause for the banishing of
all sixths and thirds from the harmony of our ancestors. To Guido is
also attributed the invention of the method of the harmonical hand
(Guidonian hand, as it has been named after its supposed originator).
This consisted of marking certain notes and musical signs on the tips of
the fingers, and by this means more readily committing them to memory.
As before stated, many of the inventions credited to Guido, are only
adaptations. The Sol-faing system was almost an accidental occurrence;
yet only genius can derive full profit from accidents. The hymn which
gave rise to it (quoted above), is a most prosaic invocation to St. John
to save the throats of the singers from hoarseness, in order that they
may fittingly sing his praise. A very diplomatic way of requesting it.

Musical history in the ninth, tenth, and eleventh centuries is at its
darkest; hence little is positively known of the life of Guido. It is
certain that he was in great favor at Rome, and that other countries
applied to him for his musical services to reorganize their
ecclesiastical chanting, and also that his health failing, he returned
to his monastery, forgetting and forgiving the ill treatment he had
received there, and in its cloisters peacefully ended his days.

The date of his decease is not known.

Other names appear in this misty epoch in musical history. Franco of
Cologne, Walter Odington, an English Monk, Heeronymus von Maehren, etc.,
wrote works upon the theory of music, while Adam de la Hale (of Arras,
France) wrote music in four-part harmony, about the year 1280. But in
the midst of this darkness there came a glorious sunburst in the shape
of chivalric bands who elevated music to a broader sphere by adding to
the ecclesiastical chanting a secular school of composition, both
warlike and lyrical.




                             CHAPTER XXIII.
                           THE ANCIENT BARDS.


While Rome and Milan were devoting themselves almost entirely to
ecclesiastical music, there had sprung up among the barbarian nations a
school of music more consonant to their habits, being warlike in its
style, and having for its object the celebration of the heroes of each
country, and the inciting of their descendants to similar deeds of
glory. From earliest days Wales has possessed a guild of such singers,
who were, in fact, the historians of the country, at a time when written
books would have been nearly useless. The songs of the Welsh bards have
been preserved traditionally by that people; while the songs of the
druids who preceded them have been allowed to pass into utter oblivion,
the latter having, evidently, not taken deep root in Welsh soil.

At the commencement of the sixth century, the bards of Wales exerted all
their energies of exhortation to animate their countrymen in the strife
with the Saxon invaders, and when Wales was conquered by Edward I.,
(1284) he dreaded their influence so much that he is said to have
persecuted them and put them to death. The bards in Wales had an
organization similar to that which we shall presently find among the
troubadours and minne-singers. They were divided into two
classes,—poets, and musicians. Each of these classes were subdivided
into three divisions. The first class of poet-bards was composed of
those who understood history, and dabbled somewhat in sorcery, thus
being held in awe as prophets and diviners. The second class consisted
of bards attached to private families, whose duties were to chant the
praises of the heroes of their particular house. The third class were
the heraldic bards, who wrote the national annals and prescribed the
laws of etiquette and precedence. These must have exerted a powerful
influence on a nation which clung so strictly to ceremony and the
privileges of lineage.

The musicians were also divided into three classes, of which the first
were harpers, and possessed the title of Doctors of Music; the second
class were the players upon the _crouth_ or _chrotta_, a smaller
stringed instrument; the third class consisted of the singers. Many laws
and regulations were made to define the privileges of each class, and
the classification of new bards took place at an assemblage called the
Eisteddfod, which met triennially, and conferred degrees. The highest
degree could only be obtained after nine years faithful study. From the
thirteenth century Wales also possessed a class of wandering musicians
entitled, “_Clery dom_.” The harps used were various, though the
three-stringed one was the national instrument. One variety was made of
leather, strung with wire, and is said to have been peculiarly harsh;
another called _isgywer_ was so small that it could be played on
horseback; another was strung with hair. The order of the bards was
hereditary to some extent. King Howel Dha issued edicts regarding them
(fixing their rank) about 940 A. D., and in 1078 the whole order was
reformed and full regulations made by Gryffith ap Conan. In spite of the
persecutions to which they were subjected, the order was sustained for
centuries, and _Eisteddfods_ were held under royal commission down to
the reign of Queen Elizabeth.

In Ireland minstrelsy has had a foothold in all times. There is a legend
that about the year 365 B. C., there occurred in Ireland the first
triumph of poetry and music. A young prince, driven from his throne by a
usurper, was so moved by a song which his betrothed wrote and caused
Craftine, a celebrated bard, to sing to him, that he resolved on
hazarding a supreme effort to regain his crown, and succeeded in driving
the usurper from his kingdom.

The Irish claim that they were the originators of the Welsh system of
bards, but this statement seems to be founded rather on national pride
than upon fact, for it is probable that the borrowing was upon the other
side. But it is certain that the Irish have ever possessed musical taste
and skill.

Gyraldus Cambriensis (who wrote in the twelfth century) says of them:
“The aptitude of this people for performing upon musical instruments is
worthy of attention.”

“They have in this respect, much more ability than any nation I have
ever seen. The modulations are not with them slow and sad, like those of
the instruments of Britain, to which we are accustomed, but the sounds,
though rapid and precipitate, are yet sweet and soothing.”[266] The harp
was, as in Wales, the national instrument. The bards were a hereditary
class, and their guild, as in Wales, had three divisions; the _Filedha_,
who sang both about religious and martial subjects, and were also
heralds to the nobility; _Braitheamhain_, who chanted the laws; and the
_Seanachaidehe_, who were the musical and poetical chroniclers and
historians. Their influence and privileges were fully as great as those
of their Welsh brethren, and they had many valuable possessions of land.
Their skill was universally acknowledged up to their conquest by Henry
II., but from that epoch the profession began to decline, although noble
families still made it a point of honor to keep private bards to sing to
them of the deeds of the ancestors of their house.

The influence which these songs exerted in fomenting rebellion was such,
that severe laws were promulgated against them in England, and under
Elizabeth all the Irish bards who were captured, were hanged.

The last Irish hard existed as late as the eighteenth century.

Turlogh O’Carolan was born 1670, and died 1737; worthily closing the
long reign of the fiery minstrel guild of Ireland.

Scotland’s bardism, was similar to that of Wales and Ireland, but the
ranks and privileges are less known. The bag-pipe was played as much as
the harp, and there was much analogy in the ancient music of Ireland and
Scotland. The scale on which the Scotch pieces were founded, bears much
resemblance to the Chinese, and to some of the Hindoo modes.

In England there were also bards, but there was not an order, as in the
preceding countries, and at a time when these heraldic singers were so
highly honored in Wales, the singers and musicians of England were held
in very slight social estimation. The irruptions of the Danes, and
Norsemen generally, upon England in the ninth, tenth and eleventh
centuries, brought a taste of the forcible Northern _sagas_ along with
them, and when King Canute held the throne, bards and “_gleemen_,” were
protected and favored, for King Canute was very fond of song. He,
himself, wrote a song which was for a long time the favorite ballad of
England.

The circumstances which prompted it were as follows:—

He was being rowed near the Monastery of Ely, in the evening, when the
sound of the monks singing their vesper chants, came across the water;
he was greatly moved by the beauty of the song, which, with the
accessories of the tranquil evening, the rippling water, and the
measured stroke of the oars, caused him to improvise upon the spot, a
song which soon spread among the peasantry as well as the higher
classes.

Only one stanza has been preserved of this interesting effusion,—

  “Merie sungen the muneches binnen Ely,
  Tha Cnute Ching, reu ther by
  Rowe cnihtes, næw the land,
  And here we thes muneches sæng,”

which may be rendered in English thus:—

  “Sweetly sang the Monks of Ely,
  As King Canute rowed there by,
  Row men, nearer to the shore
  And hear we these Monks’ song.”

The minstrels of England from the first, took a more peaceful and
religious turn than those of Wales and Ireland. The most of the really
authentic pieces of their era, take the shape of Christmas carols.




                             CHAPTER XXIV.
                   THE TROUBADOURS AND MINNE-SINGERS.


We now come to an era in music, where the most cultivated minds gave
their attention to the art; and where it is no longer confined to the
narrow channels of ecclesiastical, and even heraldic and martial use,
but finds a broader outlet in the subjects of Love, and Nature. The
troubadours were gentlemen (often knights), who held themselves totally
distinct from those musicians who wrote for pay. The rise of chivalry in
the middle ages, elevated woman from an unjustly low position, to an
absurdly high one. She was held to be the arbiter of Fate; the Queen to
whom all service was due; and was almost religiously worshipped. From
this exaggerated devotion arose the school of troubadour and
minne-singer composition. When knights racked their brains, as to what
new offering they could bring to their lady, it was but natural that
they should find, in the combination of poetry and song, a series of
never-ending tributes with which they could pay homage to their chosen
one.

It is easy to imagine that once launched into this fertile field, they
would not wholly confine themselves to Love, but that an occasional poem
on Nature, or War, would attest their versatility so that even the
puerile “Courts of Love,” of the chivalric age, brought a general onward
impulse to art; it was not to be expected that the knights could step at
once from a condition of rudeness, to a state of culture, and it is not
surprising to see a vast exaggeration of politeness, where little had
been before.

In the beautiful country of Provence (South France), this branch of art
took its rise. The lyrical songs of the troubadours were written in the
Provencal tongue, which soon became, for all South France the court
language for amatory poetry. It was called also the _Langue d’oc_ (from
the affirmative “_Oc_,” or “yes”), to distinguish it from the _Lingua di
Si_ (Italian) and the _Langue d’öil_ (North France); the name afterwards
was attached to another province of France. The Trouvères, were the
poets and minstrels of North France, and wrote in the _langue d’öil_.
They wrote chiefly epic poetry, (fables, tales and romances), while the
lyrical school was left to their southern competitors.

The troubadours composed and sang their own songs, but did not play
their own accompaniments; that branch of music was turned over to hired
musicians, called _jongleurs_.

Celebrated troubadours had often several _jongleurs_ in their employ.
Those who made music a means of gaining a livelihood, were classed much
lower. All in fact who did not invent (“_Trobar_,” to find, or invent,
whence comes the word trobador) their own songs, but sang or accompanied
others, were called _jongleurs_, which was about as ordinary a trade as
that of our perambulating “jugglers;” whose name is only a corruption of
the more ancient calling.

The troubadours had a position which was even better than that of the
bards of Wales or Ireland. They also made a livelihood of music, but in
a far more genteel way than their humbler assistants, who were
proscribed for so doing. The first thing the troubadour did, on
practising his art was to seek out some person on whom to bestow his
heart. This person was almost invariably a married lady. To her, he
would then dedicate all his lays; he would (bestowing upon her, an
assumed name), sing of her beauties, and entreat her favors; he would
sneer at the charms of other dames, and sometimes satirize them.

The feelings of the husband during all this can “better be imagined than
described.”

Yet often the dame, may have been totally indifferent to his ardor. We
feel sure that at times this was the case, for husbands are known to
have begged their wives to accept the troubadour’s flattery, and keep
him on, with slight encouragement.

Meanwhile the singers went on from Court to Court, received as equals,
by the highest; flattered and sought for by the most brilliant circles,
and fairest ladies. Often they attached themselves to some particular
prince, and gained his favor and enriched themselves by singing
_sirventes_ (songs of service) in his honor, and in derision of his
enemies.

The nobles and kings of that era, also took up the Troubadour’s lyre, at
times. Richard I., Alfonso X., William IX. Count of Poitiers and others
were famous for their efforts in this line, and they richly patronized
such troubadours as sought them.

The gifts with which a successful song was rewarded, were of course
influenced by the liberality of the giver. Horses, richly caparisoned,
elegant vestments, and money, are mentioned in this connection.[267]
Meanwhile the troubadours occasionally display the utmost contempt for
their assistants, the before mentioned _jongleurs_, and reproach nobles,
in some verses, with receiving such persons (who play at village fairs,
dance on the tight rope, and exhibit performing monkeys), into their
castles. Yet not all of the poets shared in this feeling, for Boccaccio
tells us that Dante loved to associate with the musicians who set his
_canzone_ to music. In the thirteenth century, Guirant Riquier (called
the “last of the troubadours”) complains to the king of Castile, Alfonso
X., of the decadence of the troubadour’s art, and attributes it to the
indiscriminate mixing of troubadours and jongleurs, in popular
estimation. He says—“You know that all men live in classes differing and
distinguished from each other. Therefore it seems to me that such a
distinction of names ought also to be made amongst the joglars; for it
is unjust that the best of them should not be distinguished by name as
well as they are by deed. It is unfair that an ignorant man of small
learning, who knows a little how to play some instrument, and strums it
in public places, for whatever people will give him, or one who sings
low ditties to low people about the streets and taverns, and takes alms
without shame from the first comer,—that all these should
indiscriminately go by the name of joglars ... for joglaria was invented
by wise men to give joy to good people by their skill in playing on
instruments.... After that came the troubadours to record valiant deeds,
and to praise the good, and encourage them in their noble endeavor....
But in our days, and for some time past, a set of people without sense
and wisdom have undertaken to sing and compose stanzas and play on
instruments,”[268] etc.

The poor troubadour desired the king to classify them, and to title the
best. The king’s answer is extant, wherein he endeavored to do so, but
as the real essence and life had departed from the whole institution, it
was unavailing.

The troubadours often had poetical combats, when they would indulge in a
verse-battle about some “Law of Love,” and the judges were selected from
the fairest and wittiest of the noble dames. These were called the
“Courts of Love.”

The muse of some of them seems to have taken a most curious turn, for
there are still in existence some “_Essenhamens_,” or books of etiquette
for young ladies, which emanated from these lyrical pens, which are of
the quaintest description. We reproduce a quotation from one, written by
“Amanieus des Escas, called God of Love.”[269]

In this treatise we are supplied with a minute account of the
accomplishments expected from a well educated young lady, and of the bad
habits most prejudicial to her character. The poet is supposed to be
addressing a noble damsel living at the court of some great baron, as a
sort of ‘lady help’ to his wife; this being a not unusual, and
undoubtedly a most efficient method of polite education in Provence. The
young lady has accosted Amanieus on a lonely walk, asking for his advice
in matters fashionable. This the poet at first refuses to tender,
alleging that “you (the damsel) have ten times as much sense as I, and
that is the truth!” But after his modest scruples are once overcome, he
launches forth into a flood of good counsel. He systematically begins
with enforcing the good old doctrine of ‘early to rise,’ touches
delicately on the mysteries of the toilet, such as lacing, washing of
arms, hands, and head, which, he sententiously adds, ought to go before
the first mentioned process, and, after briefly referring to the
especial care required by teeth and nails, he leaves the dressing room
for the church, where a quiet undemonstrative attitude is recommended;
the illicit use of the eyes and tongue being mentioned amongst the
temptations peculiarly to be avoided.

Directions of similar minuteness assist the young lady at the dinner
table; the cases in which it would be good taste, and those in which it
would be the reverse, to invite persons to a share of the dishes within
her reach are specified; and the rules as to carving, washing one’s
hands before and after dinner, and similar matters, leave nothing to be
desired. ‘Always temper your wine with water, so that it cannot do you
harm,’ is another maxim of undeniable wisdom.

After dinner follows the time of polite conversation in the sala
(drawing room), the arbour, or on the battlements of the castle; and now
the teachings of Amanieus become more and more animated, and are
enlivened occasionally by practical illustrations of great interest.
“And if at this season,” he says “a gentleman takes you aside, and
wishes to talk of courtship to you, do not show a strange or sullen
behavior, but defend yourself with pleasant repartees. And if his talk
annoys you; and makes you uneasy, I advise you to ask him questions, for
instance:—‘Which ladies do you think are more handsome, those of Gascony
or of England, and which are more courteous, and faithful, and good? And
if he says those of Gascony, answer without hesitation; Sir, by your
leave, English ladies are more courteous than those of any other
country. But if he prefers those of England, tell him Gascon ladies are
much better behaved, and thus carry on the discussion, and call your
companions to you to decide the questions.’”

We also give two extracts from the poems of that famous troubadour,
Bertrand De Born. He was a poet far more given to martial songs, than to
the lyrical muse. His enemies dreaded his pen as much as his sword. He
describes his belligerent qualities without any exaggeration, for he was
literally never contented except when at war with some of his neighbors.
One of his poems (addressed to a lady) begins smoothly enough, but
before he is half done, he breaks into an abrupt praise of fighting.

In the following, he warns Williams of Gordon, against Richard of
Poitou, and hurls invective at the latter.

“I love you well,” Bertrand says, “but my enemies want to make a fool
and a dupe of you, and the time seems long to them before they see you
in their ranks.” “To Perigeux, close to the wall, so that I can throw my
battle axe over it, I will come well armed, and riding on my horse,
Bayard; and if I find the glutton of Poitou[270] he shall know the cut
of my sword. A mixture of brain and splinters of iron he shall wear on
his brow.”

Here follows a frank avowal of his delight in war.

“All day long,” he says, “I fight, and am at work, to make a thrust at
them and defend myself, for they are laying waste my land, and burning
my crops; they pull up my trees by the roots, and mix my corn with the
straw. Cowards and brave men are my enemies. I constantly disunite and
sow hatred among the barons, and then remould and join them together
again, and try to give them brave hearts and strong; but I am a fool for
my trouble, for they are made of base metal.”

We cannot better take leave of the troubadours than by giving two
additional specimens of the writing of Bertrand de Born.

The first is an ingenious poem. He has quarreled with his lady, and as a
means of reconciliation he borrows from all the famous beauties of his
time, their special charm, and gives them all to his love. The second
song will explain itself.[271]

  Domna, puois de mi no us cal,
  E partit m’aretz de vos, &c.

  Lady, since thou hast driven me forth,
    Since thou, unkind, hast banished me,
  (Though cause of such neglect be none,)
    Where shall I turn from thee?
          Ne’er can I see
  Such joy as I have seen before,
  If, as I fear, I find no more
  Another fair, from thee removed,
  I’ll sigh to think I e’er was loved.

  And since my eager search were vain,
    One lovely as thyself to find;
  A heart so matchlessly endow’d,
    Or manner so refined,
          So gay, so kind,
  So courteous, gentle, debonair,—
  I’ll rove, and catch from every fair
  Some winning grace and form a whole,
  So glad (till thou return) my soul.

  The roses of thy glowing cheek,
    Fair Sembelis, I’ll steal from thee;
  That lovely smiling look I’ll take,
    Yet rich thou shalt be,
          In whom we see
  All that can deck a lady bright,
  And your enchanting converse, light,
  Fair Ellis, will I borrow too,
  That she in wit may shine like you.

  And from the noble Chales, I
    Will beg that neck of ivory white,
  And her fair hands of loveliest form
    I’ll take; and speeding, light,
          My onward flight
  Earnest at Roca Choart’s gate,
  Fair Agnes I will supplicate
  To grant her locks, more bright than those
  Which Tristan loved on Iseult’s brows.

  And Audiartz, though on me thou frown,
    All that thou hast of courtesy
  I’ll have,—thy look, thy gentle mien,
    And all the unchanged constancy
          That dwells with thee.
  And Miels de Ben, on thee I’ll wait
  For thy light shape so delicate,
  That in thy fairy form of grace
  My lady’s image I may trace

  The beauty of those snow-white teeth
    From thee, famed Faidit, I’ll extort,
  The welcome, affable and kind,
    To all the numbers that resort
          Unto her court.
  And Bels Miraills shall crown the whole,
  With all her sparkling flow of soul;
  Those mental charms that round her play,
  For ever wise, yet ever gay.


      Be in play lo douz temps de paseor
        Que fais fuelhas e flors venir;
      E play mi quant aug la baudor
        Dels auzels que fan retentir
            Lor chan per lo boscatge;
      E plai me quan rey sus els pratz
        Tendas e parallos fermetz;
      Quan rey per campanhas rengatz
        Cavalliers ab carals armatz.

  The beautiful spring delights me well,
    When flowers and leaves are growing;
  And it pleases my heart to hear the swell
    Of the birds’ sweet choruses flowing
          In the echoing wood
  And I love to see, all scatter’d around,
  Pavillions, tents, on martial ground;
          And my spirit finds it good
  To see, on the level plains beyond,
  Gay knights and steeds comparison’d.

  It pleases me, when the lances bold
    Set men and armies flying;
  And it pleases me, too, to hear around
    The voice of the soldiers crying;
          And joy is mine
  When the castles strong, totter and crack;
          And I see the foemen join,
  On the moated floor all compass’d round
  With the palisade and guarded mound.

  Lances and swords, and stained helms,
    And shields dismantled and broken,
  On the verge of the bloody battle scene,
    The field of wrath betoken;
          And the vassals are there,
  And there fly the steeds of the dying and dead;
  And where the mingled strife is spread,
          The noblest warriors care
  Is to cleave the foeman’s limbs and head,—
  The conqueror less of the living than dead.

  I tell you that nothing my soul can cheer,
    Or banqueting or reposing,
  Like the onset cry of “charge them” rung
    From each side as in battle closing,
          Where the horses neigh,
  And the call to “aid” is echoing loud;
  And there on the earth the lowly and proud
          In the foes together lie;
  And yonder is piled the mangled heap
  Of the brave that scaled the trench’s steep.

  Barons! your castles in safety place,
    Your cities and villages too,
  Before ye haste to the battle scene,
    And, Papiol! quickly go,
    And tell the lord of “Oc and No,”
  That peace already too long hath been.

The Trouvères, were, as before intimated, the poet-musicians of North
France. They wrote in a much more matter-of-fact manner than the
troubadours, and wrote in the _Langue d’öil_, while the latter wrote in
the _Langue d’oc_; two tongues as dissimilar as French and Italian, or
English and Dutch.

There existed lady troubadours and trouvères; the works of some of them
are extant, and do not in any way compare unfavorably with those of the
other sex. Of course there are several solitary cases where the Norman
poet would write a love song, and the Provencal a fable, but the general
tendency was as above indicated.

Contemporary with the troubadours and trouvères, there arose in Germany,
a similar order of singers, whose productions have been preserved, even
more copiously than those of the southrons.

The minne-singers began their career in Germany, under the glorious
reign of Barbarossa, (Frederic I.) in the last half of the twelfth
century. The first name which we meet with is Henry of Veldig, yet it is
a singular fact that he, the first of a new order of singers, begins by
complaining of the decadence of the true minne-lied (love-song.) The
word minne-singer means simply love-singer, i. e.—singer of love-songs.
We give here, a verse of this early love-song, and have endeavored to
give a translation, preserving the original metre (as nearly literal as
possible) below it.

  “Do man der rehten minne pflag
    Da pflag man ouch der ehren;
  Nu mag man naht und tag
    Die bösen sitte leren:
  Swer dis nu siht, und jens do sach,
    O we! was der nu clagen mag
  Tugende wend sich nu verkehren.”

  “When true love had its proper sway,
    Then honour too, was nourished
  But now by night and day
    All evil ways are cherished,
  Who knows the past and present way,
    Oh Woe! how well complain he may
  Since every virtue now has perished.”

Almost all the lays of the minne-singers were written in the Swabian
dialect which was then the court language of Germany. As a rule, their
grace and elegance of diction was superior to that of the troubadours.
They did not, like the latter, hire accompanists, or jongleurs, but
played their own accompaniments on a viol. As in the South, emperors,
princes, and knights, were proud to be known as minne-singers.

There exists a little epigram (ascribed to Frederic II.,) which we are
tempted to reproduce, as it gives an insight to the qualities which were
esteemed at that time.

  “I like a cavalier Frances,[272]
    And a Catalonian dame;
  The courtesy of the Genoese
    And Castilian dignity
  The Provence songs,[273] my ears to please,
    And the dance of the Trevisan;
  The graceful form of the Arragoneze
    And the pearl of the Julian;[274]
  An English face and hands to see,
  And a page of Tuscany.”[275]

The love songs of the Germans were not so fiery as those of Provence;
while the adoration of the troubadour for his love went all lengths, the
German knight rendered to his own a much quieter, (and chaster) species
of homage. There were not such criminal passions (often ending in murder
at the hands of the outraged husband) as in France. In epic poems this
school was very successful, and that stateliest of German poems, “The
_Nibelungen-lied_,” dates from about this time, although its author is
not known.

The preservation of many of the songs of the Minne-singers is due to
Rudiger of Manesse, a senator of Zurich (fourteenth century). To those
who are desirous of seeing the main part of his collection we cannot do
better than to recommend the excellent work of F. von der Hagen,
(“_Minne-sänger_,” _Manessische Sammlung_), in which all the gems of
this early growth of mediæval poetry are given. One peculiar species of
their songs were called “_Wacht-lieder_” (Watch-songs), and represent
the pleading of the knight, with the watchman of the castle, for
admittance to his love; or the warning of the watchman to the lover in
the castle, to avoid discovery by leaving while it was yet dark. We
present the reader with a specimen (author unknown).

  Vor tags ich hort, in liebes port, wohl diese wort,
    Von wächters mund erklingen;
  Ist jeman ji, vorborgen hie, derachte wie,
    Er mog hindannen sprengen, &c.

  I heard before the dawn of day
    The watchman loud proclaim;—
  “If any knightly lover stay
    In secret with his dame,
  Take heed the sun will soon appear;
  Then fly, ye knights, your ladies dear,
    Fly ere the day-light dawn.

  “Brightly gleams the firmament,
    In silvery splendor gay,
  Rejoicing that the night is spent,
    The lark salutes the day:
  Then fly, ye lovers, and begone!
  Take leave before the night is done,
    And jealous eyes appear.”

  That watchman’s call did wound my heart,
    And banished my delight;
  “Alas, the envious sun will part
    Our loves, my lady bright.”
  On me she looked with downcast eye,
  Despairing at my mournful cry,
    “We tarry here too long.”

  Straight to the wicket did she speed;
    “Good watchman spare thy joke!
  Warn not my love, till o’er the mead
    The morning sun has broke:
  Too short, alas! the time, since here
  I tarried with my leman dear,
    In love and converse sweet.”

  “Lady, be warn’d! on roof and mead
    The dew-drops glitter gay,
  Then quickly bid thy leman speed,
    Nor linger till the day;
  For by the twilight did I mark
  Wolves hyeing to their covert dark,
    And stags to covert fly.”

  Now by the rising sun I view’d
    In tears my lady’s face;
  She gave me many a token good,
    And many a soft embrace,
  Our parting bitterly we mourn’d;
  The hearts which erst with rapture burn’d,
    Were cold with woe and care.

  A ring, with glittering ruby red,
    Gave me that lady sheen,
  And with me from the castle sped
    Along the meadow green;
  And whilst I saw my leman bright,
  She waved on high her ’kerchief white;
    “Courage! To arms!” she cried.

  In the raging fight each pennon white
    Reminds me of her love;
  In the field of blood, with mournful mood
    I see her ’kerchief move;
  Through foes I hew where’er I view
    Her ruby ring, and blithely sing,
  “Lady, I fight for thee.”

But the glory of the minne-singers was but short; the emperors of the
house of Swabia, had fostered the art, by allowing an unheard-of liberty
of speech and thought; with the downfall of that house (1256 A. D.) the
church regained a continually-increasing ascendancy, and this liberty
was again fettered. Song and poetry, especially of an amatory or
frivolous (?) character were condemned, and the place of the pleasant
school of minne-singer poetry was usurped by paraphrases of the
Scriptures, hymns or legends, written either in very weak German or bad
Latin; the school of German poetry took a very long retrograde step.
Before leaving the minne-singers, a word must be said of their fables
and tales; in these we find many modern ideas in a quaint and ancient
dress, proverbs abound, and many tales of Roman History. “Don’t set the
wolf to guard the Sheep,” “Never borrow trouble,”

  “The king must die,
  And so must I,”

and many other sage thoughts.

The tales are sometimes very prettily told. We have thought it worth
while to translate one, which we believe, has not yet been seen in an
English dress.

As far as possible we have adhered to the abruptness and quaintness of
the original.

“At one time there was a king, who had but one son, who was very dear to
him; the son demanded leave of absence from his father, and said that he
wished to see the world, and wished to make friends. Then the king spoke
‘that pleases me well; but see that you do not have your labor in vain.’
The son was made ready for his journey, and remained seven years away;
after that he returned to his home and his father, which pleased the
father very much, and he said,—‘Dear son: how many friends hast thou
earned in these three years? Then the son answered ‘only three; the
first I love better than myself; the second as much as myself; and the
third, not as well as myself.’ The father said ‘It is well to have
friends, and it is well to try them; I counsel you to kill a hog, and
put it in a sack, and go in the night to your friends and say, you met
an old enemy on the street and killed him, and are afraid that if the
dead body should be found on you, it would cost you your life, and beg
him that he should, in such extremity, help you, and that he will allow
you to bury the body in his house, that it may not be found on you; so
you shall find out if you have good friends.’

This advice pleased the son well, so he went back again to the city
where he knew he should find his friends; and killed one night, a hog,
and did as his father had advised him to, and came to the friend whom he
loved better than himself. When this one had heard his story, he
said:—‘you killed him yourself, so suffer for it yourself; if it were
found by me it would cost me my life; but because we are good friends
and comrades, when you are caught, and when they are about to bill you,
I will go to you, and will console you, and will buy many ells of cloth
for you, wherein they may wind you and bury you; because you loved me
more than yourself.’ When he heard this, he answered nothing but went to
the other friend whom he loved as much as himself, and knocked at his
door with the same tale as he had told to the first; this one
said:—‘Dear one! do you suppose I am such a simpleton that I want to die
for you? If it is found here then I must die; but if they kill you, then
I will comfort you, because that we are friends, and will do it the best
I can, since we must all die.’ When he heard this, he parted from him,
and came to the third friend whom he did not love as well as himself.
This one asked what was in the sack, which he came with. He said:—‘I can
not say well, but I need help in this day; yet know that it has been my
fate to kill a man, and I carry his body on my back, and if it is caught
by me, then I must die, therefore I call on you for counsel; This one
spoke;—‘Give me here the body, and let me carry it myself, for I will
even die for you,’ and when he opened the sack he found that only a dead
hog lay therein. After that the son went home and told the whole story
to his father.”[276]

The end is of rather startling abruptness; we should have liked to have
heard of the rewards and punishment, _a la_ modern novel.

One song took its rise at this time which is even to-day a popular one,
the world over. We refer to the music of the song now known as, “We
won’t go Home till morning,” or “For he’s a jolly good fellow;” and
known in France as “Malbrook s’en va-t-en Guerre.” This was a favorite
air at the time of the crusades, and the crusaders often made it resound
before Jerusalem.

The Arabs first knew the melody and have retained it to this day. The
Arab fellahs will listen apathetically to the whole repertoire of a
European orchestra; but the moment that the above tune is played, the
whole aspect changes, and instead of a lifeless audience, the performers
have the most enthusiastic of listeners.[277] In the course of descent
from the Crusaders and ancient musicians, the tune has become a little
quicker but is not changed in any material respect.

Some time after the decline of Minne-singing, an attempt was made to
revive its glories, by musical competitions, somewhat similar in style;
but the essence of the real “Minne” was gone; it was no longer the
knight singing to his love, or telling in unaffected verse, the beauties
of Nature. Instead of this, there was a competition of burgers and
tradespeople, affecting a passion foreign to their nature, and caring
far more for a stilted style of verse, than for the subject of it. Such
were the Meister-singers;[278] Nuremburg was their chief seat, and like
all the tradesmen of that age, they made their Guild a very close one.
No one could be admitted as a Master, unless he invented a new style of
rhyme. Almost all the members came from the lower classes, and the
result of such tyros endeavoring to strike out paths which would have
been difficult even to genius, can be imagined.

Hans Sachs (a Nuremberg shoe-maker) and a couple of others, were
probably all that sang with real poetic feeling.

Their songs were also accompanied with music. There was a severe set of
rules regulating the poetical and musical contests; and the Guild spread
over all Germany; the last vestige of it did not disappear until as
recently as 1839.

But while this stultified mode of music was going on in Nuremberg, a
truer musical plant was growing beside it: at this time the Volks-lied
(folk song) took its rise in Germany.

The first form of the volks-lied was religious, and it was of a
simplicity which adapted it to the wants of the people. The pedantry of
the Meister-singers had an excellent effect upon this class of
composition, for it added counterpoint and harmony (even if driven to
excess) to a class of music which was able to bear it.

Another order of music was that connected with the miracle plays, where
scriptural events were represented upon the stage, with music. Much of
this music was taken bodily from the ecclesiastical chants of the
period.

With the commencement of the reformation, the music of Germany was
lifted to a very elevated sphere, in being applied to the stately
chorals which came into general use, through the efforts of Luther, who
himself composed some of them. Luther had a most musical nature, which
left its imprint upon his whole epoch.

It is related of him, that he spent the largest part of the night before
he appeared to define his doctrines before the Diet of Worms, playing on
his lute, in order to give composure and firmness to his thoughts.

He ranked music next to theology, and said:—“I am not ashamed to
acknowledge, that next to divinity there is no study which I prize so
highly as that of music.”

With the reformation, the epoch of modern music may be said to begin. Of
course there was both crudity and pedantry in the art, but the
Meister-singers, although they yet existed centuries later, had ceased
to exert an influence.

There are but few curious facts, which are not generally known, from
that age, to our own. Yet we think a brief sketch of the growth of some
branches of our music, will not be uninteresting to the general reader,
even if the facts have lost the relish of novelty.




                              CHAPTER XXV.
                       CURIOSITIES OF THE OPERA.
                   MODERN COMPOSERS, AND CONCLUSION.


Our series of sketches now draws towards its close. The rise of the
many-voiced harmony in Italy, France, Germany, England, and the
Netherlands, the contrapuntal works of Palestrina, Dufay, De Lattre,
etc., come rather under the head of the history and science of music,
than within the scope of a work which only endeavors to collect the
curiosities of the art, and things not generally known. But in the rise
and progress of the opera, we find some interesting facts which belong
to our subject, and which bring our chain of sketches down to the music
of our own times.

The opera was the legitimate offspring of the Miracle plays of the
Middle ages, which were only sacred operas or oratorios, wherein some
events in the life of a holy personage were represented with songs and
acting. The first opera (being exactly like a “mystery play,” except
that the subject was a secular one) was “Orpheus,” by Angelo Poliziano,
and was performed in Rome in 1480. The libretto was by Cardinal Riario
(nephew of Pope Sixtus IV.)

Pope Clement IX., wrote seven librettos for operas. All was not sung in
these: they were rather tragedies with choruses.[279]

In 1500 the popes possessed a theatre, with decorations and machinery.
The paintings in this edifice were by Balthazar Peruzzi, who may be said
to be the father of scene painting. His scenery is said to have been
very realistic.

Julian de Medicis, brother of Leon X., on being proclaimed a citizen of
Rome gave public plays, and had a comedy of Plautus presented for two
days, the music of which was much admired.

In 1574, Claudio Merulo, organist at St. Mark’s, composed music to a
drama, which was performed in the presence of Henry III., of France.

Vincent Galileo, father of the astronomer, and Giovanni Bardi invented
the recitative at about the same time.

Peri and Caccini, two of the best musicians of Florence were engaged by
two rich noblemen to write for them a complete opera; _Dafne_, produced
in Florence (1597,) was the result, and was the first complete opera in
modern form; these composers were therefore the originators of the
opera.

An opera by the same writers was given at the wedding of Henry IV., and
Marie de Medici. Rinucci, the author of the _libretti_ of both the above
was silly enough to imagine that Marie de Medici loved him, and followed
her into France the ridicule which he received for his conceit soon sent
him back to Italy.

The score of “Orpheus,” by Monteverde, 1608, allows us to see the
construction of his orchestra.

There were,—

  2 Clavichords,
  2 Lyres, or Grand Viols (13 strings),
  10 Violas,
  3 Bass Viols,
  2 Double Bass,
  1 Double Harp (2 rows of strings),
  2 Small French Violins,
  2 Great Guitars,
  2 Organs (wood),
  4 Trombones,
  1 Pair of Regals (small organ),
  2 Cornets,
  1 Small Flute,
  1 Clarion,
  3 Sourdines (muted trumpets).

These instruments gave to each chorus and character a different effect,
thus the double basses accompanied Orpheus; the viols, Euridice; the
trombones, Pluto; the regals, Apollo. The shepherd’s choruses were
accompanied by flute, cornets, sourdines and clarion, and most singular
of all, Charon sang to the light tones of the _guitar_.[280]

In Italy, from this time forth, opera followed opera.

In France it was not known till much later plays “with songs” were known
however, and one of these, “in the Italian style,” was performed in
Paris, before the King and Royal family, on the occasion of the victory
of the Duke of Guise at Calais, 1558.

The chief representations for years after, lay rather in the direction
of ballets, than of operas. Religious plays also still were given at
Paris, but after the ordinance, of 1548, that no Catholic ceremony
should be represented on the stage, they disappeared.[281]

The theatres, that is those which were public, were at this time very
poorly appointed, but through the constant festivities of the court,
many inventions came into use.

The Court of France had always a _penchant_ for music, the drama, and
dancing. Henry IV., was very fond of the latter.

Louis XIII., cultivated music with much success, he composed many airs,
and several motets which he had performed in his Chapel. Music was his
ordinary recreation when he could not go hunting. At the siege of La
Rochelle, there being no musicians or singers with the army, he himself
wrote out the vespers for Pentecost, that they might be ready in time.
Three weeks before his death, and after he had received the extreme
unction, feeling himself somewhat better, he begged Nyert, his first
_valet de garderobe_ to sing a paraphrase of David, which he had set to
music, to give thanks to God.

Saint-Martin and Campeforte who were present, each sang a part, and thus
made a concerted piece which they sang around the bed, the king from
time to time joining in with his own voice.

He also wrote a “_de Profundis_,” which was sung over him after his
death.[282] The words still exist which were written by him for his now
well-known “Amaryllis;” they were written for Madame de Hauteforte, and
one of the verses runs:—

  Tu crois, o beau soleil!
  Q’ua ton eclat rien n’est pareil;
  Mais quoi! tu palis
  Auprès d’Amaryllis.[283]

Tallement speaks of a concert given once where one of his songs was sung
four times, the king beating the measure. To these gatherings he would
admit none who were not musical, and no women whatever, “for” said he,
“_they cannot keep silent_."[284]

Under Louis XIV., the opera became well known in France, nor was it any
longer a borrowed spectacle, for Lulli in 1664 associated himself with
Moliere in writing; the latter furnishing the _libretti_, which were in
themselves of the best order. In 1672 he built a permanent opera house,
(Academie Royale de Musique) and thus gave to France, what it had never
before possessed,—a national opera.

There were, to be sure, a few French operas, before his enterprise; one
given at Paris, by Cardinal Mazarin, in 1645; one entitled “Akébar, King
of Mogul,” by the Abbeé Mailly and “La Pastorale en musique,” by
Cambert,[285] but these do not deprive Lulli of the claim of being the
“founder of French opera.”

La Fontaine tried to write some _libretti_ for Lulli, which were total
failures, and declined by the musician.

The King (Louis XIV.), was passionately fond of Lulli’s music, and would
hear scarcely any other.

About this time, the idea of _whistling and hissing_ to show
disapproval, was invented. It is said that Corneille’s “_Baron de
Fondrieres_” has the questionable honor of being the first play that
ever was hissed.

The hiss, spread rapidly, but on some one having injudiciously hissed
the opera of Orpheus, by the sons of Lully, the hiss was interdicted by
law in 1690.[286]

The repression was not very effectual, and innumerable epigrams (some of
which still exist),[287] showed the derision of the public.

The singers of Lulli’s operas had all the faults of their later
brethren. Dumenil, the tenor, used to steal the jewelry of the _prime
donne_, and get intoxicated with the baritone. He is said to have drank
six bottles of champagne every night, and only the sixth deteriorated
his performance.

Marthe Le Rochois, another of the troupe, on being accused of too much
intimacy with the bassoon of the orchestra, exhibited a promise of
marriage from the fond performer, written on the back of an _ace of
spades_.

Mlle. de Maupin was the wildest scapegrace the stage ever saw: her
adventures read like the most improbable sensational novel, and would
take as much space to reproduce.

England’s first opera was performed in 1656. It was entitled the “Siege
of Rhodes,” and was composed by five persons in collaboration. Musicians
and players were at this time held in low esteem, and were liable to
arrest as vagabonds at almost any moment.

England possessed in Henry Purcell (1658-1695) a musician of whom any
country might be proud. This composer soon turned his pen to the writing
of operas; the music to “The Tempest” was excellent, while his “King
Arthur” contains music which is still loved by Englishmen everywhere.

Now that opera was established firmly, the rivalries of the singers at
once began.

In 1726 a bitter rivalry sprang up in London between Cuzzoni and
Faustina Bordoni, in which the whole town took part. It lasted over two
years, and was throughout causeless, as the styles of the two were
entirely dissimilar, Bordoni being unapproachable in the lightness and
rapidity of her runs and embellishments, and Cuzzoni excelling in the
pathetic quality, and breadth of her tones.[288]

But to follow the absurdities which constantly arose in the rivalries of
the various composers, singers and performers, would require, not one,
but very many volumes by itself; we need only allude to the disputes and
rivalries between Gluck and Piccini (in the composition of operas,) the
singers Mara and Todi, in France, and Billington and Mara in London.

The names of those who have established a reputation as wonderful
operatic singers, also make a formidable list. Among the very greatest
may however be mentioned Farinelli (male soprano) Catalani, and
Lablache, and among the most successful of operatic writers, Gluck,
Mozart, Meyerbeer, Rossini, Verdi, Gounod. Of course many names could be
added, but these may stand as representatives.

It is not singular that the great masters, Händel, Beethoven and
Mendelssohn failed in this branch of composition. None of them had the
ability to stoop to the musical _finesses_, and _coups de theatre_,
which were necessary to make a successful opera. They might have
succeeded, if the pure style of Gluck, with _libretti_ taken from the
Greek tragedies, had continued, for these were in their vein. But the
public demanded a more spicy operatic diet which they were not able or
desirous to finish.

It is well that it was so, for to this fact we owe our grandest
oratorios.

Händel had trouble enough with opera, before he finally left it. He had
a temper which was simply frightful (and an appetite which was the
same), and when he came in contact with the conceited and irascible
singers of his day, an explosion was sure to follow.

Cuzzoni (who had the sweetest of voices, and the harshest of tempers),
was the hardest of all for him to get along with.

One day she refused absolutely to sing a part which he had assigned to
her; his patience, small at the best, gave out totally, and he was going
to throw her out of the window, when she hurriedly gave her consent to
sing.

Händel’s losses and trials as operatic manager, temporarily drove him
crazy.

Rossini also had his troubles in the operatic field. Once a manager,
whose _libretti_ he was bound by contract to set to music, took offence
at some action of the composer, and sought to revenge himself by writing
a wretched opera for him. The result nearly brought both to ruin, for
Rossini retorted by writing a terribly poor score to the words; in the
overture, during an _allegro_ movement, the violins were arranged so as
to stop at every bar, and tap the tin shades of their lamps with their
bows. The audience nearly demolished the theatre. The “Barber of
Seville” was a failure at its first performance.

There is a note to be made here, of a passage in one of his operas,
which is of interest to conductors.

The overture to “William Tell” had been played from its first
representation, August 3, 1829, for more than thirty years, with a major
trill in the violincello at the cadence of the first part; (the andante
at the beginning of the work), but on the 16th of November, 1861, the
piece was played before the composer, who stigmatized as “a great
fault,” the major trill in the third measure of the cadence.[289] “It
should be minor” he said. And since that date it has been played so. But
it is very uncertain whether the abrupt remark was not a mere whim of
the composer. The trill is more satisfactory with G sharp, than with G
natural; the earlier editions have none of them any mention of a minor
trill and it is scarcely possible that “a great fault” like this, should
have escaped notice so long.

Meyerbeer, was in all respects, a person well calculated to popularize
opera. He knew how to work up dramatic effects, in which he was well
seconded by his French librettists, and he did not hesitate at any
innovation to ask if it were classical, or belonged to pure art; and he
succeeded far better than the martinets who condemned him.

At the first representation of his “_Robert le Diable_,” an accident
occurred which nearly resulted in disaster. In the last act, Bertram,
the tempter, has to descend to the infernal regions, alone; Levasseur
(who performed the character) leaped down the trap, and Robert
(represented by the tenor Nourrit), who should have remained on earth,
saved by the prayers of Alice,—after a moment of indecision (not
remembering the denouèment) _leaped after him_.

There was general consternation on the stage, for all thought that
Nourrit was injured. In the audience they must have thought that the
opera had a rather immoral ending, since Bertram, the tempter, had
triumphed over the prayers of Alice.

Fortunately the mattresses had not been removed; and Bertram was vastly
astonished to find that he had bagged his victim after all; he asked
Nourrit in amazement.—“Has the plot been changed?” but Nourrit
recollecting his mistake, hastened back to the stage, where the audience
were astonished to see him reappear, but soon grasping the situation
burst into loud applause.

The curiosities of the opera of to-day are even greater than those of
twenty years since, for the world has found an iconoclastic composer who
is endeavoring to reform all that went before him, by pulling it to
pieces. Yet he has done opera precisely the service which it at present
needed, in showing composers the importance of bestowing a greater
attention upon the libretto, and elevating the orchestra as well as the
scene painter to their proper places; his idea that an opera should be a
“perfect chrysolite,” a complete picture in all its accessories, is the
true one, though his mode of effecting it may not be.

His zeal has allowed him to commit a ludicrous “curiosity of music” in
attacking almost all that the Jews have ever done in music, and
endeavoring to depreciate the most prominent talent of that race; a
talent which has been acknowledged ever since the days of the Babylonian
captivity.

Yet a still greater curiosity (and the most recent of all) has been
written by one of his defenders. Of course his attacks upon all who
differed from him, provoked retorts innumerable; these have been
collected and published in a compact form, and the work is entitled “A
Dictionary of Impoliteness.”

With this “curiosity” our catalogue appropriately ends. We have not
mentioned some of the great names in music (Haydn, Cherubini,
Palestrina, Schumann, Schubert, etc.), and have touched but lightly upon
others. They did not seem to come within our scope.

The incidents in the lives of the musical giants have all been sought
out by persons possessing facilities which no American writer can have,
and are generally so well known that they can no longer be called
curious. We have endeavored to show that music is a very uncertain and
fickle art, and continually changing, and that there never can be
_absolute_ laws laid down in this free art, as if it were a fixed
science. If we have done this and amused our readers at the same time,
we consider our work brought to a satisfactory conclusion.


                                THE END.




                               FOOTNOTES


[1]Krause.—Geschichte der Musik.

[2]The Raagni is the popular mode of singing in India; it is a free
    Fantasia, or improvisation.

[3]Wm. Jones; Music of India.

[4]Ambros.

[5]Krause.

[6]Plutarch, of Isis and Osiris.

[7]Herodotus, Hist.

[8]Plutarch, of Isis and Osiris.

[9]Petronius.

[10]Champollion.

[11]Lepsius, Abt. 2 Pl., 86e.

[12]Wilkinson, p. 240.

[13]Wilkinson, v. 2, p. 222.

[14]V. 3, p. 83.

[15]Abtheilung, 3, page 106.

[16]Hist. Gen. de la Mus.

[17]Doubts have been expressed concerning the genuineness even of these.

[18]Lloyd.

[19]Lloyd, Age of Pericles, Vol. II., p. 222.

[20]Ambros, Gesch. d. Musik, p. 237.

[21]Olympia, p. 106.

[22]The nome, or hymn for which Chrysothemis, gained the prize,
    celebrated the victory of Apollo over the serpent Python.

[23]Gevært, Mus. de l’antiquite, p. 45.

[24]Chappell, Hist. of Mus., p. 32.

[25]Diodorus.

[26]Ambros Ges. d musik, p. 265, v. 1.

[27]Later there were more characters added, but at first, the whole
    action consisted of dialogues between a solitary actor and the
    chorus.

[28]Jullien however, thinks Sappho in common with many other ancient
    poets much overrated. Theses Supplementaires, p. 439.

[29]Geschichte der Griech. Lit.

[30]Lucian, Lapithæ.

[31]Ambros, Gesch. d. musik, v. 1, p. 260.

[32]Jullien, Theses Supplementaires, p. 130.

[33]The very title “philosopher” was of his own coining, for previous
    sages called themselves Sophos (wise), but he preferred the better
    name of Philosopher (lover of wisdom).

[34]Some of the pupils of Pythagoras, maintained that he only of all men
    had heard the harmony of the spheres.

[35]The sense of sound differs in different ears. In Chappell’s Histy.
    of Music, page 251, an account is given of a wire of sixty-four feet
    in length, arranged by Sir F. A. Gore Ouseley, to sound the C, four
    octaves below C in the bass clef. The note was inaudible, but when
    taken at half length some of the listeners heard it, while at
    quarter length it was audible to all.

[36]See Lucian, Auction of Philosophers. Some say two years.

[37]Women were also admitted, but probably only to attendance on
    lectures, not to membership.

[38]Legum II.

[39]Lloyd, Ages of Pericles, Vol. 2, p. 239.

[40]See Lucian, Lapithæ.

[41]Ottfried Müller, V. I, p. 343.

[42]Socrates intimates that the hiring of a large retinue of servants,
    and the purchase of an expensive flute, went very far towards
    establishing a reputation as a skillful flutist.

[43]Physcon was a nickname signifying thick belly.

[44]Müller, Gesch. d. Griech. Lit. v. 1, p. 380.

[45]Müller, Gesch. v. 1, p. 399.

[46]Müller, Ges. v. 1, p. 394.

[47]At seven years old the study was usually commenced.

[48]See O. Müller, Gesch. v. 2, p. 44

[49]The lips of the tragic mask were usually half open.

[50]Gesch. d. Griech. Lit. p. 44

[51]Some Dithyrambic poets kept a band of flute-players to accompany
    their choruses.

[52]There was, and possibly is still, in some parts of Italy, a custom
    analogous to this, when the director of the orchestra marked time by
    rapping his baton regularly on his music stand instead of simply
    waving it.

[53]Thucydides also gives an unfavorable picture of Cleon. Grote in his
    History of Greece, defends Cleon’s character.

[54]Müller, p. 207, v. 2.

[55]_De Saltatione_

[56]Czerwinski, Geschichte d. tanz kunst, p. 19.

[57]Lucian, _de Saltatione_.

[58]Czerwinski, Gesch. d. Tanz k.

[59]Phillina, in dialogues of the Hetaræ.

[60]O. Müller, Gesch. d. Griech. Lit. v. 2, p. 210.

[61]Valerius Maximus, Book 2, x.

[62]Book 2. s. iv

[63]These are still used in Italy, and their performers are called Zam
    pognari. The derivation is obvious.

[64]Chappell, in his History of Music, is the most lucid of these.

[65]See Fetis’ Hist. Gen. de la Musique.

[66]Fetis, Hist. v. 8.

[67]Gevært, Hist. de la Mus. de l’ant. p 56.

[68]Tacitus, Bk. IV.

[69]Gevært, Mus. de l’ant. p. 58.

[70]Tacitus, Bk. I.

[71]Lucian, _de Saltatione_.

[72]Lucian, _de Saltatione_.

[73]Lucian, ibid.

[74]Seneca.

[75]Suetonius, Calig. LIV.

[76]Suetonius, Vesp. XIX.

[77]Letters of Julian, No. 56.

[78]Tacitus, Bk. XX.

[79]Suetonius, XX.

[80]Tacitus, XV.

[81]Suet. Nero, XXI.

[82]Tacitus, Bk. XXI.

[83]Suetonius, Nero. XXIII.

[84]See chapter on Games of Greece.

[85]Nero however sometimes took part in other contests, he was as poor
    and persistent a charioteer as magician.

[86]Tacitus, Book XVI.

[87]In the early historical part of this article, we have mainly
    followed the dates used by La Fage.

[88]Ambros, Gesch. d. Mus. p. 20, v. 1.

[89]Amiot, Abrege Chron. p. 201.

[90]Chinese annals claim that their empire was founded 80,000 or 100,000
    years B. C. Fo-hi’s reign is fixed by some at about 2,250 B. C.

[91]Amiot, De la Mus. des Chinois, p. 54.

[92]Amiot, p. 57.

[93]It is singular that a similar personage exists in the Hindoo
    mythology.

[94]Quoted by La Fage, Hist. de Mus., p. 47.

[95]La Fage, p. 50.

[96]Amiot, de la Mus. des Chinois, p. 11.

[97]P. 63. Mus. des Chinois.

[98]La Fage, 69. De Mailla, 191.

[99]Amiot, de la Mus. de Chin., p. 33.

[100]Ambros, Gesch. der Musik, p. 27, v. 1.

[101]Ambros, Gesch. d Mus. p. 32.

[102]Pieces for the Clavichord in the style of Rameau.

[103]Amiot, Mus. des Chinois, p. 3.

[104]Cibot, Essai sur les Caracteres Chinois.

[105]Amiot, de la Mus. de Chin., p. 35.

[106]Figures 2 and 3, pl. 1, Amiot, des Chin.

[107]Figures 4 and 6, pl. 2, Amiot.

[108]Figure 7, pl. 2, Amiot.

[109]Amiot, Essai sur les pierres sonores.

[110]L’Abbé Roussier, Annotations sur Amiot.

[111]The chronicle says “it was mute forever,” but this was meant as
    hyperbole.

[112]De la Mus. des Chin., p. 60.

[113]There are two kinds of _siao_, the great and the small. The latter
    has the same number of tubes, but pitched an octave higher.

[114]Fetis, Hist. Gen de la Mus. VI. 1, p. 66-67.

[115]Fetis, p. 73.

[116]“Les Chinois ont remplacé les voix des femmes par celles des
    casrats. Les chirurgiens Chinois sont arriveés a pratiquer
    l’operation avec une addresse singuliere et presque sans souffrance
    pour le sujet.” La Fage, Mus. des Chin., p. 150.

[117]La Fage, Mus. des Chin., p. 241.

[118]Amiot, Mus. des Chinois, p. 179.

[119]In singing this the chorus speaks in the name of the emperor.

[120]Amiot, des Chin., p. 180.

[121]The offerings are viands, libations, and perfumes, the latter being
    burnt as incense by the emperor.

[122]Copied by Ambros, in Gesch d mus. v. 1, p. 34-5.

[123]Quoted by Fetis, Hist. Gen. de la Mus. v. 1, p. 62.

[124]Amiot, p. 171.

[125]La Fage, des Chinois, p. 269.

[126]First it was Haydn, then Handel, then Mozart, then Beethoven and
    to-day Wagner (a few years ago, Schumann) whose bold eagle-flights
    dismayed the more timid owls.

[127]“Among the Chinese themselves, society chiefly consists of certain
    stated forms, and expressions, a calm, equal, cold deportment,
    hypocritical attentions, and hyperbolical professions.” Barrow’s
    Life of Macartney, v. 2, p. 414. The curious reader will also find a
    very full description of Chinese social etiquette, in the
    “_Description de la Chine_,” by Pere Du Halde, pages 115 to 154,
    vol. 2. Rules are given for set formalities, even on the slightest
    occasions, such as, the opening of a conversation when visiting (p.
    126), the exit, the rising from table after meals, (138), etc., etc.
    It is possible, that in the customs of this people, we may see a
    living reproduction of some traits of the ancient Egyptians

[128]Barrow’s life of Macartney, v. 2, p. 231.

[129]Ibid, v. 2, p. 217

[130]Desc. de la Chine. T. II. p. 132. In La Fage’s quotation the page
    is given as 112, probably an oversight, or a later edition.

[131]Account of Lord Macartney’s embassy, by Sir George Staunton.

[132]Musical Myths and Facts, vol. 2, p. 163.

[133]La Fage Mus. des. Chinois T. 1. p. 302

[134]_Leit motiven_ however the Chinese have _not_!!

[135]De Guignes, Voyage a Peking v. 2, p. 325.

[136]It would however, be as unjust to judge average Chinese plays by
    this one instance as to judge of the Shakesperian drama by “Titus
    Andronicus.”

[137]Voyage to Cochin China, p. 295.

[138]In like manner physiologists at one time endeavored to account for
    the peculiar singing of the Tyrolese peasantry (called the “yodel”)
    by the theory that the Tyrolese throat was shaped differently from
    throats in general. Anatomy exploded the assumption.

[139]La Fage, Mus. des Chinois, v. 1, p. 311.

[140]Edward Brown, Adventures In Cochin China, p. 221, quoted by Engel
    Mus. Myths and facts, vol. 2, p. 157.

[141]DuHalde, Description de l’emp. de la Chine. T. 2, p. 156.

[142]LaFage, Mus. des. Chin., T. 1, p. 313.

[143]Barrow’s life of Macartney, v. 1, pp. 341-2

[144]Ibid, p. 337.

[145]Ainsworth, around the world, p. 102.

[146]The following is a short synopsis of Chinese education. “When
    choosing a wet-nurse, the mother must seek a modest, virtuous,
    affable, discreet, respectful, exact and prudent woman. When the boy
    can carry his hand to his mouth he is weaned, and taught to use his
    right hand in eating; at the age of six, teach him the simplest
    numbers, and the names of most important parts of the globe; at the
    age of seven separate him from his sisters, and let him neither eat
    nor sit with them; at the age of eight teach him the rules of
    politeness and civility, which he must observe when entering or
    leaving a house, or when he is with his elders; at nine teach him
    the calendar; at ten send him to the public school and give him no
    more cotton-stuffed garments, they will be too warm for his age. The
    school-master is to give him knowledge of reading, writing and
    arithmetic. At thirteen, let him study music, that he may sing
    poetry, and that the wise maxims contained in the verses, be
    engraven on his memory. At fifteen he is to learn archery and
    riding. As for girls, when they have attained the age of ten years,
    they are not to be allowed to go out of doors; teach them to speak
    sweetly, to have an affable air, and to understand all household
    duties.” Book of ancient rites quoted in Pere du Halde’s Descrip. de
    la Chin., T. 2, p. 438.

[147]Ainsworth, p. 102.

[148]A good example of the ludicrous side of this over politeness, may
    be given here. The host in China will constantly press his guest to
    accept of things which the latter is _expected_ to refuse; the host
    is also required by etiquette to depreciate himself and extol his
    guest, which the latter returns in kind. An English gentleman having
    resigned himself to his interpreter, the following dialogue (like
    that in Kinglake’s “Eothen,”) takes place:—

    _Interpreter._ His excellency has long looked forward to this day.

    _Chinese Dignitary._ I meet him now as an old friend, and request to
    know his honorable age.

    _Int._ His excellency has profitlessly passed —— years.

    _Chinese Dig._ The ears of his excellency are long, and betoken
    great ability.

    _Int._ Ah! oh! he is unworthy of the compliment.

    _Chinese Dig._ You have had an arduous journey.

    _Int._ We deserved it, etc.

    A similar “call” is described in Ainsworth’s “all around the world,”
    p. 106.

    “At last we begged to take our leave, and began violently to
    ‘tsing-tsing,’ a ceremony which consists in clasping your hands
    before your breast, and making a crouching baboon-like gesture; it
    is the equivalent of shaking hands, only one shakes one’s own
    hands.... Our host insists on following us to our chairs. We
    remonstrate; ‘stop! stop! we are unworthy,’ say we. ‘What language
    is this’ he replies. ‘We are really unworthy’ we reiterate. ‘You are
    in my house,’ he insists; and so we back to our chairs, perpetually
    imploring him not to accompany us, which he vehemently resists,
    until at last, when we are in our chairs, he reluctantly consents to
    return, apologising to the last, for being so rude as to leave us
    even then.”

[149]Japan, Aime Humbert, p. 173.

[150]Ambros, Gesch. d. Mus. v. 1, p. 38.

[151]Ibid, 39.

[152]See Article on Egypt.

[153]Fetis, Hist. de la Mus. v. 1, p. 84.

[154]Humbert’s Japan, p. 174.

[155]Siebold, Pantheon of Nipon, part C, plates

[156]Or more properly, agglutinate.

[157]Humbert, Japan, p. 42.

[158]Abbe Huc, Travels in Thibet.

[159]S. Osborne, Japanese Fragments.

[160]Mr. Oliphant, in Elgin’s Mission to Japan.

[161]Thunberg, Voyage to Japan, p. 351, Sherwood’s Edition.

[162]Kaempfer, Hist. of Japan (Pinkerton), p. 745.

[163]Kaempfer, Hist. of Japan, p. __.

[164]Dr. Müller, Journal of the German Eastern Asiatic Society.

[165]Letter to the “Leisure Hour,” June 9, 1877.

[166]Humbert, Japan, p. 248.

[167]Caron’s Account of Japan (Pinkerton), p. 633.

[168]Humbert, Japan, p. 295.

[169]Humbert, Japan, p. 258.

[170]Thunberg, Voyage to Japan (Sherwood’s Ed.), p. 293.

[171]Kæmpfer’s history of Japan, p. 815 (Pinkerton’s).

[172]Ibid, p. 818.

[173]Caron’s Account of Japan (Pinkerton’s ed.), p. 611. v. 7.

[174]Dr. Müller; paper read before the German Asiatic Society.

[175]Wood’s Natural History of Man, v. II, p. 849.

[176]La Fage, Hist. gen. de la musique, v. I, p. 376.

[177]Wood’s Nat. Hist. of Man, v. II, p. 850.

[178]Dr. Müller, German East. Asiatic Society.

[179]Japan and the Japanese. Capt. Golownin, v. II, p. 149.

[180]Worn one above the other. Sometimes six or seven dresses are worn
    in this manner by one fair fashionable.

[181]Humbert’s Japan, p. 336.

[182]Thunberg.

[183]La Fage, Hist. de la Mus. v. I, p. 375.

[184]Engel, Mus. Myths and Facts, v. II, p. 164.

[185]La Fage, Hist. de la Mus. v. I, p. 376.

[186]Humbert, Japan, p. 337.

[187]All Round the World, p. 206.

[188]Thunberg, p. 307.

[189]Ambros, Gesch. d. Musik, v. I, p. 4.

[190]Comettant, Mus. et Musiciens, p. 586.

[191]Fetis, Hist. gen. de la Mus., v. I, p. 26.

[192]Ambros, Gesch. d. Musik, p. 10, v. I.

[193]See Fetis, Hist. gen. de la Mus. v. I, p. 15.

[194]The effect of this in some Australian dances, is said to be very
    striking. The favorite device, is to draw the outline of a skeleton,
    on the front of the body, with white paint. As the dancers twirl
    round, the pattern is plainly perceptible when their faces are
    turned toward the spectator, but when their black backs are turned,
    the whole vanishes, and gives the impression of a number of ghastly
    skeletons, alternately appearing and disappearing, by the dim
    flicker of the firelight.

[195]Here we see one of the earliest traits of primitive music. The use
    of a plain, rhythmic accompaniment, without tune.

[196]From the “Illustrated London News,” Oct. 8, 1863.

[197]Wood’s Nat. Hist. of Man, v. I, p. 68.

[198]Meinicke, Inseln des Stillen Oceans, v. I, p. 329.

[199]Wood’s Hist. of Man, v. I, p. 162.

[200]Meinecke, Inseln d still. Oceans, v. I, p. 330.

[201]A conundrum from Java may be interesting to the reader. Here is
    one,—

    _Q._—What is lower than the knee, yet higher than the mountain?

    _A._—The road which crosses the mountain.

[202]De Backer, L’Archipel Indien, p. 185.

[203]De Backer, L’Archipel Indien, p. 207.

[204]Quoted in Ainsworth, Round the World, p. 246.

[205]Engel’s Musical Myths, e. c., v. 2, p. 150.

[206]A voyage round the World (Cook’s) Forster, p. 398, v. 1.

[207]Wood’s Nat. History of Man, v. 1, p. 285.

[208]An account of a Government mission to the Fiji Islands, p. 116.

[209]Fetis, Histoire de la Mus., v. 1, p. 96.

[210]Wood’s Nat. History, v. 2, p. 288.

[211]All Kaffir chiefs aspire to obesity as an emblem of rank.

[212]The Heart of Africa, v. 2, p. 29.

[213]Schweinfurth, Heart of Africa, v. 2, p. 30.

[214]Central Africa, or Naked Truths about Naked people, p. 278.

[215]Wood’s Nat’l History of Man, v. 2, p. 498.

[216]Journal of the discovery of the source of the Nile, by Capt. Speke,
    page 210.

[217]Captain Speke’s Journal, p. 222.

[218]Heart of Africa, v. 1, p. 287.

[219]Heart of Africa, v. 1, p. 289.

[220]Ismailia, By Sir S. W. Baker, page 391.

[221]Ismailia, p. 355.

[222]See “Ismailia,” p. 372.

[223]It will be recollected that the Abyssinians belong to a sect of the
    Christian Church.

[224]Coomassie and Magdala, by H. M. Stanley, p. 310

[225]Coomassie and Magdala, page 488.

[226]Ismailia, page 282.

[227]Baker’s “Ismailia,” page 351.

[228]Stanley’s “How I found Livingstone,” page 622.

[229]Brendel, Gesch. d. Musik, p. 7.

[230]According to Clemens Romanus, a contemporary of St. Paul.

[231]Tertullian, Apologia, 39. Evidently a custom derived from the
    _skolion_ of Greece.

[232]Ambros, Geschichte d. Musik, v. II, p. 5.

[233]Gesch. d. Musik, v. II p. 11

[234]Marcillac, Histoire de la Mus. Modern, p. 25.

[235]Fetis, Histoire Gen. de la mus, v. 4, p. 6.

[236]Letters, v. 5, p. 7.

    Affirmabent autem, hanc fuisse summan vel culpæ suæ, vel erroris
    quod essent soliti stato die ante lucem convenire; carmenque
    Christo, quasi Deo, dicere secum invicem; seque sacramento non in
    scelus aliquod obstringere, sed ne furta, ne latrocinia, ne
    adulteria committerent ne fidem fallerent, ne depositum appellati
    abnegarent, quibus peractis morem, sibi discedendi fuisse, rursusque
    coeundi ad capiendum cibum, promiscium tamen et innoxium.

[237]Quoted by Fetis, Histoire Gen. d. l. Mus., v. 4, p. 7.

[238]Fetis.

[239]Marcillac, Histoire de la Mus. Moderne, p. 27.

[240]Ambros, Geschichte d. Mus., v. 2, p 13.

[241]Fetis, Histoire Gen. de la Mus., v. 4, p. 17.

[242]A good explanation of the system is to be found in Fetis, v. 4, pp.
    29-56.

[243]See Curzon’s “Monasteries of the Levant,” or Proust’s “Voyage on
    Mt. Athos.”

[244]Some excellent German translations of the hymns, have been made by
    Zingerle, and are to be found in the “Zeitschrift d. Deutschen
    Morgenl. Gesellschaft.”

[245]Fetis, Histoire Gen. T. 4. p 90.

[246]Rambosson, Harmonies du Son, p. 21.

[247]King’s “Ten Thousand Wonders,” p. 241.

[248]Marcillac, Hist. de la Mus. Moderne, p. 28, and Brendel, Gesch. d
    Mus. p. 9.

[249]Confessions, Book IX., Chap. 6.

[250]Ambros, Geschicht der Musik, vol. 2, p. 14. Fetis, Biographie Univ.
    v. 1. p. 85.

[251]Confess, IX., 7.

[252]Fetis, Hist. Gen de la Mus., v. 4, p. 135.

[253]Grove’s Dictionary of Music and Musicians, part 1, vol. 1, article
    “Ambrosian chant,” by Rev. Thomas Helmore.

[254]Ambros, Gesch. d. Mus., v. 2, p. 43.

[255]Ambros, v. 2, p. 45.

[256]These latter letters may however, only refer to the diagrams, and
    not to musical notes.

[257]Epoch men, by Sam’l Neal, p. 43.

[258]Vie de Charlemagne, Guizot, T. 3, p. 151.

[259]Ambros Gesch. d. Mus., v. 2, p. 94. We must remind the reader that
    “Gregorian” music, does not always refer to the compositions of
    Gregory, but simply means the singing used at Rome, as the
    “Ambrosian” means the style used at Milan.

[260]Monachus Engolismensis (the monk of Angouleme), an anonymous writer
    of this era, in his _Vita Caroli Magni._ quoted by J. J. Rousseau,
    in his Dictionnaire de Musique article “Chant,” also by Crowest,
    Mus. Anecdotes, v. 2, p. 239; Fetis, v. 4, p. 279; Ambros, v. 2, p.
    94, etc., etc.

[261]It has been suggested by some recent writers on this subject, that
    even this should be met by forming the notes of various lengths,
    thus, a whole note ———, a half note ——, a quarter —, etc., but this
    difficulty can be obviated, in spacing, by any good music engraver,
    and does not require so radical a change.

[262]The semitone falling always between the second and third note, is
    the only regularity apparent.

[263]Stainer’s Dictionary, p. 311.

[264]There is some ambiguity regarding the title of this pontiff. Some
    authorities call him John XX., and the next John (1276) the XXI.

[265]Quoted by Stainer and Barrett, Dict. p. 314.

[266]Topog. Hibern., 3 C. 1.

[267]“The Troubadours,” F. Hueffer, p. 61.

[268]Quoted by Hueffer, “Troubabours,” p. 72.

[269]Hueffer, p. 274-5.

[270]Richard.

[271]Taylor’s “Lays of the Minnesingers,” p. 229.

[272]French.

[273]Those of the Troubadours.

[274]This line is vague in its meaning.

[275]Taylor’s “Minne-singers,” p. 98.

[276]Fabeln und Erzehlungen aus d. zeiten d. minne-sanger. Von Bodmer
    and Breitlinger Zurich, 1757, p. 247.

[277]Rambosson, Harmonies du Son, p. 46.

[278]Anglice—Master-singers.

[279]L’Opera Italien. Castil-Blaze, p. 20.

[280]L’Opera Italien. Castil-Blaze, p. 26.

[281]Curiosites Theatrales, Fournel (Paris), p. 17.

[282]Bibliotheque de Poche, v. VIII., p. 345.

[283]Ibid, vol. II., p. 811.

[284]Historiette d. la Marechale de Themines, book 5, p. 196.

[285]Edwards’ History of the Opera, vol. 1, p. 15.

[286]Curiosites Theatrales, Fournel, p. 161.

[287]See Annals Dramatiques, VII., p. 165.

[288]L’Opera Ital. Castil-Blaze, p. 128.

[289]Deldeves. Curiosites Musicales, p. 215.




                                 INDEX.


                                   A
  Abyssinian Music                                                   270
  Æschylus                                                            74
  African Music                                                      251
  Amanieus, troubadour                                               334
  Amaryllis                                                          356
  Ambrosian Chant                                                    299
  Ancestors, feasts of                                               186
  Aristotle                                                           57
  Armenian Church                                                    292


                                   B
  Bamboo Instruments                                                 153
  Banquet Music, Egyptian                                         17, 24
  Banquet Music, Grecian                                          53, 57
  Banquet Music, Japanese                                            213
  Barbarians, Music of                                               229
  Bards, ancient                                                     323
  Bardesanes                                                         291
  Bells                                                              148
  Bertrand du Born                                                   336
  Bœthius                                                            308
  Bongo Songs                                                        267
  Brahma, legend of                                                    8


                                   C
  Caligula                                                            99
  Canadian, curious song                                             234
  Canute                                                             328
  Caste of musicians, Chinese                                        131
  Caste of musicians, Egyptian                                        18
  Chant, Ambrosian                                                   299
  Chant, Gregorian                                                   303
  Charlemagne                                                        308
  Cheng                                                              155
  Chinese ceremonies                                                 162
  Chinese compositions                                               162
  Chinese music                                                      114
  Chinese a musical language                                         160
  Chinese music resembles Scotch                                     166
  Chinese songs, earliest                                            115
  Chinese songs                                                      158
  Chinese theatre and plays                                          176
  Chinese whistle                                                    149
  Chorus, a terrible                                                  74
  Chorus, Greek                                                       74
  Christian, early customs                                           287
  Christian, early music                                             283
  Christian churches of Africa                                       293
  Chun, Song of                                                      121
  Clavichord in China                                                137
  Confucius                                                          124
  Conservatories in ancient Egypt                                     25
  Coptic Hymns                                                       294
  Crusaders’ songs                                                   349
  Cuzzoni                                                       358, 360


                                   D
  Dances, Australian                                                 234
  Dances, Bushmen                                                    256
  Dances, Chinese                                                    176
  Dances, Egyptian                                                    21
  Dances, Fiji Islands                                               248
  Dances, Grecian                                                     79
  Dances, Roman                                                       97
  Dances, Savage                                                234, 277
  Dances, Tasmanian                                                  238
  Dances, War                                                        241
  Destruction of musical instruments                                 133
  Dictionary of Impoliteness                                         363
  Drums, African                                                     265
  Drums, Chinese                                                     143
  Drums, used to mark the hour                                       144
  Drums, Javanese                                                    243
  Drums, water                                                       256


                                   E
  Egyptian music                                                      15
  Egyptian Muses                                                      16
  Egyptian banquets                                                   17
  English Bards                                                      327
  Essenhamens                                                        334
  European music in China                                            135


                                   F
  Female musicians, Chinese                                          129
  Female musicians, Greek                                             51
  Female musicians, Troubadours                                      341
  Festivals, Chinese                                                 170
  Festivals, Theban                                                   21
  Fiddle, Chinese                                                    156
  Fiji Islanders, Music                                              248
  Flute, Chinese                                                     139
  Flute, Egyptian                                                     23
  Flute, Grecian                                          41, 42, 43, 59
  Flute, Kaffir                                                      255
  Flute, Roman                                                        86
  Flute, Prehistoric                                                 232
  Flute-playing at Grecian Games                                      41
  Foang-hoang                                                        116
  Fo Hi, the Chinese Noah                                            116
  Folk Songs                                                         350
  Funeral music, Chinese                                             173
  Funeral music, Egyptian                                             19
  Funeral music, Japanese                                            207
  Funeral music, Roman                                                88


                                   G
  Games of Greece                                                     35
  Goura—African Instrument                                           257
  Greek Church, music of                                             288
  Greek music, ancient                                                35
  Greek Hymns                                                         35
  Greek Scale                                                     36, 55
  Gregorian Chant                                                    303
  Gregorian Chant in France                                          310
  Guido d’Arezzo                                                     318
  Guitar, African                                                    263
  Guitar, Hindoo                                                      14


                                   H
  Handel                                                             360
  Harmony, Egyptian                                                   19
  Harps, African                                                     255
  Harps, Egyptian                                                     23
  Harps, Hebrew                                                       26
  Hebrew music                                                        26
  Hebrew music, resemblance to Negro                                  33
  Hermes, Egyptian god                                                15
  Hindoo music                                                         8
  Hissing, when first began                                          357
  Hucbald                                                            315
  Hymns, Christian, ancient                                     281, 294
  Hymn, Chinese                                                      164
  Hymn, Greek                                                         35


                                   I
  Instruments, African                                          257, 259
  Instruments, Chinese                                               142
  Instruments, East Indian                                            13
  Instruments, Egyptian                                               24
  Instruments, Greek                                                  59
  Instruments, Hebrew                                                 29
  Instruments, Hindoo                                                 13
  Instruments, Japanese                                              202
  Instruments, Kaffir                                                255
  Instruments, Roman                                                  89
  Irish Bards                                                        325
  Irova, Japanese                                                    204


                                   J
  Japanese music                                                     201
  Jews, music of modern                                               27
  Jewsharps in Africa                                                258
  Jongleurs                                                          331
  Julian, reforms of Emperor                                         100


                                   K
  Kaffir songs                                                       251
  Kin, Chinese                                                       150
  King, Chinese instrument                                           147
  Kithara, Greek instrument                                           57


                                   L
  Laborers’ songs, Egyptian                                           18
  Lamia                                                               61
  Laws relative to music, Egyptian                                    20
  Legends of music, Chinese                                     116, 119
  Legends of music, Egyptian                                          15
  Legends of music, Hindoo                                             8
  Legends of music, Japanese                                         215
  Legends of music, Javanese                                         244
  Louis Xiii.                                                        355
  Louis Xiv.                                                         357


                                   M
  Malay music                                                        243
  Meistersingers                                                     349
  Melody, Hindoo                                                      12
  Melody, an old                                                     348
  Meyerbeer                                                          361
  Military music, African                                            262
  Military music, Chinese                                       131, 169
  Military music, Greek                                           47, 60
  Military music, Japanese                                           219
  Minnesingers                                                  329, 341
  Mode, Ambrosian                                                    301
  Mode, Gregorian                                                    365
  Musical Buildings                                                   44
  Musical course Roman                                                86
  Music as a means of inspiring fear                                 276
  Music boxes in Africa                                              269
  Music boxes, Chinese                                               175


                                   N
  Nero, musical history of                                           101
  Neumes                                                             313
  New Zealand, Harmony in                                            233
  New Zealand songs                                                  240
  Nose-flutes                                                        248
  Notation                                            313, 316, 317, 321
  Nyam-Nyams, Music of                                               258


                                   O
  Olympic Games                                                       39
  Opera                                                              352
  Orchestra, an old                                                  354
  Organ, ancient Rome                                                 89
  Organ, Chinese                                                     155
  Organ, Hebrew                                                   28, 30


                                   P
  Pantomimes, Chinese                                                195
  Pantomimes, Roman                                                   97
  Pantomimes, Javanese                                               243
  Persecution of musicians                                           126
  Philosophers and music                                              53
  Pindar                                                              65
  Pianoforte in Japan                                                227
  Poems of the Troubadours                                           338
  Power of Music                                                   9, 10
  Power of Music in Africa                                           274
  Processional music, Egyptian                                        22
  Processional music, Japanese                                       218
  Processional music, Roman                                           92
  Processional music, Savage                                         263
  Provençal songs                                                    330
  Psaltery                                                            30
  Ptolemy                                                             62
  Pythagoras                                                          53
  Pythian Games                                                       41


                                   Q
  Quarrel between choirs                                             311
  Quarrel between singers                                            358


                                   R
  Ragas, Hindoo                                                        9
  Religious music, Abyssinian                                        269
  Religious music, Chinese                                           162
  Religious music, Christian                                         280
  Religious music, Greek                                              35
  Religious music, Hebrew                                             26
  Religious music, Japanese                                          205
  Religious music, Roman                                              86
  Rhythm, Egyptian                                                    20
  Rhythm of savage nations                                           229
  Riquier, Guirant                                                   332
  “Robert,” accident at first performance                            361
  Roman, ancient music                                                85
  Roman Empire, music of                                              99
  Rossini                                                            360
  Royal dancers                                                      193
  Royal musicians                            99, 100, 102, 115, 332, 355


                                   S
  Salaries, ancient Greece                                            61
  Salaries, Chinese                                                  187
  Salaries, Nero                                                     105
  Sappho                                                              61
  Savage music                                                       229
  Scale, Chinese                                                     167
  Scale, East Indian                                                  11
  Scale, Grecian                                                  36, 55
  Scale, Hindoo                                                       11
  Scale, Japanese                                                    201
  Scale, modern                                                      320
  Scale, Religious, Greek                                            289
  Schofer, Hebrew horn                                                27
  Schools of music, Egypt                                             25
  Schools of music, Rome                                         86, 100
  “Selah!” meaning of                                                 31
  Signals, musical Chinese                                      123, 173
  Simonides                                                           63
  Sistrum                                                             22
  Skolion                                                             57
  Societies, or Guilds of Musicians, Roman                            87
  Songs, Chinese                                                     158
  Stesi-chorus                                                        49
  Stones, musical                                                    145
  Stringed instruments                                               149
  Syrian Church                                                      290


                                   T
  Tales of the Minnesingers                                          346
  Terpander                                                           45
  Theatre, Chinese                                                   176
  Theatre, Greek                                                      67
  Theatre, Japanese                                                  219
  Theatre, Javanese                                                  245
  Theatre, Roman                                                      95
  Timbrel                                                             30
  Time marked by bells                                               120
  Time marked by drums                                               120
  Tone-picture, Grecian                                               59
  Treatises on music, Chinese                                        135
  Triumphs, Roman                                                     92
  Triumphal Odes, Greece                                              62
  Trumpeter, a great                                                  40
  Trumpets, African                                             261, 265
  Trumpets, Chinese                                             120, 157
  Trumpets, pre-historic                                             231
  Trumpets, Russian                                                  157
  Troubadours                                                        329


                                   V
  Vina, Indian instrument                                             13
  Violin, Hindoo                                                      13
  Volkslied                                                          350


                                   W
  Wagner                                                             362
  War Song                                                           284
  Watch Song                                                         344
  Welsh Bards                                                        324
  “William Tell,” an error in                                        361
  Wood instruments of China                                          151


                                   Y
  Yu, Chinese musician                                               132




                          Transcriber’s Notes


—Silently corrected a few typos.

—Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook
  is public-domain in the country of publication.

—In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by
  _underscores_.

—Created a Table of Contents based on the chapter headings.