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A Miracle in Music

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A much-admired patron of the arts and something of a ‘ladies’ man, the Duke of Arkholme, a very rich and celebrated aristocrat, is as passionate about music as he is bored by the attentions of predatory Society ladies. He decides to launch at his own expense a competition to encourage talented new composers, but he finds that the entrants he has to listen to are insipid and uninspiring.So when he hears the sparkling brilliant music he has been searching for being played on his own piano in a room next to his bedroom in his own home in the middle of the night, he is bewitched. Even more so when the pianist proves to be a pale, elfin, auburn-haired beauty called Vanola. She forces the Duke at gunpoint to listen longer to her music and she relates the story of her Hungarian father and his failure to attract any interest in his superb and innovative compositions in England.He is also horrified to be told by Vanola that his employees are corrupt and taking bribes from entrants to his auditions, so that the real talent, such as her father’s, is excluded. Realising that she is half-starved and that her father is at death’s door, he is determined to make amends, despite her implacable contempt for him for employing crooked Managers. Soon the Duke realises that he has fallen in love – but too late. Vanola’s father is dead and in her grief and fury she has fled to who knows where and it seems that he has lost her and his one chance of happiness forever.

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Author’s Note
Author’s NoteThe theatre built on the same site in Bow Street, Covent Garden, and which is the present Royal Opera House, was opened on May I5th 1858. The first was built in 1732. The present theatre saw the establishment of Verdi, Wagner, Puccini and Strauss – also the debut of eighteen year old Adelina Patti. Since the last war the Covent Garden Opera Company has joined with the Sadler’s Wells Theatre Ballet, which in 1956 received a Royal Charter from the Queen and became known as the Royal Ballet. The descriptions of Kate Hamilton’s Saloon are correct and she was the Queen of London’s nightlife from the eighteen-fifties until she died at the beginning of the sixties. The Salon, however, carried on and the Shah of Persia patronised it on his first visit to London in 1872. He was reputed to have been an embarrassing guest when at Buckingham Palace he executed a member of his staff with a bowstring. When this was done, the body was buried at night in the Palace grounds.

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