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ARGUMENT
ACT
I.A
Norwegian brig is driven out of her course on the homeward voyage,
and near the rockbound Norwegian Coast meets with the phantom ship of
the “Flying Dutchman.” Daland, the captain of the Norwegian
vessel, enters into a compact with the “Flying Dutchman” whose
identity, however, is unknown to him, to give him a home and his
daughter, Senta, for a wife, in consideration of the rich treasures
stored away in the “Flying Dutchman’s” ship.ACT
II.When
the curtain rises, a bevy of Norwegian Girls, among whom are Daland’s
daughter, Senta and her nurse Mary, are discovered turning their
spinning wheels and singing a spinning song. A picture of the “Flying
Dutchman” adorns the wall, and Senta, after singing a ballad
sketching in incoherent, passionate strains, a story of the subject
of the picture, solemnly vows that she will become the means of
terminating the torment, to which the “Flying Dutchman” is
subjected, and who can only be saved by a woman unwaveringly constant
in her love. During the confusion which ensues upon this avowal, the
father’s arrival is announced. In the time intervening between this
announcement and Daland’s arrival, Erik, Senta’s lover, pleads
for his love, and endeavors to persuade Senta that her infatuation
for a phantom lover will lead to her irretrievable ruin; but to no
avail. Daland arrives and presents the “Flying Dutchman” to his
daughter. Senta accepts him as her affianced husband.ACT
III.The
curtain rises on the crew of the Norwegian brig singing a frolicking
sailor song, and jesting with a bevy of girls, who bring them
refreshments. The special object of their jest and fun (in which the
girls also join), is the crew of the “Flying Dutchman,” whom they
cannot persuade to join in their merry-making. They finally conclude
that the crew of the neighboring ship must be dead, and the suspicion
gains belief that the “Flying Dutchman” is playing one of his
ugly tricks. The crew of the “Flying Dutchman” sing a fantastic
song to which the Norwegian sailors intently listen, and whose weird
words they finally endeavor to drown in a song of their own. Erik
pleads again with Senta, and the “Flying Dutchman” appears on the
scene, and orders his crew to prepare for immediate departure,
thinking Senta had proven as faithless and inconstant in the love she
had vowed him, as the rest of womankind he had come in contact with.
Senta, however, vows that she will be true to him, and even after the
“Flying Dutchman” discloses his identity, she does not falter in
her resolution. “Thine will I be, until death shall us part!” she
passionately exclaims and the curtain falls.