Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Lilli Alm by Edgar Lee Masters
Public domain poetry and public domain stories from the literary greats of yesteryear.
Custom Search
Main Menu

Home

Latest Poetry

Latest Authors

Authors Surname

Authors First Name

Poetry Title

Poetry First Lines

Latest Stories

Stories Title

Top Authors

Top Poetry


Top Stories Etc.

Search

Contact Us

Useless Information!!

Store



Top Sites, Click here to vote for our site

Sponsored Links

Read, Rate, Comment on or Submit your poetry

Lilli Alm

    By Edgar Lee Masters



        In Lola Schaefer's studio in the Tower,
        Tea being served to painters, poets, singers,
        Herr Ludwig Haibt, a none too welcome guest,
        Of vital body, brisk, too loud of voice,
        And Lilli Alm crossed swords.

        It came about
        When Ludwig Haibt said: "Have you read the papers
        About this Elenor Murray?" And then said:
        "I tried to train her voice - she was a failure."
        And Lilli Alm who taught the art of song
        Looked at him half contemptuous and said:
        "Why did she fail?" To which Herr Ludwig answered
        "She tried too hard. She made her throat too tense,
        And made its muscles stiff by too much thought,
        Anxiety for song, the vocal triumph."

        "O, yes, I understand," said Lilli Aim.
        Then stabbing him she added, "since you dropped
        The Perfect Institute, and dropped the idea
        Which stresses training muscles of the tongue,
        And all that thing, be fair and shoulder half
        The failure of poor Elenor Murray on
        Your system's failure. For I chanced to know
        The girl myself. She started work with me,
        And I am sure that if I had been able -
        With time enough I could have done it too -
        To rid her mind of muscles and to fix
        The thought alone of music in her mind,
        She would have sung. Now listen, Ludwig Haibt,
        You've come around to see that song's the thing.
        I take a pupil and I say to her:
        The mind must fix itself on music, say
        I would make song, pure tones and beautiful;
        That comes from spirit, from the Plato rapture,
        Which gets the idea. It is well to know
        Some physiology, I grant, to know
        When, how to move the vocal organs, feel
        How they are moving, through the ear to place
        These organs in relation, and to know
        The soft palate is drawn against the hard;
        The tongue can take positions numerous,
        Can be used at the root, a throaty voice;
        Or with the tip, produce expressiveness.
        But what must we avoid? - rigidity.
        And if that girl was over-zealous, then
        So much the more her teaching should have kept
        Mind off the larynx and the tongue, and fixed
        Upon the spiritual matters, so to give
        The snake-like power of loosening, contracting
        The muscles used for singing. Ludwig Haibt,
        I can forgive your system, since abandoned,
        I can't forgive your words to-day who say
        This woman failed for trying over much,
        When I know that your system made her throw
        An energy truly wonderful on muscles;
        And when I think of your book where you said:
        The singing voice is the result, observe
        Of physical conditions, like the strings
        Or tubes of brass. While granting that it's well
        To know the art of tuning up the strings,
        And how to place them; after all the art
        Of tuning and of placing comes from mind,
        The idea, and the art of making song
        Is just the breathing of the perfect spirit
        Upon the strings. The throat is but the leaves,
        Let them be flexible, the mouth's the flower,
        The tone the perfume. And your olden way
        Of harping on the larynx - well, since you
        Turned from it, I'm ungenerous perhaps
        To scold you thus to-day.

            But this I say,
        Let us be frank as teachers: Take the fetich
        Of breathing and see how you cripple talent,
        Or take that matter of the laryngyscope,
        Whereby you photograph a singer's throat,
        Caruso's, Galli Curci's at the moment
        Of greatest beauty in song, and thus preserve
        In photographs before you how the muscles
        Looked and were placed that moment. Then attempt
        To get the like effect by placing them
        In similar fashion. Oh, you know, Herr Ludwig,
        These fetiches go by. One thing remains:
        The idea in the soul of beauty, music,
        The hope to give it forth.

        Alas! to think
        So many souls are wasted while we teach
        This thing or that. The strong survive, of course.
        But take this Elenor Murray - why, that girl
        Was just a flame, I never saw such hunger
        For self-development, and beauty, richness,
        In all experience in life - I knew her,
        That's why I say so - take her as I say,
        And put her to a practice - yours we'll say -
        Where this great zeal she had is turned and pressed
        Upon the physical, just the very thing
        To make her throat constrict, and fill her up
        With over anxiety and make her fail.
        When had she come to me at first this passion
        Directed to the beauty, the idea
        Had put her soul at ease to ease her body,
        Which gradually and beautifully had answered
        That flame of hers.

            Well, Ludwig Haibt, you're punished
        For wasting several years upon a system
        Since put away as half erroneous,
        If not quite worthless. But I must confess,
        Since I have censured you, to my own sin.
        This girl ran out of money, came to me
        And told me so. To which I said: "Too bad,
        You will have money later, when you do,
        Come back to me." She stood a silent moment,
        Her hand upon the knob, I saw her tears,
        Just little dim tears, then she said good-bye
        And vanished from me.

        Well, I now repent.
        I who have thought of beauty all my life,
        And taught the art of sound made beautiful,
        Let slip a chance for beauty - why, I think,
        A beauty just as great as song! You see
        I had a chance to serve a hungering soul -
        I could have said just let the money go,
        Or let it go until you get the money.
        I let that chance for beauty slip. Even now
        I see poor Elenor Murray at the door,
        Who paused, no doubt, in hope that I would say
        What I thought not to say.

        So, Ludwig Haibt,
        We are a poor lot - let us have some tea!
        "We are a poor lot," Ludwig Haibt replied.
        "But since this is confessional, I absolve you,
        If you'll permit me, from your sin. Will you
        Absolve me, if I say I'm sorry too?
        I'll tell you something, it is really true: -
        I changed my system more I think because
        Of what I learned from teaching Elenor Murray
        Than on account of any other person.
        She demonstrated better where my system
        Was lacking than all pupils that I had.
        And so I changed it; and of course I say
        The thing is music, just as poets say
        The thing is beauty, not the rhyme and words,
        With which they bring it, instruments that's all,
        And not the thing - but beauty."

            So they talked,
        Forgave each other. And that very day
        Two priests were talking of confessionals
        A mile or so from the Tower, where Lilli Alm
        And Ludwig Haibt were having tea. You say
        The coroner was ignorant of this!
        What is the part it plays with Elenor Murray?
        Or with the inquest? Wait a little yet
        And see if Merival has told to him
        What thing of value touching Elenor Murray
        Is lodged in Father Whimsett's heart or words.




Extra Info:
From the "Doomsday Book".


Printable Page

Add Your Thoughts on this poem.



This page viewed 70 times.
Sponsored Links


Your Shops - Affordable Ecommerce stores and cheaper goods for customers - No listing fees!



Our Sites