Taras Bulba is set in Kyiv, Taras's village in Ukraine, the
Zaporozhian Sich, and
Dubno, in the 17th century, at a time when Poland sought supremacy in the region. This synopsis is based on the version which was first produced in 1955. The opera is preceded by an orchestral overture.
Act I The opera opens in Kyiv, which is occupied by the Polish
szlachta, whose servants disperse a crowd listening to the song of a
kobzar, or Ukrainian bard. Taras Bulba leaves his sons Ostap and Andriy at a
monastery to be educated. Andriy has already been impressed by a Polish girl he has seen (who turns out to be Maryltsya, daughter of the Polish governor of Dubno). Ostap encourages the kobzar to sing a patriotic song; this angers the Poles, and in a scuffle the bard is killed.
Act II Taras's village. Ostap and Andriy return from Kiev and greet their mother Nastya. Bulba's friend Tovkach tells of the war being unleashed throughout Ukraine by the Poles. Despite his wife's protestations, Taras determines to take his sons to the Sich, the
Cossack stronghold, so as to participate in the struggles. Nastya collapses.
Act III The Sich. Taras successfully encourages the idle residents to rouse themselves for battle. Andriy and Ostap look forward to this; when Andriy has brief forebodings, Ostap promises always to support him. Drumbeats summon a council (
rada) of the Cossacks; with Taras's support, they elect a new, more pugnacious
hetman, Kyrdiaha, to lead them. He declares his intention to go into battle.
Act IV 's depiction of the
Cossack Taras Bulba, standing over his dead son
Scene 1 The Cossack camp. The Cossacks are besieging Dubno, where Maryltsya's father is governor. She has sent her
Tatar maid to find Andriy, and to beg his help as the inhabitants are suffering from starvation. Andriy agrees to help and, with the maid, takes food into the town through a secret passage.
Scene 2 Inside the castle. Andriy and Maryltsya express their love for each other. Andriy asks the Governor for her hand; the szlachta object on class grounds. On the advice of his priest, the Governor considers it expedient to allow Andriy to marry, and appoints him a Colonel in the Polish Army.
Scene 3 The Cossack camp. Taras hears news that the Tatars have destroyed the Sich. Then an escaping prisoner tells him of Andriy's desertion. Troops under Andriy make a
sortie from the castle, and Taras kills his own son for his treason. Ostap's feelings are torn and he sings a lament for his brother.
Scene 4 In a purely orchestral scene Taras and Ostap lead the Cossacks to victory against the Poles and take over the town of Dubno. This ending significantly differs from Gogol's original in which first Ostap and then Taras are captured by the Poles and given cruel public executions. Many other significant features of the novel – notably the equivocal behaviour of Taras and the Cossacks to local
Jews – are also omitted (see article
Taras Bulba). ==References==