Abstract :
Lucretia’s principal virtue is her undoing. Her chastity is vaunted as the guarantor of
Collatinus’s honour and standing, as the trigger for Tarquinius’s lust, and its brutal loss as the
symbol of the corruption of the Etruscans and thus the catalyst for Junius’s ascent to power.
She is established in a patriarchal system as a desexed woman, as innocent as a child, who can
only exist as a chaste wife. When her virtue is polluted by rape, she has no choice but to kill
herself in an attempt to restore her function as chaste wife.
Britten’s opera encodes the naming of Lucretia in terms redolent of the oppressive ‘speechacts’
of Peter Grimes. Through tonal and motivic association the projection of her innocence
and the ‘stain’ introduced by her rape are worked into the opera’s design at the level of longrange
musical structure. Through analysis of the thematic implications of musical process in the
work, this article opens to view the complex and at times conflicting moral hermeneutics of the
work.