登陆注册
26101100000029

第29章

They had spent the morning together before this second performance of Parsifal that closed their series, in the woods above the theatre, and Michael, no longer blurting out his speeches, but speaking in the quiet, orderly manner in which he thought, discussed his plans.

"I shall come back to London with you after Munich," he said, "and settle down to study. I do know a certain amount about harmony already; I have been mugging it up for the last three years. But Imust do something as well as learn something, and, as I told you, I'm going to take up the piano seriously."Falbe was not attending particularly.

"A fine instrument, the piano," he remarked. "There is certainly something to be done with a piano, if you know how to do it. I can strum a bit myself. Some keys are harder than others--the black notes.""Yes; what of the black notes?" asked Michael.

"Oh! they're black. The rest are white. I beg your pardon!"Michael laughed.

"When you have finished drivelling," he said, "you might let me know.""I have finished drivelling, Michael. I was thinking about something else.""Not really?"

"Really."

"Then it was impolite of you, but you haven't any manners. I was talking about my career. I want to do something, and these large hands are really rather nimble. But I must be taught. The question is whether you will teach me."Falbe hesitated.

"I can't tell you," he said, "till I have heard you play. It's like this: I can't teach you to play unless you know how, and Ican't tell if you know how until I have heard you. If you have got that particular sort of temperament that can put itself into the notes out of the ends of your fingers, I can teach you, and I will.

But if you haven't, I shall feel bound to advise you to try the Jew's harp, and see if you can get it out of your teeth. I'm not mocking you; I fancy you know that. But some people, however keenly and rightly they feel, cannot bring their feelings out through their fingers. Others can; it is a special gift. If you haven't got it, I can't teach you anything, and there is no use in wasting your time and mine. You can teach yourself to be frightfully nimble with your fingers, and all the people who don't know will say: 'How divinely Lord Comber plays! That sweet thing;is it Brahms or Mendelssohn?' But I can't really help you towards that; you can do that for yourself. But if you've got the other, Ican and will teach you all that you really know already.""Go on!" said Michael.

"That's just the devil with the piano," said Falbe. "It's the easiest instrument of all to make a show on, and it is the rarest sort of person who can play on it. That's why, all those years, Ihave hated giving lessons. If one has to, as I have had to, one must take any awful miss with a pigtail, and make a sham pianist of her. One can always do that. But it would be waste of time for you and me; you wouldn't want to be made a sham pianist, and simply I wouldn't make you one."Michael turned round.

"Good Lord!" he said, "the suspense is worse than I can bear.

Isn't there a piano in your room? Can't we go down there, and have it over?""Yes, if you wish. I can tell at once if you are capable of playing--at least, whether I think you are capable of playing--whether I can teach you."

"But I haven't touched a piano for a week," said Michael.

"It doesn't matter whether you've touched a piano for a year."Michael had not been prevented by the economy that made him travel second-class from engaging a carriage by the day at Baireuth, since that clearly was worth while, and they found it waiting for them by the theatre. There was still time to drive to Falbe's lodging and get through this crucial ordeal before the opera, and they went straight there. A very venerable instrument, which Falbe had not yet opened, stood against the wall, and he struck a few notes on it.

"Completely out of tune," he said; "but that doesn't matter. Now then!""But what am I to play?" asked Michael.

"Anything you like."

He sat down at the far end of the room, put his long legs up on to another chair and waited. Michael sent a despairing glance at that gay face, suddenly grown grim, and took his seat. He felt a paralysing conviction that Falbe's judgment, whatever that might turn out to be, would be right, and the knowledge turned his fingers stiff. From the few notes that Falbe had struck he guessed on what sort of instrument his ordeal was to take place, and yet he knew that Falbe himself would have been able to convey to him the sense that he could play, though the piano was all out of tune, and there might be dumb, disconcerting notes in it. There was justice in Falbe's dictum about the temperament that lay behind the player, which would assert itself through any faultiness of instrument, and through, so he suspected, any faultiness of execution.

He struck a chord, and heard it jangle dissonantly.

"Oh, it's not fair," he said.

"Get on!" said Falbe.

In spite of Germany there occurred to Michael a Chopin prelude, at which he had worked a little during the last two months in London.

The notes he knew perfectly; he had believed also that he had found a certain conception of it as a whole, so that he could make something coherent out of it, not merely adding bar to correct bar.

And he began the soft repetition of chord-quavers with which it opened.

Then after stumbling wretchedly through two lines of it, he suddenly forgot himself and Falbe, and the squealing unresponsive notes. He heard them no more, absorbed in the knowledge of what he meant by them, of the mood which they produced in him. His great, ungainly hands had all the gentleness and self-control that strength gives, and the finger-filling chords were as light and as fine as the settling of some poised bird on a bough. In the last few lines of the prelude a deep bass note had to be struck at the beginning of each bar; this Michael found was completely dumb, but so clear and vivid was the effect of it in his mind that he scarcely noticed that it returned no answer to his finger. . . .

At the end he sat without moving, his hands dropped on to his knees.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 腹黑相公:吃定你

    腹黑相公:吃定你

    苏小小很悲催,她是真的很悲催,别人穿越都是王妃安心的做个小米虫。丫的,她一朝穿越穿成个乞丐也就算了。还穿成个被追杀的小乞丐。历来哪个穿越女主不是在穿越世界活的顺风顺水,外加美男收割机。她倒好,收割美男没收成,收了个大乞丐,还要对他负责。负责负责就负责,反正就是负责吃,喝嘛简单。某男一脸笑意“还有睡呢?”
  • 千冥煞变

    千冥煞变

    村边一个不起眼的小孩无意中得到一个神界半成品功法千冥煞、得到半成品圣器。从此不在被瞧不起、走出一段属于他的路程、创出属于他的功法!
  • 网游之笑椅天下

    网游之笑椅天下

    玩网游这么久,潇潇从未想过被前夫盗号这样狗血的剧情会出现在她身上,就像恶狗咬了你一口,难道咬回去,比一比谁的牙利?不,潇潇选择的是让这只恶狗上天堂。就在潇潇怒杀恶狗时,却不慎成了大神跟班,好吧,为了还人情,可是,快把自己给搭上了这算什么?十九年来感情史一尘未染的潇潇不知道此时爱神已悄悄降临…….(纯宠,一对一,不喜勿进)
  • 天下掌控

    天下掌控

    传承巫之力道,以力征服天下。!唯有一双拳头,打扁天下。!不服来战,抡到你服。!粉嫩的新手一枚~求收藏,求推荐~谢谢各位大大~
  • 高冷邪帝独宠妃

    高冷邪帝独宠妃

    她魅凌雪---天之骄女---现代的金牌特工,完成一个任务后太高兴,吃葡萄噎着了,导致死亡,一朝穿越成一个不受宠的嫡女,父亲不爱姨娘使坏,姐姐们总是欺负她,先是抽鞭子抽巴掌,后来就是灌毒药搞刺杀,她?废材?真搞笑!什么宝贝丹药,她当零食吃,什么宝贝武器,她随便乱扔,什么宝贝符咒,心情不好时,一把火烧掉,你算什么?小读者们可以加小醉qq3392680748也可以加小醉的读者群584364038
  • 闪婚游戏:多情少爷俏皮妻

    闪婚游戏:多情少爷俏皮妻

    一回国就被父母骗去相亲,对象还是她在飞机上碰到的那个没风度的大少爷?!什么?他大少爷穿着一件名牌西装出席相亲,竟然还随身携带购物发票!而她,偏偏就那么邪门,一不小心太吃惊了,华丽丽的喷了他一身的咖啡!然后,大少爷拽拽的说,四万块,不赔钱就结婚……坑爹的,为什么她觉得,背后有阴风吹过……这一切,都是设计好的吧……一年,这一年,她要怎么过?不过踩了他一脚罢了,这个小心眼儿的狐狸男,不会已经想好什么变态的方法来报复她了吧,哼,那就走着瞧吧,她柳小蕾也不是喝稀饭长大的!
  • 梦醒时分:超时空任务

    梦醒时分:超时空任务

    恍惚之间,耳边喃喃细语,究竟哪一个是真实的我?一个梦,真的可以预知未来?然而这只是个开始!末世危机,世界崩坏,道德沦陷,无法挽救,阴谋?真相并不遥远,也许就在梦醒之间!
  • 报告影殿,神子大人不飞了

    报告影殿,神子大人不飞了

    一场变故,她家破人亡。再转眼,她已是他,白衣飘然,俊美无匹,他是逍遥阁阁主的关门弟子,更是人们眼中的绝世天才。她亦是他,墨衣耀世,白色面具掩着绝色的容颜,神秘似仙。他是诛神殿一人之下万人之上的影殿,更是众生又敬又怕的天纵奇才。一光一暗矛盾却完美的结合在一起。谁能想到,他们都是她?一场惊变,他神魂离体。十三年漂泊,一朝回归,天域神子显神威。他是天之骄子,他是遗世谪仙。他冷面冷心冷肺,他把所有的温柔都给了她。辱她者,灭;伤她者,亡。他说:“萧然,你是我最终漂泊的港湾,我的心遗落的彼岸。”
  • 无限残兵之我的邻居叫九尾

    无限残兵之我的邻居叫九尾

    原本应该死去的无限冒险者镜湖在失去身体之后,暂时栖身于鸣人的身体中苟延残喘。主角可能是伏地魔,也可能是哆啦a梦。
  • 最强护花使

    最强护花使

    成风!一名孤儿,三岁时被一位神秘老人收养,十二年后,老人去世,成风也在老人临死前,将其托付给一名隐世的绝世高手收养,经过十年磨练,成风逐渐迈上强者行列,而在一个炎热的季节,成风却被其派到陆丰市保护二名大学生,这等意外的任务却是引起了成风的注意,在这时间的推移下,成风只身一人来到了繁华,强盛的陆丰市。。。。。