"The Chevalier Seraphael," said Anastase, in his stilly voice, "has been writing a two-act piece to perform at his birth-night feast,[4]
which is in honor, not so much of his own nativity, as of his parents arriving just that day at the twenty-fifth anniversary of their nuptials. He was born in the fifth year of their marriage, and upon their marriage-day. We have not too much time to work (but a week), as I made bold to tell him; but it appears this little work suggested itself to him suddenly,--in his sleep, as he says. It is a fairy libretto, and I should imagine of first-rate attraction. This is the score; and as it is only in ma.n.u.script, I need not say all our care is required to preserve it just as it now is. Your part, Auchester, will be sufficiently obvious when you look it over with the Fraulein Cerinthia, as she is good enough to permit you to do so; but you had better not look at it at all until that time."
"But, sir, she can"t undertake to perfect me in the fiddle part, can she?"
"She could, I have no doubt, were it necessary," said Anastase, not satirically, but seriously; "but it just happens you are not to play."
"Not to play! Then what on earth am I to do? Sing?"
"Just so,--sing."
"Oh, how exquisite! but I have not sung for ever so long. In a chorus, I suppose, sir?"
"By no means. You see, Auchester, _I_ don"t know your vocal powers, and may not do you justice; but the Chevalier is pleased to prefer them to all others for this special part."
"But I never sang to him."
"He has a prepossession, I suppose. At all events, it will be rather a ticklish position for you, as you are to exhibit yourself and your voice in counterpart to the person who takes the precedence of all others in songful and personal gifts."
"Sir,"--I was astonished, for his still voice thrilled with the slightest tremble, and I knew he meant Maria,--"I am not fit to sing with her, or to stand by her, I know; but I think perhaps I could manage better than most other people, for most persons would be thinking of their own voices, and how to set them off against _hers_; now I shall only think how to keep my voice down, so that hers may sound above it, and everybody may listen to it, rather than to mine."
Maria looked continually in her lap, but her lips moved. "Will you not love him, Florimond?" she whispered, and something more; but I only heard this.
"I could well, Maria, if I had any love left to bestow; but you know how it is. I am not surprised at Charles"s worship."
It was the first time he had called me Charles, and I liked it very well,--him better than ever.
"I suppose, sir, I _may_ have a look at the score, though?"
"No, you may not," said Maria, "for I don"t mean we should use this copy. I shall write it all out first."
"But that will be useless," answered Anastase; "he made that copy for us."
"I beg your pardon; I took care to ask him, and he has only written out the parts for the instruments. He thinks nothing of throwing about his writing; but it shall be preserved, for all that."
"And how do you mean to achieve this copy?" demanded Anastase. "When will it be written?"
"It will be ready to-morrow morning."
"Fraulein Cerinthia!" I cried, aghast, "you are not going to sit up all night?"
"No, she is not," returned Anastase, coolly; and he left the sofa and walked to the table in the window where it lay,--a green-bound oblong volume of no slight thickness. "I take this home with me, Maria; and you will not see it until to-morrow at recreation time, when I will arrange for Auchester to join you, and you shall do what you can together."
"Thanks, sir! but surely you won"t sit up all night?"
"No, I shall not, nor will a copy be made. In the first place, it will not be proper to make a copy. Leave has not been given, and it cannot be thought of without leave,--did you not know that, Maria? No, I shall not sit up; I am too well off, and far too selfish, too considerate perhaps, besides, to wish to be ill."
Maria bore this as if she were thinking of something else,--namely, Florimond"s forehead, on which she had fixed her eyes; and truly, as he stood in the full light which so few contours pa.s.s into without detriment, it looked like lambent pearl beneath the golden shadow of his calm brown hair.
My hand was on the back of the sofa; she caught it suddenly in her own and pressed it, as if stirred to commotion by agony of bliss; and at the same moment, yet looking on him, she said, "I wonder whether the Chevalier had so many fine reasons when he chose somebody to administer the leadership, or whether he did it simply because there was no better to be had?"
He smiled, still looking at the book, which he had safely imprisoned between his two arms. "Most likely, in all simplicity. But a leader, even of an orchestra, under _his_ direction is not a fairy queen."
"Is Herr Anastase to lead the violins, then? How glorious!" I said to Maria.
"I knew you would say so. What then can go wrong?"
"And now I know what the Chevalier meant when he said, "I must go find my queen." You are to be t.i.tania."
"They say so. You shall hear all to-morrow,--I have not thought about it, for when Florimond brought me home, I was thinking of something else."
"He brought you home, then?"
"And told me on the way. But he had to tell me all over again when we came upstairs."
"But about the rehearsals?"
"We shall rehea.r.s.e here, in this very room, and also with the orchestra at a room in the village where the Chevalier will meet us; for he has his parents staying with him, and they are to know nothing that is to happen."
"I wish I could begin to study it to-night; I am so dreadfully out of voice since I had my violin,--I have never sung at all, indeed, except on Sundays, and then one does not hear one"s self sing at all."
"It is of no consequence, for the Chevalier told us your master, Aronach, told him that your voice was like your violin, but that it would not do to tell you so, because you might lose it, and your violin, once gained, you could never lose."
"That is true; but how very kind of him to say so! He need not have been afraid, though, for all I am so fond of singing. Perhaps he was afraid of making me vain."
Anastase caught me up quickly. "Carl, do not speak nonsense. No musicians are vain; no true artists, ever so young: they could no more be vain than the angels of the Most High!"
"Well said, Florimond!" cried Maria, in a moment. "But it strikes me that many a false artist, fallen-angel like, indulges in that propensity; so that it is best to guard against the possibility of being suspected, by announcing, with free tongues, the pride we have in our art."
"That is better to be announced by free fingers, or a voice like thine, than by tongues, however free; for even the false prophet can prate of truth."
I perceived now the turn they were taking; so I said, "And do miracles in the name of music too, sir, can"t they?--like Marc Iskar, who, I know, is not a true artist, for all that."
Anastase raised his brows. "True artists avoid personalities: that is the reason why we should use our hands instead of our tongues. Play a false artist down by the interpretation of true music; but never cavil, out of music, about what is false and true."
"Florimond, that is worthy to be your creed! You have mastery; we are only children."
"And children always chatter,--I remember that; but it is, perhaps, scarcely fair to blame those who own the power of expression for using it, when we feel our own tongue cleave to the roof of our mouth."
"So generous, too!" I thought; and the thought fastened on me. I felt more than ever satisfied that all should remain as it was between them.
FOOTNOTE:
[4] Mendelssohn wrote the "Son and Stranger" in 1829 for the silver wedding of his parents.
CHAPTER V.[5]