Desultory Speculator —No. VII. tody as a prisoner for some time. Luidgi anrid his compa nions rush to her rescue and succeed(l. The brigands are defeated, and the lady is saved. She shows her gratitude by offering valuable presents to her preserver, who refuses to receive a reward; and she bestows them upon Lauretta, as her liberator's intended bride, and indicates to him that she has influence and will never forget him. Dr. Omeoquaco arrives-and is smitten with the charms of the beautiful Lauretta, and offers his wealth to her mother to obtain her consent to his marriage with her daughter; who had been attired, at the instance of her mother in her bridal dress, in expectation of being united to Luidgi: but her mother had bestowed her on the pompous old doctor, who makes love to the young peasant with great fervor. Lauretta, how ever, laughs at his pretensions; and though pressed by her mother, declares she will never consent to marry any other than Luidgi. In the meantime, poor Luidgi has been stung by a Tarantula; and Lauretta, half distracted, and finding no other aid than Dr. Omeoqtiaco, describes her lovdr's delirium, frantic motions and agony, and begs him to em ploy his medical skill to restore him. He refuses to (lo so, unless she will consent to become his wife: to which, when she finds that Luidgi is becoming worse and worse, and if not instantly relieved will die, she consents, and is led fainting to the altar. Luidgi, in the 2d act, is brought at his earnest solicitation, scarcely restored, to Lauretta's cham ber: and an affecting scene takes place between the lovers when he learns that she has been married to Omeoquaco. He thinks of the strange lady whom he had rescued fromn the banditti, and hastens to seek her aid in annulling a mar riage effected by force and violence. During his absence, and to produce delay, Dr. Omeoquaco having ordered his carriage to depart immediately with his young wife, Lau retta employs all sorts of stratagems to detain him till the r eturn of her lover. These scenes are exceedingly amu sing. Finding at last that nothing will do, and not half the time necessary for the return of Luidgi had expired, she resorts to the expedient of pretending to be stung by the Tarantula; and, to the horror of her old husband, assumes all the contortions, feverish trance, depressions and fainting, she had noticed in her lover when laboring under the effects of the poison infused by the spider. Her dancing becomes frantic, but at the same time fail of grace and beauty-her husband calls on the company to assist, and Lauretta appears to expire from exhaustion. The poor doctor is in a terrible quandary, and is about to be roughly handled by the peasants, when Luidgi enters with the lady he had rescned, who turns out to be the Doctor's wife, who he thought had been murdered by the brigands. Lauretta suddenly recovers, and after pretending to claim the Doctor for her husband, offers her hand to her lover; and the Doctor and his former wife ar c again united, and take their departure. All this is exhi bited by pantomime and dancing. It is founded upon the supposed effects of the bite of a species of spider, called the Tarantula, found in the southern parts of Europe, and especially in the neighborhood of Tarentum in Italy, where it was first observed. This insect belongs to the genus Lycosa of Latreille; and the Tarantula is the largest of all European spiders. It is of a brown color, with the back of the abdomen marked by a row of trigonal black spots, with * whitish edges; and the legs, eight in number, marked beneath by black and white bars. The part surrounding the eyes is bristled with a few upright hairs. The eyes have sometimes the color of rubies. The strong huge mandibles are of a * shining black, except at their exterior base, which is covers ed with a down more or less grey or ochreous in color; the other parts of the month are black. The feelers have a tint of ochre which is often vivid; hut they are always black at the extremity. The legs are strong anid stout, and on the upper side, of a uniform blackish or yellowish grey. This description is taken in part from a naturalist, who studied Bride of the ever-sounding seas! Each wave titt rolls in dirges o'er The tombs of warriors who upbore Thy stars in triumph on the breeze The winds, that journeying onward, sweep The harps which gild the dark-blue deep The radiant glories of the light, And silence of star-mantled night, Shall bring loud welcomes unto thee, From every land, o'er every sea, And where oppression binds the slave, Thy form shall glow-a light to save, And Earth's remotest clime be FREE! Si~mpsonville, Ky. [SEPTEMBER, 700 Shall guard thee still, though they no more May tread the soil they loved of yore. An unseen phalanx they shall stand, Round Freedom's fane, and there unfurled, The banner of their native land Shall wave unsullied o'er the world! ,DESULTORY SPECULATOR.-No. VIT. BY G. W N. MAM'SELLE FANNY ELSSLE.,', AND THE TARANTULA. Mam'selle Fanny Elssler has acquired great celebrity as a danseuse both in Europe and America. She;s superioiin this branch of art to all who have yet visited this country and has attained to a degree of perfection in the 11 poetry of motion," that none, I believe, but Madame Taglioni has c-xcelled. In some particulars, however, I prefer Madame Celeste to Mam'selle Elssler.'I'he latter, it is true, dayices with less effort and greater ease; but the former has a finer figure, and is occasionally more graceful, especially in the Cachue,ha. Celeste is, moreover, decidedly a better pantomimic actress; and in the tout ensemble more. attractive. This, however, is a matter of opinion, and I do not insist upon its infallibility. My object, in these remarks, is to give some account of the origin of one of those Ballets-ttie TAP.ANTULL -in which Mam'selle Elssler excels, and displays the perfection of her art, The Ballet is derived from the French baller-to dance, It has been greatly improved by the French, and especially by Monsieur Noverre, who flourished in the last century and I)ublished a work in two vols. on the art of dancing. The pantomirole dance was known to the ancients; but the ballet received its regular dramatic form from -Baltazarini, the director of music to the princess Catharine de Medici, The ballet is defined to be in its widest sense, 11 the representation of a series of passionate actions and feelings, by means of gestures and dancing." Like the drama, it is divided into acts and scenes in which are several entrees-each of which consists of one or more quadrilles of dancers, who represent the action by their gestures, steps, and attitudes. The Tarantule is a comic or dramatic ballet, arranged by M. Coralli. The scene lies in Italv and the characters are Luidg',, a young peasant; Lauretta, the object of his love, and the daughter of the wealthy postmistress of the village; Dr. Omeoquaco, a rich and consequential personage; a strange lady, who is rescued from a band of brigands by Luidgi; and a number of male and female peasarits-who constitute the corps de ballet. In the Ist act, Luidgi is represented serenading Lauretta, while a band of brigands are seen crossing the village arid taking with them a lady whom tiey have had in their ctis K
Desultory Speculator, Number VII [pp. 700-702]
Southern literary messenger; devoted to every department of literature and the fine arts. / Volume 6, Issue 9
Annotations Tools
Desultory Speculator —No. VII. tody as a prisoner for some time. Luidgi anrid his compa nions rush to her rescue and succeed(l. The brigands are defeated, and the lady is saved. She shows her gratitude by offering valuable presents to her preserver, who refuses to receive a reward; and she bestows them upon Lauretta, as her liberator's intended bride, and indicates to him that she has influence and will never forget him. Dr. Omeoquaco arrives-and is smitten with the charms of the beautiful Lauretta, and offers his wealth to her mother to obtain her consent to his marriage with her daughter; who had been attired, at the instance of her mother in her bridal dress, in expectation of being united to Luidgi: but her mother had bestowed her on the pompous old doctor, who makes love to the young peasant with great fervor. Lauretta, how ever, laughs at his pretensions; and though pressed by her mother, declares she will never consent to marry any other than Luidgi. In the meantime, poor Luidgi has been stung by a Tarantula; and Lauretta, half distracted, and finding no other aid than Dr. Omeoqtiaco, describes her lovdr's delirium, frantic motions and agony, and begs him to em ploy his medical skill to restore him. He refuses to (lo so, unless she will consent to become his wife: to which, when she finds that Luidgi is becoming worse and worse, and if not instantly relieved will die, she consents, and is led fainting to the altar. Luidgi, in the 2d act, is brought at his earnest solicitation, scarcely restored, to Lauretta's cham ber: and an affecting scene takes place between the lovers when he learns that she has been married to Omeoquaco. He thinks of the strange lady whom he had rescued fromn the banditti, and hastens to seek her aid in annulling a mar riage effected by force and violence. During his absence, and to produce delay, Dr. Omeoquaco having ordered his carriage to depart immediately with his young wife, Lau retta employs all sorts of stratagems to detain him till the r eturn of her lover. These scenes are exceedingly amu sing. Finding at last that nothing will do, and not half the time necessary for the return of Luidgi had expired, she resorts to the expedient of pretending to be stung by the Tarantula; and, to the horror of her old husband, assumes all the contortions, feverish trance, depressions and fainting, she had noticed in her lover when laboring under the effects of the poison infused by the spider. Her dancing becomes frantic, but at the same time fail of grace and beauty-her husband calls on the company to assist, and Lauretta appears to expire from exhaustion. The poor doctor is in a terrible quandary, and is about to be roughly handled by the peasants, when Luidgi enters with the lady he had rescned, who turns out to be the Doctor's wife, who he thought had been murdered by the brigands. Lauretta suddenly recovers, and after pretending to claim the Doctor for her husband, offers her hand to her lover; and the Doctor and his former wife ar c again united, and take their departure. All this is exhi bited by pantomime and dancing. It is founded upon the supposed effects of the bite of a species of spider, called the Tarantula, found in the southern parts of Europe, and especially in the neighborhood of Tarentum in Italy, where it was first observed. This insect belongs to the genus Lycosa of Latreille; and the Tarantula is the largest of all European spiders. It is of a brown color, with the back of the abdomen marked by a row of trigonal black spots, with * whitish edges; and the legs, eight in number, marked beneath by black and white bars. The part surrounding the eyes is bristled with a few upright hairs. The eyes have sometimes the color of rubies. The strong huge mandibles are of a * shining black, except at their exterior base, which is covers ed with a down more or less grey or ochreous in color; the other parts of the month are black. The feelers have a tint of ochre which is often vivid; hut they are always black at the extremity. The legs are strong anid stout, and on the upper side, of a uniform blackish or yellowish grey. This description is taken in part from a naturalist, who studied Bride of the ever-sounding seas! Each wave titt rolls in dirges o'er The tombs of warriors who upbore Thy stars in triumph on the breeze The winds, that journeying onward, sweep The harps which gild the dark-blue deep The radiant glories of the light, And silence of star-mantled night, Shall bring loud welcomes unto thee, From every land, o'er every sea, And where oppression binds the slave, Thy form shall glow-a light to save, And Earth's remotest clime be FREE! Si~mpsonville, Ky. [SEPTEMBER, 700 Shall guard thee still, though they no more May tread the soil they loved of yore. An unseen phalanx they shall stand, Round Freedom's fane, and there unfurled, The banner of their native land Shall wave unsullied o'er the world! ,DESULTORY SPECULATOR.-No. VIT. BY G. W N. MAM'SELLE FANNY ELSSLE.,', AND THE TARANTULA. Mam'selle Fanny Elssler has acquired great celebrity as a danseuse both in Europe and America. She;s superioiin this branch of art to all who have yet visited this country and has attained to a degree of perfection in the 11 poetry of motion," that none, I believe, but Madame Taglioni has c-xcelled. In some particulars, however, I prefer Madame Celeste to Mam'selle Elssler.'I'he latter, it is true, dayices with less effort and greater ease; but the former has a finer figure, and is occasionally more graceful, especially in the Cachue,ha. Celeste is, moreover, decidedly a better pantomimic actress; and in the tout ensemble more. attractive. This, however, is a matter of opinion, and I do not insist upon its infallibility. My object, in these remarks, is to give some account of the origin of one of those Ballets-ttie TAP.ANTULL -in which Mam'selle Elssler excels, and displays the perfection of her art, The Ballet is derived from the French baller-to dance, It has been greatly improved by the French, and especially by Monsieur Noverre, who flourished in the last century and I)ublished a work in two vols. on the art of dancing. The pantomirole dance was known to the ancients; but the ballet received its regular dramatic form from -Baltazarini, the director of music to the princess Catharine de Medici, The ballet is defined to be in its widest sense, 11 the representation of a series of passionate actions and feelings, by means of gestures and dancing." Like the drama, it is divided into acts and scenes in which are several entrees-each of which consists of one or more quadrilles of dancers, who represent the action by their gestures, steps, and attitudes. The Tarantule is a comic or dramatic ballet, arranged by M. Coralli. The scene lies in Italv and the characters are Luidg',, a young peasant; Lauretta, the object of his love, and the daughter of the wealthy postmistress of the village; Dr. Omeoquaco, a rich and consequential personage; a strange lady, who is rescued from a band of brigands by Luidgi; and a number of male and female peasarits-who constitute the corps de ballet. In the Ist act, Luidgi is represented serenading Lauretta, while a band of brigands are seen crossing the village arid taking with them a lady whom tiey have had in their ctis K
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- Song - By a Lady of Ohio - pp. 585
- Virginia Dare - Louisa Cornelia Tuthill, Signed Miss C. L. Tuthill - pp. 585-595
- Poetic Musings - Robert Howe Gould - pp. 595-598
- To *** - John Collins McCabe - pp. 598
- Midsummer Fancies - George D. Strong - pp. 598-600
- Intercepted Correspondence, Number II - A. D. G. - pp. 600-601
- Lines on an Eagle Soaring among the Mountains - Dewitt C. Roberts - pp. 601
- The Dying Poet - pp. 601-602
- Michigan - Charles Lanman - pp. 602-605
- Historic Speculations - C. - pp. 606-608
- Desultory Thoughts - Thomas H. Shreve - pp. 608
- Summer Morning - Charles Lanman - pp. 609-611
- To My Mother - pp. 611-612
- The Motherless Daughters, Number III - George E. Dabney, Signed by a Virginian - pp. 612-622
- To the Moon: Almeeta - Egeria - pp. 622-624
- Mysteries of the Bible - W. G. Howard - pp. 624-628
- The Voice of Music - Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Hewitt - pp. 628
- Literary Recreations, Number I - Henry Ruffner, Signed Anagram Ferran - pp. 628-640
- The Change of the Violet - Mrs. A. M. F. Buchanan Annan, Signed Miss A. M. F. Buchanan - pp. 640
- Poetical Specimens - pp. 641
- Song - By a Young Lady of 14, of Kentucky - pp. 641
- To a Friend - pp. 641
- The Grave of Laura - pp. 641
- She Is Leaving the Land - pp. 641
- To a Poetess - Thomas H. Shreve - pp. 641-642
- Mr. Jefferson - Abel Parker Upshur [Unsigned] - pp. 642-650
- The Skeptic - Payne Kenyon Kilbourn - pp. 650-651
- Address - A. B. Longstreet - pp. 651-652
- Characteristics of Lamb - Henry Theodore Tuckerman - pp. 652-660
- The Quakeress, Number II - pp. 660-665
- The Dying Exile - R. A. P. - pp. 665-666
- The Prophetic Tapestry - pp. 666-675
- Lines on the Sudden Death of a Very Dear Friend - L. L. - pp. 675
- Harriet Livermore - pp. 675-676
- To the Constellation Lyra - William Ross Wallace - pp. 676-677
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- A Tale of the Revolution - By a Lady of Pennsylvania - pp. 681-686
- The Eagle and the Swan - Mrs. Lydia Jane Wheeler Pierson - pp. 686-687
- Abbot - W. C. P. - pp. 687-699
- Literary and Intellectual Distinction - pp. 699
- Formation of Opinions - pp. 699
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- Desultory Speculator, Number VII - George Watterston, Signed G. W—n - pp. 700-702
- To Her of the Hazel-Eye - Lewis Jacob Cist - pp. 702-703
- Ancient Eloquence - W. G. Howard - pp. 703-706
- By the Rivers of Babylon - George B. Wallis - pp. 706-707
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- Anburey's Travels in America - C. Campbell - pp. 710-712
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- Watterston, George
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- Southern literary messenger; devoted to every department of literature and the fine arts. / Volume 6, Issue 9
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"Desultory Speculator, Number VII [pp. 700-702]." In the digital collection Making of America Journal Articles. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/acf2679.0006.009. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 22, 2025.