ANDANTE CON MOTO FIFTH
For the first time in his life, Bedient
learned what America liked to read.... All the
finer expressions of the human mind and hand gave him
deep joy. His love and divination for the good
and the true were the same that characterized the
rarest minds of our ancestors, who had access only
to a few noble books in their formative years.
And Bedient’s was the expanded and fortified
intelligence of one who has grown up with the Bible.
Each ship brought the latest papers,
periodicals and certain pickings from the publishers’
lists. India had not prepared Bedient for this.
With glad welcome he discovered David Cairns here and
there among short-story contributors, but the love
of man and woman which the stories in general exploited,
struck him of Indian ideals as shifty and pestilential.
The woman of fiction was equipped with everything to
make her as common as man. She was glib, pert,
mundane, her mind a chatter-mill; a creature of fur,
paint, hair, and absurdly young. The clink of
coins was her most favorable accompaniment; and her
giving of self was a sort of disrobing formality.
The men who pursued her were forward and solicitous.
There was something of sacrilege about it all.
The minds and souls of real women such were
not matters for American story; and yet the Americans
wrote with dangerous facility. Bedient, who worshipped
the abstraction, Womanhood, felt his intelligence
seared, calcined.... Only here and there was a
bit of real literature usually by a woman.
The men seemed hung up to dry at twenty-five.
There was no manhood of mind.
Bedient’s sense of loneliness
became pervasive. Apparently he was outside the
range of consciousness for better or worse with
the country to which he had always hoped to give his
best years. His ideals of the literary art were
founded upon large flexible lines of beauty into which
every dimension of life fell according to the reader’s
vision. He felt himself alone; that he was out
of alignment with this young race from which he had
sprung, to wander so far and so long.
And yet there was a Woman up there
for him to know. This was imbedded in his consciousness.
Soon he should go to her.... He should find her.
And as the Hindu poets falteringly called upon the
lotos and the nectars; upon the brilliance of
midday athwart the plain, and the glory of moonlight
upon mountain and glacier and the standing water of
foliaged pools; upon the seas at large, and the stars
and the bees and the gods to express the
triune loveliness of woman (which mere man may only
venture to appraise, not to know) so should
he, Bedient, envision the reality when the winds of
the world brought him home to her heart.
There was much to do at the hacienda.
The Captain was past riding a great deal, and the
large hill and river property the coffee,
cacao, cotton, cane and tobacco industries profited
much better with an overseer. Still Bedient slowly
realized that the hundreds of natives in touch with
Captain Carreras’ plantations worked about as
well for him as they knew. Single-handed, Carreras
had done great things, and was loved as a good doctor
is loved. In spite of his huge accumulation of
land, the Captain was the least greedy of men.
He had been content to improve slowly. His incalculable
riches, as he had early confided to Bedient, were
in the river-beds. Only a few of these placer
possibilities were operated. There was a big leak
in the washings. Still, the natives were not
greedy, either. They were home-keepers, and had
no way to dispose of bullion.
Carreras had managed all his affairs
so as to keep the government on his side, and his
revenues were no little part of the support of the
Capitol. This was his largest outlay, but in return
he was protected.... Deep disorder brooded in
the present political silence; all recalcitrants were
gathering under Celestino Rey but this
situation was only beginning to be understood.
At certain times of year, Carreras
had in his employ the heads of five hundred families,
and had shown himself unique in paying money for labor.
This was un-Spanish. It gave him the choice of
the natives. He represented therefore a stable
and prosperous element of the population. His
revenues were becoming enormous. The Hollanders
paid him a fortune annually for raw chocolate.
This, with tree-planting and culture, would double,
for the soil seemed to contain the miraculous properties
of alkahest. The point of all this is,
that Captain Carreras had come to be regarded as the
right wing of the government. He arranged all
his dealings on a friendly rather than a business
basis; his good-will was his best protection....
Bedient had been in Equatoria for several months when
Jaffier sent for the Captain.
“I don’t feel like it,
but I’d better go,” the old man said.
“Something amiss is in the air. Damme,
I’ve got all delicate to the saddle since you
came, sir.... I used to think nothing of the ride
down town and now it’s a carriage....
Ah, well, you can try out a new symphony and
tell me what it says when I get back.”
As it turned out, Bedient did exactly
this thing.... Time could not efface the humor
evoked by the sight or sound of the magnificent orchestrelle.
During one of the Captain’s New York trips, he
had heard a famous orchestra. The effect upon
him was of something superhuman. The Captain
went again followed the musicians to Boston
and Philadelphia. The result was more or less
the same. Soul flew in one direction; mind in
another; and, inert before the players a
little fat man, perspiring, weeping, ecstatic.
What came of it, he had told Bedient in this way:
“The Hatteras was to
sail at night-fall, but on that morning I went into
a music-store, not knowing what I wanted exactly, but
a souvenir of some kind, a book about orchestras.
It appears, I told a man there how I’d been
philanderin’ with the musicians; how I had caught
them in an off day at Springfield, Mass., and bought
cornucopias of Pilsner until they would have
broken down and wept had they not been near their
instruments.... It was a big music-store, and
he was a very good man. He sold me the orchestrelle
that morning. You think I had an electric plant
installed down here to light the house and drive my
sugar-mill, don’t you? It wasn’t
that at all, but to run the big music-box yonder.
The man had smoothly attached a current, but he said
I could just as well pump it with my feet. Then
he called in a church organist to drive
the stops. Between them, they got me where I was
all run down from that orchestra crowd. They
said a child could learn the stops.... You should
have heard my friends on the Hatteras when
the orchestrelle was put aboard that afternoon.
They never forget that. Then we had a triple
ox-cart made down in Coral City, and four span were
goaded up the trail and there she stands.
“Andrew, they finally left me
alone with it and a couple of hundred music-rolls....
It was hours after, that I came forth a sick man to
cable for power.... About those music-rolls I
had called for the best. One does that blind,
you know. But the best in music matters, it appears,
has nothing to do with retired sea-captains....
It’s a pretty piece of furniture. The orchestra
had died out of me by the time we had the electric-plant
going.... I take it you have to be caught young
to deal with those stops.... You go after it,
Andrew. It scares me and the natives when it
begins to pipe up. I had a time getting my household
back that first time. Maybe, I didn’t touch
the right button or I touched too many.
You go after it, my boy its all there appassionato oboe ’consharto’ vox
humana and the whole system
... It is hard for one to realize
how little music Bedient had heard in his life.
Just a few old songs always unfinished but
they had haunted the depths of him, and made him think
powerfully. Certain strains had loosed within
him emotions, ancient as world-dawns to his present
understanding, but intimate as yesterday to something
deeper than mind. And so he came to ask; “Are
not all the landmarks of evolution identified with
certain sounds or combinations of sounds? Is there
not an answering interpretation in the eternal scroll
of man’s soul, to all that is true in music?”
Long ago, one night in Korea, he had
been wakened by the yammering of a tigress. His
terror for a moment had been primal, literally a simian’s
helpless quaking. Earlier still, he had heard
a hoot-owl, and encountered through it, his first
realization of phantom horrors; he knew then there
was an Unseen, and nether acoustics; here was
a key to ghostly doors. A mourning-dove had brought
back in a swift passage of consciousness the breast
of some savage mother. Night-birds everywhere
meant to him restless mystery.... Is sound a key
to psychology? Is the history of our emotions,
from monster to man, sometime to be interpreted through
music as yet the infant among the arts?
The answer had come why
the unfinished songs had the greater magic for him.
So diaphanous and ethereal is this marvellously expressive
young medium, music, that the composers could only
pin a strain here and there to concrete form as
a bit of lace from a lovely garment is caught by a
thorn. So they build around it as flesh
around spirit. But it was the strain of pure
spirit that sang in Bedient’s mind and
knew no set forms. So an artistic imagination
can finish a song or a picture, many times better
than the original artist could with tones or pigments.
Too much finish binds the spirit, and checks the feeling
of those who follow to see or hear.
These, and many thoughts had come
to him from the unpretentious things of music....
Ben Bolt brought back the memory of some prolonged
and desperate sorrow. The linéaments of
the tragedy were effaced, but its effect lived and
preyed upon him under the stress of its own melody.
Once he had heard Caller Herrin’ grandly
sung, and for the time, the circuit was complete between
the Andrew Bedient of Now, and another of a bleak
land and darker era. In this case the words brought
him a clearer picture gaunt coasts and
the thrilling humanity of common fisher folk....
Many times a strain of angelic meaning and sweetness
was yoked to a silly effigy of words; but he rejoiced
in opposite examples, such as that little lullaby
of Tennyson’s, Sweet and Low, which J.
Barnby seemed to have exactly tono-graphed....
Once across infantry campfires, Juanita came,
with a bleeding passion for home to him
who had no home. There was a lyrical Ireland very
dear to him songs and poems which wrung
him as if he were an exile; Tom Moore’s Sunflower
Song incited at first a poignant anguish, as of
a sweetheart’s dead face; and Lead Kindly
Light brought almost the first glimmer of spiritual
light across the desolate distances of the world like
a tender smile from a greater being than man.
And there were baleful songs that ran red with blood,
as the Carmagnole; and roused past the sense
of physical pain, like the Marseillaise.
What heroic sins have been committed in their spell!
By no means was it all uplift which the songs brought.
There was one night when he heard Mandalay
sung by some British seaman across the dark of a Japanese
harbor. They were going out, and he was coming
into port....
These were his sole adventures in
music, but they had bound his dreams together.
He had felt, if the right person were near,
he could have made music tell things, not to be uttered
in mere words; and under the magic of certain songs,
that which was creative within him, even dim and chaotic,
stirred and warmed for utterance.... So fresh
a surface did Bedient bring to the Carreras music-room.
The time had come when his nature
hungered for great music. The orchestrelle added
to the Island something he needed soulfully.
Experimenting with the rolls, the stops and the power,
he found there was nothing he could not do in time.
Music answered trombone, clarionet, horn,
bassoon, hautboy, flute, ’cello answered.
Volume and tempo were mere lever matters. On
the rolls themselves were suggestions. Reaching
this point, his exaltation knew no bounds. He
looked upon the great array of rolls symphonies,
sonatas, concertos, fantasies, rhapsodies, overtures,
prayers, requiems, meditations, minuets and
something of that rising power of gratitude overcame
him, as only once before in his life when
he had realized that the Bible was all words,
and they were for him. From the first studious
marvellings, Bedient’s mind lifted to adoring
gratefulness in which he could have kissed the hands
of the toilers who had made this instrument answer
their dreams. Then, he fell deeply into misgiving.
It seemed almost a sacrilege for him to take music
so cheaply; that he had not earned such joy.
But he could praise them in his heart, and he did with
every sound.
The orchestrelle unfolded to a spirit
like this. Doubtless his early renderings of
random choice were weird, but more and more as he went
on, the great living things righted themselves in his
consciousness, for he had ear and soul and love for
them. Some great fissure in his nature had long
needed thus to be filled. He sent for books about
the great composers; descriptions of the classics;
how the themes were developed through different instruments.
Then he wanted the history of all music; and for weeks
his receptivity never faltered. No neophyte ever
brought a purer devotion to the masters. His first
loves the Andante in F, the three
movements of the Kreutzer Sonata, a prayer
from Otello, the Twelfth Rhapsody,
the Swan Song and the Evening Star,
and finally Isolde’s Triumph over Death these
were ascendings, indeed to the point of
wings.
The stops so formidable at first became
as stars in the dark.... Little loves, little
fears and sins and hopes were all he had known before;
and now he entered into the torrential temperaments
of the masters magnificent and terrifying
souls who dared to sin against God, or die defying
man; whose passions stormed the world; whose dirges
were wrung from heaven. Why, these men levelled
emperors and aspired to angels, violated themselves,
went mad with music, played with hell’s own
dissonances, and dared to transcribe their baptisms,
illuminations, temptations, Gethsemanes, even their
revilings and stigmata.
The dirges lifted him to immensity
from which the abysses of the world spread themselves
below. Two marches of Chopin, and the death-march
of Siegfried, the haunting suggestion of a soul’s
preparation for departure in Schubert’s Unfinished;
the Death of Aase, the Pilgrim’s Chorus,
one of Mozart’s requiems, and that Napoleonic
funèbre from the Eroica these,
with others, grouped themselves into an unearthly
archipelago towering cliffs of glorious
gloom, white birds silently sweeping the gray solitudes
above the breakers....
It was during the four days while
Captain Carreras remained in Coral City with Jaffier,
that Bedient entered into the mysterious enchantment
of the Andante movement of Beethoven’s
Fifth Symphony. He had played it all, forgetting
almost to breathe, and then returned to the second
movement which opens with the ’celli:
Again and again it unfolded for him,
but not its full message. There was a meaning
in it for him! He heard it in the night;
three voices in it a man, a woman and a
soul.... The lustrous third Presence was an angel there
for the sake of the woman. She was in the depths,
but great enough to summon the angel to her tragedy.
The man’s figure was obscure, disintegrate....
Bedient realized in part at least that this was destined
to prove his greatest musical experience....
Captain Carreras found much to do
in the city, but he did not tell Bedient that the
real reason for his remaining four days was that he
couldn’t sooner summon courage for the long ride
home. He spoke but little regarding the reasons
Jaffier had called him.
“He’s afraid of Celestino
Rey, and likely has good reason,” said the Captain
wearily. “The old pirate is half-dead below
the knees, but his ugly ambition still burns bright.
He thinks he ought to be drawing all the Island tributes,
instead of the government. Jaffier expects assassination.
On this point, it would be well to watch for the death
of Rey. These two old hell-weathered Spaniards
are worth watching each tossing spies over
the other’s fences, and openly conducting affairs
with melting courtesy toward each other but
I don’t seem to have much appetite for the game.
There was a time when I would have stopped work and
helped Jaffier whip this fellow. But I hardly
think he’ll take our harvests and the river-beds
just yet
They talked late. The Captain
alternated from his bed to a chair, seemed unwilling
for Bedient to leave and unable to sleep or find ease
anywhere. He was over-tired, he explained, and
hearing about Bedient’s experience with the
Andante con moto, insisted upon it being played
that night....
“It’s very soothing,”
Carreras said, when Andrew returned to the upper apartment.
“I think I can sleep now. Off to bed with
you, lad.”
So lightly did Bedient sleep, however, for
the music haunted his brain, that he was
aroused by the bare feet of a servant in the hall-way,
before the latter touched his door to call him.
Captain Carreras had asked for him. The glow
of dawn was in the old man’s quarters, and he
smiled in a queer, complacent way from his bed, as
if a long-looked-for solution to some grave problem
had come in the night, and he wanted his friend to
guess. A hand lifted from the coverlet, and Bedient’s
sped to it; yet he saw that something more was wanted.
The Captain’s shoulder nudged a little, and
the smile had become wistful. He did not fail
to understand the need, but other realizations were
pressing into his brain. So the Captain nudged
his shoulder again bashfully. Bedient bent and
took him in his arms.
It was death. Bedient had known
it from the first instant of entering, but he was
not prepared. He could not speak only
look into the tender, glowing smile. Captain
Carreras finally turned his eyes into the morning:
“You know it was very foolish
of me very to think I could make
you happy, Andrew, with all these riches,” he
said at last, not thickly, but very low, as if he
had saved strength for what he wished to say....
“You were a long time coming, but I knew you
would come knew it would be just like this in
your arms. Queer, isn’t it? And all
the waiting years, I kept piling up lands and money,
saying: ’This shall be his when he comes.’...
It was a little hard at first to know you didn’t
care you couldn’t care that
one, and ten, were all the same to you. And last
night, I saw it all again. Had I brought you word
that Celestino Rey had the government and that confiscation
of these lands were inevitable, you would never have
compared it in importance with finding that part of
the symphony. It’s all right. I wouldn’t
have it changed....”
Andrew listened with bowed head, patting
the Captain’s shoulder gently, as he sustained.
“But I have given you more than
money, boy. And this you know as a
man, who knew money better, could never understand.
I have given you an old man’s love for a son but
more than that, too, something of the old
man’s love for the mother of his son....
I thought only women had the delicacy and fineness you
have shown me, sir.... It is all done, and you
have made me very glad for these years since
the great wind failed to get us
Then he mingled silences with sentences
that finally became aimless seas, ships,
cooks, and the boy who had nipped him from the post
he meant to hold and a final genial blending
of goats and symphonies, on the borders of the Crossing.
Then he nestled, and Bedient felt the hand he had
taken, try to sense his own through the gathering
cold.... It was very easy and beautiful and
so brief that Bedient’s arm was not even tired.
An hour afterward, Falk came in for
orders and withdrew.
Bedient had merely nodded to him from
the depths of contemplation.... At last, he heard
the weeping of the house-servants. And there was
one low wailing tone that startled him with the memory
of the Sikh woman who had wept for old Gobind.