Pangloss' Song:
A comic-opera lyric
IDear boy, you will not hear me speakWith sorrow or with rancorOf what has paled my rosy cheekAnd blasted it with canker;'Twas Love, great Love, that did the deedThrough Nature's gentle laws,And how should ill effects proceedFrom so divine a cause?Sweet honey comes from bees that sting,As you are well awareTo one adept in reasoningWhatever pains disease may bringAre but the tangy seasoningTo Love's delicious fare.IIColumbus and his men, they say,Conveyed the virus hitherWhereby my features rot awayAnd vital powers wither;Yet had they not traversed the seasAnd come infected back,Why, think of all the luxuriesThat modern life would lack!All bitter things conduce to sweet,As this example shows;Without the little spirocheteWe'd have no chocolate to eat,Nor would tobacco's fragrance greetThe European nose.IIIEach nation guards its native landWith cannons and with sentry,Inspectors look for contrabandAt every port of entry,Yet nothing can prevent the spreadOf love's divine disease:It rounds the world from bed to bedAs pretty as you please.Men worship Venus everywhere,As plainly may be seen;The decorations which I bearAre nobler than the Croix de Guerre,And gained in service of our fairAnd universal Queen.
-Richard Wilbur
Somehow it seemed time for a little light verse, even if it's verse in celebration (?) of syphilis.
Richard Wilbur wrote this for Leonard Bernstein's operetta Candide, the first version of which was performed in 1956. This song for Dr. Pangloss (he was the young Candide's tutor) didn't make it into the operetta--I suspect Bernstein thought it would be too hard to sing and so didn't write music for it--but did make it into subsequent volumes of Richard Wilbur's poetry. But the majority of the lyrics in the operetta were by Richard Wilbur, including its most famous song, 'Glitter and Be Gay', sung by Cunegonde.
I bet the rhymes would make this a fun one to memorise, but perhaps with few opportunities to "perform"?
ReplyDeleteI can't sing anything so I also can't sing this...but other people do sing those tongue-twisters in Gilbert and Sullivan, but that's not quite high opera.
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