The opera tells the story of the evening star, who falls in love with a mortal princess. He begs God to send him to earth, despite the protestations of the other angels. The princess ultimately chooses to marry another mortal, leaving the evening star condemned to immortality.[6]
^Fanfare - Volume 19, Issue 1 - Page 84 1995 "His first opera, Luceafarul (The Evening Star), was written in 1921 for Cluj's Romanian Opera. This was followed by Golem (1924), Eroii de la Rovine (1925), Horia (1937), and Arald (1942), and all but the last work received their premieres in ..."
^Wood, Charles E. (2008). "The One-Act Operas of Nicolae Bretan"(PDF). Texas Tech University. Retrieved July 16, 2020. Beginning with the King's Daughter's lines Căci vai, un chip aievea nu eşti... Bretan quotes from another Eminescu poem Din valurile vremii (From Waves of Time)… The text [of the duet] is the first quatrain from another poem by Eminescu, Lasă-Ńi lumea ta uitată (Leave and Forget Your World). … As Bretan composes the last lines of the opera, he chooses to end the opera, to quote from yet another poem by Eminescu: S-a dus amorul.