THE ORGANIST OF BERGAMO

“For blowing is not playing on the flute,

To do that well you must put fingers to’t.”

German Proverb.

This is a Merry Tale of Bergamo.

It chanced in Fifteen Hundred Twenty-Eight

[As I do find the fact recorded in

A pleasing book of Sixteen Thirty-Six

Entitled Scelta di Facetie—

A little yellow, quaint, italic tome,

Which looks as if it were behind the age,

And would have been black letter if it could]

That in fair Venice raged a pestilence

Whereof in time full many people died,

And among these a trusty servitor

Who blew the bellows for the organist

All in the great Cathedral of Saint Mark,

Whose billowy pavement truly seems to roll

In time and measure with the music sweet,

So perfect were the harmonies of Art

Which men imagined in the olden time.

Now as this man had died while at his work,

Even while blowing a Magnificat

All in the holy church, it was adjudged

That he almost deserved to be a saint.

And he who preached the sermon over him

Said that “his soul had risen on the notes

Of the grand anthem which he had inspired,

And having reached the Music all divine

Had softly sunk, as light is lost in light,

Into the pure Celestial.” Here he stopped.

Men were great preachers in the olden time.

It happened that a certain Giannolo,

Facchino Bergamasco, or a man

From Bergamo, a porter by his trade,

Who carried heavy burdens, yet withal

Was not o’erburdened with a load of wit,

Hearing this sermon, got it in his head—

And no great wonder either—that the late

Departed bellows-blower must have been

The Chief Musician of the Holy House;

And knowing that the man who bloweth up

A pair of bagpipes also is the one

Who plays upon the same—drew inference

That the deceased was the true organist,

And he who played thereon his humble aid,

Who only worked to keep the tune in time.

Now being smitten with a deep desire

To rise in life and also to be called

A Child of Art—with a nice salary—

And have a sermon preached o’er him when dead,

Giannolo unto the Bishop went,

And made a great entreaty to be placed

Among the holy followers of Saint Mark,

And that the aim of his ambition was

Alzare i mantici quando suonava

gli organi—that’s to say:

“To lift the bellows when the organ played.”

And as he was a stout and lusty knave

Who might be useful in a hundred ways,

They gladly took him on, so there he stayed

Blowing the bellows faithfully in time.

I ween there is not in all Italy

A man—unless he came from Bergamo—

Who could have blown an organ seven years

In the full faith that he was playing it,

And was indeed the real organist.

Yet this, in fact, unless the legend lies,

Was what befell Giannolo. By this time,

Having laid by a very handsome sum,

And being well attired though modestly,

As is becoming to a Son of Art,

He went a-visiting his native place,

Where all who were related unto him—

That is to say about one-half the town—

Did greatly marvel at his handsome clothes

And at his air of stately dignity,

But most of all when he informed them that

He was no more a porter: he had felt

Immortal longings in him to arise

Above that vulgar calling, and to soar

“ ’Mid palpitations sweet and pleasures soft,

The manifestations of that beauteous life

Diffused unseen throughout eternal Space”

Which men call Music; and that he had risen

Even to a monthly salary of ten francs,

Wherewith were many pleasing perquisites;

And that he played the organ in Saint Mark’s,

As all the world allowed, in perfect time.

Up rose a buzz of strangest wonderment,

Or, as ’tis writ, Di che restarono

Più maravigliati; for they all

Were much amazed that such a common man—

Si vile e si rozzo—such a boor—

Had risen to the pinnacle of Art

In Venice, where all Art was at its height,

And gained the crown of glory—Iddio!

“Ten francs a month besides the perquisites!”

They bowed before him with deep reverence,

Hoping he’d stay with them a little time.

Then some one spoke with hesitating tone,

As if in fear to take a liberty,

And said: “Your Excellence—if we might dare—

Since we would celebrate the kind return

Of such an Honour to our noble town,

Would you not grace the occasion, and increase

Our joy and sense of deep respectfulness,

By playing Vespers for us in the Dome

On Sunday next?” Giannolo bowed low,

And in a speech adorned with many flowers,

Which he had culled from sermons in Saint Mark,

Acceded gracefully to their request,

And said he would be there to play, in time.

When Sunday came there came with it a crowd

Such as Bergamo never saw before,

For in her streets and past her palaces

Thousands in holiday attire swept on,

And even afar there was a thundering roar,

From time to time, which rolled from square to square,

As when the incoming ocean, with a tide

Urged by a tempest, breaks among the rocks.

Yea, there were many—tanto popolo—

All that the church would hold, and then outside

A vast, impatient, brilliant multitude,

Such as had ne’er been there at any time.

And at the appointed hour Giannolo came,

Rising before the people in his state,

Waiting awhile the appearance of the man

Who was to play the organ while he—blew!

And all the congregation waited too,

All staring steadily at the great man

In anxious expectation, till at last

Giannolo from the pulpit cried aloud:

“Where is the man who is to touch the keys?

What is the use of making music, hey—

And filling up the thing with melody,

As I have come to do, unless there be

Some one to click the bones and let it out?

You don’t suppose that I can raise the wind,

And steer, and sail the ship as well, my friends.

Such things were ne’er beheld at any time.”

There was an instant’s silence—deep and strange;

In all the great cathedral rang no sound.

All stared at one another open-eyed,

Or at Giannolo—just as if some power

Before unknown in life had seized on them

With a tremendous sense of dire amaze,

Not knowing what the devil it could mean;

When all at once they took—and from them all

There rose a roar of laughter like a crash

Of thunder, and so near it that one seemed

To miss the lightning—or, as I might say,

’Twas like a flash of sound—and then again

It came re-echoed from the multitude

Gathered outside, as the electric peal

Resounds, repeated by the mountain tops.

Yea, such a peal of laughter as the book

Declares “at vespers ne’er was heard before,”

And ne’er again will be at any time.


Moral. I pray you think upon it well.

There are full many people in this world

Who think that they are wondrous wise in art,

And who, as Critics, write about the same

In transcendental phrase with capitals,

And call it Faith, and Love, and Heaven knows what,

And cannot think of it without a gasp

And uttering phrases silly, mystical,—

Because they are the empty, windy ones,

Inflating and inflated, who but blow

The bellows of the organ, yet believe

That they are leaders in the Realm of Art!