136
Fugue.
[Chap. VIII.
286. Our next illustration is by Spohr. The original subject of the fugue is
In the last and closest stretto of this fugue, only the first notes of the subject are imitated by the alto and tenor; but the treble, which enters last, gives the entire subject, though with some modifications of detail.
Spohr. 'Fall of Babylon.
287. Our last examples, by a living composer, will illustrate the modern freedom of treatment in a stretto.
Brahms. Deutches Requiem.