‘Look! […] Things People Can’t See!’ Wordbooks, Reader-Listenership, and Invisible Theatre in Handel’s Oratorios
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Results and Discussion
2.1. Reader-Listenership and Precedent for Oratorio as Unstaged Drama
2.2. Stage Pictures, Character Movement, and Props in the Inner Eye of the Reader-Listener
- As he is going to drink, a Hand appears writing upon the
- Wall over against him; he sees it, turns pale with Fear,
- drops the Bowl of Wine, falls back in his Seat, trembling
- from Head to Foot, and his Knees knocking against each other.6
2.3. Non-Specification of Events and Characters
2.4. Librettist-Specific Dramaturgy-by-Wordbook
2.5. Paratextuality
2.6. Attitudes to the Libretto
2.7. Directions for Further Research
The two original Poems […] had they been printed entire, and annex’d to the Drama, in a small Character [a small font], it would have been an agreeable Compliment paid to the Audience, had heighten’d the Relish of the Musick, and been no Injustice done to the Fitter of them for the Theatre; whose dramatic Moderato (or Mean between them) can very well bear being compared together.
3. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
| ASIN | Amazon Standard Identification Number |
| Cah | Cambridge (Massachusetts), Harvard |
| EEBO | Early English Books Online |
| GB | Great Britain |
| Lbl | British Library |
| US | United States |
| 1 | In his facsimile reprint of Anonymous (1732), Hume suggests the playwright Aaron Hill as the author of this comment (see Anonymous 1732, p. iii). |
| 2 | I thank Katherina Lindekens for bringing this to my attention in private correspondence, 10 January 2016. Throughout this article, the wordbooks referred to are those prepared for the première performance, unless otherwise stated. |
| 3 | These examples have also been noted by recent scholars, such as Cervantès (1995, p. 586), who quotes and comments upon Hill’s statement, and Robarts (2008, p. 4) and Degott (2021) do the same with Fielding’s scene. |
| 4 | For a debate over whether Italian oratorio was staged, see (Boyd 1978; Dean 1978; Boyd and Crowther 1978). The Handelian oratorio in England, however, may reasonably be considered an unstaged music-drama. |
| 5 | The communicative use of typography in wordbooks will be discussed at a later point in this article, but for now it is worth at least briefly noting the hanging indentation, exclusive use of italic typeface, (non-italic) opening square bracket, and prose layout (the stage directions are in prose rather than verse, and therefore move onto a new line when space on the page runs out, and do not capitalize the first letter of that new line) that set the stage directions apart from the text to be sung. ‘The layout of the verse’ in a wordbook, as Robarts (2008, p. 320) observed, ‘is interspersed, and is therefore variegated, by stage directions, character cues, and the various marks of punctuation, all of which enliven the visual [and, I would argue, intellectual and interpretive] effect, particularly when viewed as a double-page spread.’ |
| 6 | Italics, opening square bracket, and hanging indentation original. The stage direction is also written into the manuscript score (Handel 1744, f. 105v). |
| 7 | This is also how the event is described in the Book of Samuel, the ultimate source for the Saul libretto. ‘And Michal took an image, and laid it in the bed, and put a pillow of goat’s hair for his bolster, and covered it with a cloth.’ (King James Bible 2011, Samuel 1, 19:13.) |
| 8 | On the Belshazzar example, see (Twomey 2020, vol. 2, p. 3). |
| 9 | The exceptions occur in Act 2 (‘SCENE IX. SAUL at the Feast of the New Moon’; Jennens 1738, p. 17) and Act 3 (‘SCENE I. SAUL disguis’d at Endor’; Jennens 1738, p. 19). Even these directions are more general than specific as to location; feasts can occur in many different places (is Saul ‘at the Feast’ being held in his home, his palace, outdoors?), and Endor is a village (the direction does not say that Saul is outside a particular house in Endor). |
| 10 | For the description of Saul as a ‘SACRED DRAMA’, see (Jennens 1738, p. 1). For the scripture oratorios, see (Jennens[?] 1739, pp. xlv–xlviv; Jennens [1992] 1743). I sincerely thank Professor John H. Roberts for helping me to locate Jennens[?] 1739, in private correspondence, 25 May 2020. |
| 11 | On the use of chorale commentary in Bach’s oratorios, see (Leaver [1997] 2003, p. 95). |
| 12 | For the ‘CHORUS of Women’ heading, see (Jennens 1738, p. 7). |
| 13 | On the fluid treatment of the chorus’s characterisation, knowledge, involvement, and perspective in Greek tragedy, see (Rutherford 2012, pp. 222–23, 225, 230). On the even greater detachment of the chorus in Bach’s oratorios, at least when singing chorales, see (Leaver [1997] 2003, p. 95). |
| 14 | David’s lamentation on the death of Saul and Jonathan was well known to contain a version of this latter phrase (‘Great was the Pleasure I enjoyed in thee’), and David had exclaimed ‘Alas !my Brother!’ when told of Jonathan’s death in the previous scene of this very libretto. (Jennens 1738, p. 21). |
| 15 | As Robarts observed, the autograph and fair copy of the score both give this stage direction as ‘Dej = going out meets Lichas’, and that ‘[t]he two manuscript scores thus give a mental picture of two characters crossing, as if one makes an exit as the other enters’. Robarts suggests that some similar stage direction may have appeared in the libretto copy from which Handel worked while composing the music (a libretto copy since lost). (Robarts 2008, pp. 196–97). |
| 16 | Iöle is, of course, far from a silent character overall; she has many lines at other points in the drama. But she is silent throughout this scene. Whether the performer would remain standing and silent throughout the scene is an interesting question that is unlikely ever to be answered satisfactorily. |
| 17 | Although we do not have space for a detailed examination of differences between the stage directions of spoken theatre texts and opera librettos on the one hand and oratorio librettos on the other, the contrast appears to be one of kind, rather than of detail or quantity. Spoken plays, operas, and oratorios all vary in the number and specificity of their stage directions from author to author and work to work, rather than suggesting such differences to be a matter of distinct genres; but promising things that could (probably) never have been presented on stage seems the exclusive purview of the oratorio libretto (or perhaps, rather, of certain oratorio librettists). This warrants further study, and I thank Dr Antonio Cascelli for pointing it out to me in private correspondence. |
| 18 | See (Zazzo 2015, p. 26; also Twomey 2020, vol. 2, p. 181). Both Zazzo and Robarts also observe that wordbooks themselves contain paratexts to their own text (for instance the dramatis personae, advertisements and authorial advertisements, prefaces, dedications, front matter, and translations). See (Zazzo 2015, p. 27; Robarts 2008, pp. 336–37). |
| 19 | Italians of the era called these double quotation marks virgolette; Robarts termed ‘diple’ marks. Their use is not uniform; in some cases, these signal reported speech, or indicate that the marked passage of the libretto is paraphrased or quoted directly from another source. On ‘virgolette’, see (Rosand [1991] 2007, pp. 18, 207–8; Robarts 2008, p. 330). The statement about the black line in the margin appeared marked ‘N. B.’ in the first wordbook for Belshazzar. See (Jennens 1744, p. 2). |
| 20 | I thank Estelle Murphy for pointing out to me that Hercules. A Masque was not in fact a stand-alone masque; rather, it formed an act in The Novelty, Every Act a Play. See (Motteux et al. 1697). |
| 21 | On the use of wordbooks (which Walkling usually calls ‘programme libretti’) for dramatick operas (also called ‘semi operas’ by other scholars), see (Walkling 2019a). On the use of wordbooks (again, ‘programme libretti’) for masques, see (Walkling 2019b). On the use of wordbooks for serenatas, see (Owens 2009). On the use of wordbooks for odes, see (Murphy, forthcoming). |
| 22 | And non-English-language musical theatre as well. On wordbooks with translations of Italian opera libretti, see (Zazzo 2015), although the extent to which the ode can be called a ‘theatre’ piece is perhaps debatable, given that the form seems not generally to have involved drama. |
| 23 | The extent to which serenatas were (semi-)staged remains unclear. |
| 24 | On the availability of prospective wordbooks, see (Greencombe 2012, p. 673). |
| 25 | This is the case in many wordbooks for Handel oratorios, but that for Solomon will serve as an almost-randomly selected example: (Mendes[?] 1749b). On these typographical conventions as standard in Baroque music, see (Harris 2001, p. 297). |
| 26 | For instance, Theodora’s recitative ‘---O my Irene’, which begins as accompanied recitative, but changes to simple recitative at the words ‘---Stay me not’. The entire passage is headed ‘RECITATIVE accompany’d.’, and, although the change from accompanied to simple recitative occurs in the middle of a poetic line (between the fifth and sixth syllables of an iambic pentameter, a line with ten syllables), and in the voice of the same character (Theodora), the wordbook imposes a typographical line-break (new paragraph) and indentation to mark the change of declamation style: While safe my Honour.--- ---Stay me not, dear Friend, See (Morell 1750, p. 19). |
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Twomey, C. ‘Look! […] Things People Can’t See!’ Wordbooks, Reader-Listenership, and Invisible Theatre in Handel’s Oratorios. Arts 2025, 14, 144. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts14060144
Twomey C. ‘Look! […] Things People Can’t See!’ Wordbooks, Reader-Listenership, and Invisible Theatre in Handel’s Oratorios. Arts. 2025; 14(6):144. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts14060144
Chicago/Turabian StyleTwomey, Cathal. 2025. "‘Look! […] Things People Can’t See!’ Wordbooks, Reader-Listenership, and Invisible Theatre in Handel’s Oratorios" Arts 14, no. 6: 144. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts14060144
APA StyleTwomey, C. (2025). ‘Look! […] Things People Can’t See!’ Wordbooks, Reader-Listenership, and Invisible Theatre in Handel’s Oratorios. Arts, 14(6), 144. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts14060144

