
This etext was produced by David Widger widger@cecomet.net
BOOK 4. - XX. THE OPERA OF CAMILLA XXI. THE THIRD ACT XXII. WILFRID COMES FORWARD XXIII. FIRST HOURS OF THE FLIGHT XXIV. ADVENTURES OF VITTORIA AND ANGELO XXV. ACROSS THE MOUNTAINS - CHAPTER XX - THE OPERA OF CAMILLA
CAMILLA.
'VITTORIA.'
In a richly appointed Italian theater, a striking figure steps onto the stage, cloaked in amber and pale blue silk that seems to have been lifted straight from a Titian canvas. The audience watches with a mixture of admiration and exacting scrutiny, ready to test whether the prima donna’s reputation lives up to her luminous appearance. Vittoria moves with a poised elegance that captures the eye, her dark-banded hair and penetrating gaze hinting at a depth beyond mere beauty. The hush that falls over the crowd feels like a reverent anticipation of something extraordinary.
When the opera’s central aria begins, Vittoria’s voice transforms, soaring from a resonant contralto to a pure, haunting soprano. She tells a chilling tale of a mother’s spectral visitation, of tears that become rivers and blood that mingles with sorrow, all delivered in a melody that borders on the Gregorian. The performance’s dramatic shift and lingering minor chord leave listeners poised on the edge of the narrative, eager to follow the unfolding drama without revealing what lies beyond this powerful opening.
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (134K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2003-09-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1828–1909
A sharp-witted Victorian writer, he became famous for novels that mix social comedy with unusually deep attention to character and motive. His best-known books include The Ordeal of Richard Feverel, The Egoist, and Diana of the Crossways.
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