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I have an O, but I'm just wondering how I can make it more difficult
O! I think I chose the wrong four-letter word after "terrible' in my earlier message...
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
Oberon Blackbird - a motor cycle made by Honda (that was a naughty clue)
Son of Margate - Alfred Deller (he created the part in Britten's "A Midsummer Night's Dream"
Oxonian - James Bowman (first played Oberon in the same work in 1967)
Mahler - Oberon's Grove "Ich bin der welt abhanden gekommen" (Ruckert Lileder) sorry Ruckert Lieder, which I first heard when Jessye Norman sailed on to the platform of the Usher Hall to sing to an enrapt, not to say mesmerised audience many Festivals ago.
I shall be back about 10 in the morning to learn whether my grasps are correct. Meanwhile, my dearios, I'm orf to bed.
I guess that was an object lesson to me that if you make it too fiendish you will get some equally valid parallel answers!
Angle is, of course, correct with Oberon although only the second clue with Britten's Midsummer Night's Dream was what I had in mind.
The first was, as Mercia cleverly unravelled, the actress Merle Oberon and not the motorcycle, but the latter was an equally valid (and arguably better) answer.
The third was perhaps more obvious than the Ruckert Lieder, Weber's Oberon was revised variously by Gustav Mahler and the novelist Anthony Burgess, so maybe I should have thrown in the latter as the clincher.
But very well done, Angle and and Mercia.
I suppose we must now wait until dusk for Angle's coffin lid to rise before we can expect P
I suppose we must now wait until dusk for Angle's coffin lid to rise before we can expect P
that's made my morning
Yes, Angle - what's the Oberon's Grove thing all about then??
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
Dawn has broken, at last. And here I am, shamefaced.
I love the Ruckert songs but now, nine hours later. have no idea why or how I linked them with "Oberon's Grove". Thank goodness it was in supplying an answer and not in the setting of a question. My apologies for the confusion from which gave pause for investigation nevertheless.
Actually, I think I shall blame it on a surfeit of London air.
Perhaps, as it is still very early in my day, Mercia will set us his P question. Oh, the blessed P.
What P links Murder in the Cathedral, 3 Petrach Sonnets and d'Annunzio?
Is this to do with pilgrimage?
Murder in the Cathedral (Eliot) relates to Thomas a Becket's assassination there. Chaucer's Canterbury Tales tells of a pilgrimage to Canterbury to pay respects to Becket.
The wonderful Liszt's Annees de Pelerinage (Years of Pilgrimage) Book 2 contains 3 Petrarch Sonnet settings.
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