
Carmen
Description
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The opera's plot, it turns out, is based only on part of the larger adventure that is Carmen. The story opens, for example, with the narrator, a historian like Mérimée, researching the lost site of an ancient Roman battle on the plains of Andalusia, when he meets a notorious bandit, Don José Navarro, on the run from the law. Feeling a certain sympathy for Don José, whose face is "at once noble and fierce," and a vicarious thrill at this brush with danger, he helps the bandit to escape.
When they next meet again, Don José is in jail in Cordova, due to be hanged for his crimes. In his last days, he tells the narrator about a wild gypsy woman he met back in Seville . . .
What follows is an iconic and highly entertaining tale of doomed passion full of chases, sword fights, bullfights, smuggling, wild dancing, and more-except no mezzo-sopranos.
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Persons
George Burnham Ives (1856-1930) also translated the work of George Sand and Honoré de Balzac.
Content
- Intro
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Contents
- Epigraph
- I
- II
- III
- IV
- Other Books in This Series
- Illuminations for Carmen
- 1. Prosper Mérimée on the Way to Carmen
- "A tall, erect, pale man ."-Selection from Hippolyte Taine's Lettres à une inconnue.
- The Origin of Carmen-Letter from Mérimée to the Countess Montijo.
- Scholarly Pursuits-Selection from Carmen.
- Illustration: Map of Andalusia (1635).
- An Encounter with Gypsies-Selection from one of Mérimée's letters to Jeanne Françoise Dacquin.
- 2. The Influence of George Borrow
- Borrow in the Novella-Selection from Carmen.
- On Gypsy Dialect-Selection from one of Mérimée's letters to Jeanne Françoise Dacquin.
- An Authoritative Work on Gypsies-Selections from George Borrow's The Zincali: An Account of the Gypsies of Spain.
- Illustration: "Rig to Romany Rye" by George Borrow (1874).
- 3. Gypsies and Bohemians in the Imagination
- Illustration: The Suppliants: Expulsion of the Gypsies from Spain by Edwin Long (1872).
- An Early Spanish Gypsy Narrative-Selections from Miguel de Cervantes' The Gypsy Girl.
- "A Russian Parallel"-Passages from Alexander Pushkin's "The Gypsies."
- Esmeralda-Selection from Victor Hugo's The Hunchback of Notre Dame.
- "The wild air bloweth in our lungs"-Ralph Waldo Emerson's "The Romany Girl."
- A Different View-Selection from Vicente Blaso Ibáñez's La Bodega.
- Two Bohemians-Charles Baudelaire's "Gypsies Travelling" and Arthur Rimbaud's "Sensation"
- 4. A Gallery of Notable Carmens
- "Carmen"-A poem by Théophile Gautier.
- Illustration: "Carmen and Don José" by Prosper Mérimée (ca. 1845).
- Illustration: "Célestine Galli-Marié" by Félix Nadar (1875).
- Illustration: Advertisement for the film Gypsy Blood (1921).
- Illustration: Advertisement for Gitanes cigarettes (1947).
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