PLOT SUMMARY
Act I
Colonel Fairfax, a man of science, but formerly a soldier of
great and dashing bravery, is confined in the Tower of London.
He is under sentence of death as a sorcerer. Although he is a
student of alchemy, Fairfax is still young and handsome, and
Phoebe has lost her heart to him, for she sees him occasionally
taking exercise on the Beauchamp Tower.
As the curtain rises the unhappy girl is discovered sitting at
her spinning wheel sighing-over her hopeless love for the
prisoner. Wilfred Shadbolt, head jailer and assistant tormenter,
is greatly put out, for Phoebe will have none of him, though
before the arrival of Fairfax she had not been so averse to his
attentions. Dame Carruthers, the housekeeper to the Tower,
believing Fairfax to be guilty, resents Phoebe's praise of him,
and her criticisms of the Tower. The Dame was born in the old
Keep, and the Tower is very dear to her; she leaves no doubt of
her sentiments in the noble air "Then our gallant Norman foes."
Sergeant Meryll, of the Yeomen of the Guard, is saddened by the
thought of the approaching execution of Fairfax. He greatly
admires Fairfax for his brilliant career as a soldier and not
even the imminent arrival of his son, Leonard Meryll, can raise
his despondent spirits, though there is a hope that Leonard may
bring a reprieve from Court with him for Fairfax.
Leonard arrives even while Phoebe and her father are discussing
the sad case of the unfortunate prisoner; there is no reprieve.
None saw him enter, and the unheralded coming gives Sergeant
Meryll an idea. "Give me the dispatch," he says . . . "lie hidden
for a space." Leonard does so willingly, for Fairfax was once
his great friend. A moment later Fairfax passes by, under guard,
on his way to the Cold Harbour Tower to await his end in
solitude. He sees and recognizes Sergeant Meryll and bids him
cheer up; as a soldier, he says, he knows how to die. If life is
a boon, he says, death must inevitably come too soon. Phoebe and
her father are overcome with emotion and leave him.
Fairfax asks the Lieutenant of the Tower to grant him a favor.
He is, he says, imprisoned as a result of the machinations of his
cousin, Sir Clarence Plotwhistle -- a greedy fellow to whom the
Fairfax estates must naturally fall if Colonel Fairfax should die
unmarried. Fairfax's request is therefore that the Lieutenant
shall find him a woman willing to go through a form of marriage
with him: her dower shall be Fairfax's name and a hundred crowns.
Since he is to be executed in an hour's time it should be easy
enough to find someone.
As Fairfax moves on his way there is laughing and shouting, and a
roistering throng of men and women, pursuing a wandering jester
and a merrymaid, appear. The jester, Jack Point, and the girl,
Elsie Maynard, are both more than a little terrified, for the
crowd, in demanding entertainment, threaten to throw them into
the river if they do not come up to expectations. They sing them
the "singing farce of the Merryman and his maid," and are about
to be mobbed by the less appreciative members of the audience
when the Lieutenant reappears from the Cold Harbour Tower.
The crowd is dispersed and the Lieutenant, learning all about
Elsie and Jack Point, suggests to Elsie that she be Fairfax's
bride for the short hour he has to live. The hundred crowns
which she is to receive tempt and persuade her. She is led
blindfolded to the cell where Fairfax and his confessor await
her. While she is gone Point (in the song "I've jibe and joke")
explains his calling of a jester and is engaged by the Lieutenant
as his jester.
Then Phoebe reflects on her state, and finally finds Wilfred
alone. She determines to get the keys of Fairfax's cell from
him. Exerting all her charms and flattering Wilfred, she
compliments him on his jollity and wit, though he is in truth the
heaviest-minded dolt. Slyly she takes the keys from his belt and
hands them to her father, who disappears immediately.
Whilst her father is away she sings a tempting little ditty "Were
I thy bride." As she begins the last verse the keys are pushed
back into her hand and she cleverly puts them back on Wilfred's
belt. She runs off and Wilfred wanders away bewildered and
happy.
No sooner has he gone than Sergeant Meryll and Fairfax appear
from the Tower. Fairfax has shaved off his beard and has put on
the dress of a Yeoman of the Guard. He is to pose as the
Sergeant's son Leonard. Sergeant Meryll presents his "son" to
the assembled yeomen, who cheer him to the echo. Phoebe, too,
welcomes this "brother" far more lingeringly and ecstatically
than might be considered perfectly natural. Then while "brother
and sister" are greeting one another the clock of St. Peter's
begins to toll and crowds surge around to witness the execution
of Fairfax. Fairfax (alias Leonard) and two other Yeomen are
ordered to fetch the prisoner, but are back in a moment: the
prisoner has escaped!
Act II
(Two Days Later)
Jack Point is now in a quandary. He has agreed to Elsie's
marrying the imprisoned Fairfax because he was assured that
Fairfax would die within the hour. Now that Fairfax has escaped
Elsie is still a married woman, and Jack Point cannot himself
marry her. He conceives a plan, however. With the dazzling
bribe of a free schooling in the trade of a jester he persuades
Wilfred to help him in his scheme. They move off mysteriously.
Meanwhile Fairfax has learned of the identity of the woman whom
he married and resolves to woo her and thus test her fidelity. A
shot from the tower sets everyone agog and an excited crowd
quickly gathers. Wilfred and Point both appear with an air of
importance. Wilfred asserts that he has had a desperate struggle
with Colonel Fairfax, whom he discovered in a dark corner of the
battlements. Fairfax, after a cunning twist, eluded Wilfred and
dived into the river. Wilfred, however, was equal to the
occasion and shot Fairfax with his arquebus as he swam in the
Thames. All this Jack Point endorses most heartily.
Elsie admits to the supposed Leonard Meryll that she loves him,
when there is an interruption. A pardon for Fairfax has arrived,
and simultaneously comes news that Fairfax is returning to claim
his bride. Poor Elsie is distracted: she must follow Fairfax,
though her heart is elsewhere. There is much musical analysis of
love.
Fairfax comes. Elsie comes forward with bowed head, lamenting
her cruel fate. She looks up and with a start she sees that the
"Leonard" she loves is none other than this detested Fairfax.
With a cry of joy she falls into his arms amid general rejoicing.
Meanwhile Dame Carruthers has forced Sergeant Meryll into a
proposal, and Phoebe Meryll is promised in marriage to the
uncouth Wilfred.
The final scene is one of general gaiety--only Jack Point is left
without a mate--and still singing the refrain "Heigh-dy,
heigh-dy! Misery me, lack-aday-dee! . . . all for the love of a
ladye!" he falls insensible at the feet of the now happily
united couple.
[Plot summary from the book The Victor Book of the Opera, RCA Manufacturing Co., Camden, NJ, 1936.]
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