Heine and Mendelssohn heard the news, and although disappointed, they knew that in such matters one cannot force people.
However, although they hit a wall at the Italian Theatre, Heine quickly came up with a new solution.
At the time in Paris, the opera stage had three great tenors: Giovanni Rubini, Adolphe Nourri, and Gilbert Dupre.
Since Rubini's path didn't work, perhaps it was worth trying to invite Nourri and Dupre.
Among them, Nourri had once crossed paths with Arthur.
Back then, when Arthur, the Great Dumas, Heine, and Andersen were dining at the Waai'er Restaurant, they ran into Nourri, who was meeting with Mazzini and Garibaldi.
However, since Heine wasn't too familiar with Nourri, he naturally led Mendelssohn and the others to find the Great Dumas.
The Great Dumas had fought alongside Nourri during the July Revolution of 1830, so there was some revolutionary camaraderie between them.