登陆注册
19597700000004

第4章 THE TWO MARIES(3)

The master was a Catholic German;one of those men born old,who seem all their lives fifty years of age,even at eighty.And yet,his brown,sunken,wrinkled face still kept something infantile and artless in its dark creases.The blue of innocence was in his eyes,and a gay smile of springtide abode upon his lips.His iron-gray hair,falling naturally like that of the Christ in art,added to his ecstatic air a certain solemnity which was absolutely deceptive as to his real nature;for he was capable of committing any silliness with the most exemplary gravity.His clothes were a necessary envelope,to which he paid not the slightest attention,for his eyes looked too high among the clouds to concern themselves with such materialities.

This great unknown artist belonged to the kindly class of the self-forgetting,who give their time and their soul to others,just as they leave their gloves on every table and their umbrella at all doors.His hands were of the kind that are dirty as soon as washed.In short,his old body,badly poised on its knotted old legs,proving to what degree a man can make it the mere accessory of his soul,belonged to those strange creations which have been properly depicted only by a German,--by Hoffman,the poet of that which seems not to exist but yet has life.

Such was Schmucke,formerly chapel-master to the Margrave of Anspach;a musical genius,who was now examined by a council of devotes,and asked if he kept the fasts.The master was much inclined to answer,"Look at me!"but how could he venture to joke with pious dowagers and Jansenist confessors?This apocryphal old fellow held such a place in the lives of the two Maries,they felt such friendship for the grand and simple-minded artist,who was happy and contented in the mere comprehension of his art,that after their marriage,they each gave him an annuity of three hundred francs a year,--a sum which sufficed to pay for his lodging,beer,pipes,and clothes.Six hundred francs a year and his lessons put him in Eden.Schmucke had never found courage to confide his poverty and his aspirations to any but these two adorable young girls,whose hearts were blooming beneath the snow of maternal rigor and the ice of devotion.This fact explains Schmucke and the girlhood of the two Maries.

No one knew then,or later,what abbe or pious spinster had discovered the old German then vaguely wandering about Paris,but as soon as mothers of families learned that the Comtesse de Granville had found a music-master for her daughters,they all inquired for his name and address.Before long,Schmucke had thirty pupils in the Marais.This tardy success was manifested by steel buckles to his shoes,which were lined with horse-hair soles,and by a more frequent change of linen.

His artless gaiety,long suppressed by noble and decent poverty,reappeared.He gave vent to witty little remarks and flowery speeches in his German-Gallic patois,very observing and very quaint and said with an air which disarmed ridicule.But he was so pleased to bring a laugh to the lips of his two pupils,whose dismal life his sympathy had penetrated,that he would gladly have made himself wilfully ridiculous had he failed in being so by nature.

According to one of the nobler ideas of religious education,the young girls always accompanied their master respectfully to the door.There they would make him a few kind speeches,glad to do anything to give him pleasure.Poor things!all they could do was to show him their womanhood.Until their marriage,music was to them another life within their lives,just as,they say,a Russian peasant takes his dreams for reality and his actual life for a troubled sleep.With the instinct of protecting their souls against the pettiness that threatened to overwhelm them,against the all-pervading asceticism of their home,they flung themselves into the difficulties of the musical art,and spent themselves upon it.Melody,harmony,and composition,three daughters of heaven,whose choir was led by an old Catholic faun drunk with music,were to these poor girls the compensation of their trials;they made them,as it were,a rampart against their daily lives.

Mozart,Beethoven,Gluck,Paesiello,Cimarosa,Haydn,and certain secondary geniuses,developed in their souls a passionate emotion which never passed beyond the chaste enclosure of their breasts,though it permeated that other creation through which,in spirit,they winged their flight.When they had executed some great work in a manner that their master declared was almost faultless,they embraced each other in ecstasy and the old man called them his Saint Cecilias.

The two Maries were not taken to a ball until they were sixteen years of age,and then only four times a year in special houses.They were not allowed to leave their mother's side without instructions as to their behavior with their partners;and so severe were those instructions that they dared say only yes or no during a dance.The eye of the countess never left them,and she seemed to know from the mere movement of their lips the words they uttered.Even the ball-dresses of these poor little things were piously irreproachable;their muslin gowns came up to their chins with an endless number of thick ruches,and the sleeves came down to their wrists.Swathing in this way their natural charms,this costume gave them a vague resemblance to Egyptian hermae;though from these blocks of muslin rose enchanting little heads of tender melancholy.They felt themselves the objects of pity,and inwardly resented it.What woman,however innocent,does not desire to excite envy?

同类推荐
  • 垂光集

    垂光集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 平滇始末

    平滇始末

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 唐书直笔

    唐书直笔

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 江西诗派小序

    江西诗派小序

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 艾子杂说

    艾子杂说

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 养仙记

    养仙记

    当迷惘少年捡到失忆萝莉,他该怎么做?少年深思熟虑,决定为了人类的复兴大业,将她送去最富盛名的修仙门派。谁知萝莉本是暴萝,短短几天便将门派上下给揍了个遍。痛定思痛,少年又觉得她应该先学会待人接物,遂送她去了世间最牛叉的服务机构。奈何掌柜是抖M,转眼即将萝莉奉成女王,任其蹂躏各方来客。无奈之下,少年只好自己带着萝莉,开始一场只属于他们的旅途……
  • 我的第一本物理探索发现全纪录

    我的第一本物理探索发现全纪录

    纵观物理学的发展史,可以分为物理学萌芽时期、经典物理学时期和现代物理学时期三个阶段。主要的物理学科有经典力学、理论力学、电磁学、电动力学、热力学、统计物理学、相对论、时空物理、量子力学、核物理学、地球物理学、生物物理学、天体物理学等。物理学的永恒主题是寻找各种序、对称性和对称破缺、守恒律或不变性。
  • 无上寻仙道

    无上寻仙道

    寻仙路,坎坷多。少年郎,空自狂。八仙门,孽缘生。英烈女,独悲伤。****************前世今生,重生为匪。少年英气,锐不可当!诸位且看,少年郎‘柳天’如何玩转异界,一步步踏上无上寻仙道。
  • 重启三国

    重启三国

    优化戒指功能:复活+优化体质+优化兵器穿越到三国,主角手戴优化戒指,率一班兄弟横扫腐朽的东汉末年。自力为王,令潘凤力擒华雄,在陈宫跳的白门楼下堆被子、复活被砍头的高顺,于是主角开始标榜顺我者昌,逆我者……有本事你昌给我看!~给吕布下战书,与曹操决战平原,同孙策争雄水上霸主,令贾诩与诸葛亮隔千里决战于帷幄之中。与刘备、袁术、袁绍等三国众英雄一起逐鹿……还原三国历史风貌,一展名将风流。加入新时代元素,绽放新的三国世界。问天苍茫大地,谁主沉浮?且看我优化三国!
  • 萌萌娇妻御四王

    萌萌娇妻御四王

    女主角是一个十七岁的高中女生,正值青春,却连自己也不知道自己怎么穿越了一个连朝代都没有记载的封建王朝,阴差阳错的当了人人畏惧的冷王爷的---冷王妃?“老婆是什么东西?”某王爷呆萌呆萌的拽着某女的袖子。“放开,我要睡觉!”某女不耐烦的抖了抖袖子,回到床上去。
  • 十亿年之后

    十亿年之后

    如果有一天,你从梦中醒来,发现自己在一颗蛋里,你会惊慌失措,惶恐不安,或者谛笑皆非?姬烈便遇到这样的荒唐,他捅开蛋壳,发现一个更为荒唐的世界,以及荒唐得不真实的人。这是个从一粒蛋开始的故事。故事开始的时间,在十亿年之后。
  • 异世非妖

    异世非妖

    她,是不老不死的异类,为天道不容。送往异世,却成为萝莉一枚。好吧,萝莉就萝莉,反正她不在乎。没爹没娘?没关系,反正她早就习惯一个人了。阿偶,这里的人均寿命300?没关系,她还活了一千年呢。以武为尊?没事,她会武功。但但但,谁可以告诉她这是怎么回事,明明是要过平静日子的她,现在就是个战斗狂?敢不敢不追杀她,敢不敢不仗人多势众?姐一定会让你们知道,狂暴的孤女你们惹不起------------------本人简介无能,,请大家原谅。
  • 九转成神

    九转成神

    世人眼中的废材,懦弱无能的二世祖唐风,痛击夺爱小人,碾杀杀父仇敌。小小的一个虚天鼎,引来多少杀机,揭露多少人心!也正是因为它,唐风才能脱离前世的险境,穿越到这个新奇的世界。
  • 铜镜辞

    铜镜辞

    他是九天之上的仙,长发披肩明眸皓齿,一袭白衣俯瞰芸芸众生。她生自于万花中,却偏偏不是花中的王,可她却是最恋他的一个,朝拾露只为让他有最好的露水煮花茶。她知道,他最爱的,就是花茶,四月的花。
  • 都市那些事儿

    都市那些事儿

    一千九百八十年间的华夏某个小山村发生的一件怪事,造就了一个悲剧,也造就了一段传奇故事,且看悲剧人物在现代都市里的闯荡经验!