A Roman Singer | Page 3

F. Marion Crawford
my senses over a lecture I had to prepare.
Suddenly his voice cracked horribly and his singing ended in a sort of
groan. It happened again once or twice, the next day, and then the
house was quiet. I found him at night asleep over the old piano, his
eyes all wet with tears.
"What is the matter, Nino?" I asked. "It is time for youngsters like you
to be in bed."
"Ah, Messer Cornelio," he said, when he was awake, "I had better go to
bed, as you say. I shall never sing again, for my voice is all broken to
pieces"; and he sobbed bitterly.
"The saints be praised," thought I; "I shall make a philosopher of you
yet!"
But he would not be comforted, and for several months he went about
as if he were trying to find the moon, as we say; and though he read his
books and made progress, he was always sad and wretched, and grew
much thinner, so that Mariuccia said he was consuming himself, and I

thought he must be in love. But the house was very quiet.
I thought as he did, that he would never sing again, but I never talked to
him about it, lest he should try, now that he was as quiet as a
nightingale with its tongue cut out. But nature meant differently, I
suppose. One day De Pretis came to see me; it must have been near the
new year, for he never came often at that time. It was only a friendly
recollection of the days when I had a castello and a church of my own
at Serveti, and used to have him come from Rome to sing at the festa,
and he came every year to see me; and his head grew bald as mine grew
grey, so that at last he wears a black skull-cap everywhere, like a priest,
and only takes it off when he sings the Gloria Patri, or at the Elevation.
However, he came to see me, and Nino sat mutely by, as we smoked a
little and drank the syrup of violets with water that Mariuccia brought
us. It was one of her eternal extravagances, but somehow, though she
never understood the value of economy, my professorship brought in
more than enough for us, and it was not long after this that I began to
buy the bit of vineyard out of Porta Salara, by instalments from my
savings. And since then we have our own wine.
De Pretis was talking to me about a new opera that he had heard. He
never sang except in church, of course, but he used to go to the theatre
of an evening; so it was quite natural that he should go to the piano and
begin to sing a snatch of the tenor air to me, explaining the situation as
he went along, between his singing.
Nino could not sit still, and went and leaned over Sor Ercole, as we call
the maestro, hanging on the notes, not daring to try and sing, for he had
lost his voice, but making the words with his lips.
"Dio mio!" he cried at last, "how I wish I could sing that!"
"Try it," said De Pretis, laughing and half interested by the boy's
earnest look. "Try it--I will sing it again." But Nino's face fell.
"It is no use," he said. "My voice is all broken to pieces now, because I
sang too much before."

"Perhaps it will come back," said the musician kindly, seeing the tears
in the young fellow's eyes. "See, we will try a scale." He struck a chord.
"Now, open your mouth--so--Do-o-o-o!" He sang a long note. Nino
could not resist any longer, whether he had any voice or not. He
blushed red and turned away, but he opened his mouth and made a
sound.
"Do-o-o-o!" He sang like the master, but much weaker.
"Not so bad; now the next, Re-e-e!" Nino followed him. And so on, up
the scale.
After a few more notes, De Pretis ceased to smile, and cried, "Go on,
go on!" after every note, authoritatively, and in quite a different manner
from his first kindly encouragement. Nino, who had not sung for
months, took courage and a long breath, and went on as he was bid, his
voice gaining volume and clearness as he sang higher. Then De Pretis
stopped and looked at him earnestly.
"You are mad," he said. "You have not lost your voice at all."
"It was quite different when I used to sing before," said the boy.
"Per Bacco, I should think so," said the maestro. "Your voice has
changed. Sing something, can't you?"
Nino sang a church air he had caught somewhere. I never heard such a
voice,
Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code

 / 124
Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.