REVIEW POTPOURRI: Just browsing

Peter Catesby Peter Cates

Just browsing

Recently I have been browsing through volumes of the Library of Universal Knowledge, published in 1880, not so much for information on any particular subject but for how it was discussed in 1880.

A few examples-

“Infant, in English law, means every male and female under the age of 21.”

“Augusta, the name of two considerable cities in the United States. 1. A. is the capital of Maine, situated on both banks of the river Kennebec, which is here crossed by a bridge 520 feet long. Its latitude is 44 degrees 19 minutes north., and longitude 69 degrees 50 minutes west. …. Up to A. the river is navigable for sloops from its mouth, a distance of 43 miles in a straight line; while a dam, constructed immediately above the city, enables steamboats to ply more than 20 miles above as far as Waterville. ”

2. Augusta is the second city in Georgia, on the Savannah, 231 miles from its mouth.”

“Augustulus, Romulus, the last emperor of the western portion of the Roman empire. His name was Augustus, but the diminutive title under which he is universally known was given him by the Romans on account of the essential littleness of his character.”

“Adultery – in some of the United States, Adultery is made criminal by special law; in some it is not so recognized; in some the act itself is not a crime; but open and continued Adultery is.” [Whatever this means – the English language might not have been as simple to understand in those good old days 145 years ago. ]

I noticed that Beethoven, Berlioz, Verdi and Wagner are listed but not Brahms.

“Waterville, a village of Maine, on the right bank of the Kennebec river, at Ticonic falls, 82 miles north north central from Portland. Around the falls are clustered saw-mills, plow, axe, hoe, and scythe factories, machine-shops, tanneries, etc. Waterville has a Baptist college, with 100 students, and a library of 15,500 volumes, an academy, etc. Population in 1876, 4,000.”

Luisa Tetrazzini

Luisa Tetrazzini – Swiss Echo Song; Victrola Red Seal 88311, recorded 1918, 12 inch one-sided acoustic shellac disc.

Luisa Tetrazzini

Soprano Luisa Tetrazzini (1871-1940) had the kind of vocal agility and beauty of tone and phrasing that left her listeners awestruck. I own a batch of her records and include her among my top favorite singers of very long ago with Caruso, McCormack, Evan Williams, Elsie Baker, Olive Kline, Amellita Galli-Curci, Nellie Melba (with whom Tetrazzini had a long-sustained feud.) and Rosa Ponselle.

The Swiss Echo Song is a silly trivial piece yet Tetrazzini transforms it into a precious gem by the phenomenal beauty and perfect pitch of her trills, top to bottom notes and phrasing.

Personality-wise, she was much loved by her colleagues but could throw a fit with agents, and recording producers, demanding exorbitant fees for her appearances on stage and in the studio. When it came to grudges or slights, Luisa never forgot or forgave.

One touching anecdote though – she and Caruso had the deepest personal affection for each other. When the tenor took ill during his last year (he died in 1921 at the age of 48), he sent her a note with the following words: “I am waiting for you with open arms, waiting every moment to salute you with a golden note.”

Unfortunately, Tetrazzini was never able to visit him.

 
 

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