The following is part of the opening chapters of a novel I have written based on my youthful experiences. It is based on Schubert's song cycle Die Schöne Müllerin which tells the tale of a young miller who falls in love. You can find the earlier chapters on this blog. One day I'll put the whole thing up as a iBook.
The Beautiful Miller Maid by Janette Miller
Chapter 3 Halt by the Brook Part 1
“I think she will do for Phebe” said Simon. “I’ll get Louis Crick to write to her
school. I’ll get Pansy to teach her the two little arias and see if she is up
to it. I’ll tell her school I am prepared to rewrite.”
“Do what you like” said a
disinterested Tring “but I shall never sing Rawlings again even for British Television” and Tring lost
interest. It was now another rival that took up the cudgels against Antoinette
who was in the future to prove deadly.
Pansy Salmon was duly
instructed to teach Antoinette the fiendishly difficult little aria that Phebe
sings to her doll. Pansy by now was
completely jealous. Her best friend had played the first Phebe and it seemed inconceivable that this chit of a girl
with no musical background should usurp the role. Pansy’s strategy was masterly
inactivity, just three one hour sessions and no score to the applicant.
“That should put paid to her
chances” thought Pansy who was a first class unmarried bitch.
November came and the BBC decided to do The Ghosts so it became imperative to see if Antoinette was up
to it. It was arranged that she should come to Simon’s flat in Swiss Cottage at
5 pm on a dark cold night in November and sing for him. He forgot and it was
around about six o’clock when he and Tring arrived in the
dark at their London “pad”.
The flats on the second floor had a flight of steps leading up to it. The entrance was forbidding. It was of the hideous red brick Edwardian era and resembled the blocks of council flats in the next suburb. The flats also had the sort of
lights that turn themselves off when not needed to save electricity and when the happy party pushed
the button and turned on the lights they were in for the shock of their lives.
There was a young schoolgirl in full uniform sitting on the door step of their
flat who was overjoyed to see them.
“I’m awfully sorry” said
Simon, “How long have you been here? We were delayed.”
The child very composed stood
up and said “Since five. The lights went out and I had no idea where I was. I
was afraid to move for fear of falling down the stairs. I have never seen this
type of light before.
My chaperone just bought me
here and dumped me. I mean you were supposed to be here at 5 pm. Then all the
lights in the passage went out and I was stuck. I mean you are sort of on the
second floor and I have only been here once.”
Antoinette sound like a very
young and “Not amused” Queen Victoria. It was hard to say who was the most
embarrassed, Antoinette or the naughty and rude grown men who ought to
have known better. Actually her school should have known better! Taking a child to a man's flat and then leaving her alone on the doorstep would not be allowed today!
Antoinette was ushered in to
the tiny and to her disappointing flat of the major English Opera composer. It
was small, dark, dingy and depressing and she felt unworthy of so great a man.
Tring was dispatched to make tea.
“Indian or China” he called
out in his upper middle class voice. This would be enough to intimidate any
working class or lower middle class child as he well knew but he was greeted with the words.
“Russian,
please but if you have no lemon china will do!" came the confident reply.
Simon could not help
laughing. He knew exactly what Tring was up too. Putting Antoinette in her
place! There was no lemon!
For the first time Simon
decided he better get to know this young girl a little better so he sat down
and started to ask her a few questions. He did this with his little boy friends
all the time. Cars and aeroplanes were his usual openers but here was a little
girl. King was at a bit of a loss and then he remembered that Antoinette had
seen his disastrous production of“Henry VIII” at the Royal
Opera House so he asked her about that.
He discovered she was a
little ballet dancer who had worked at The Royal Opera House, Covent Garden
since the age of twelve in the ballets and consequently had had an almost
impeccable musical education. That is why she knew all his ballet music so
well. It seemed she had grown to love opera and ballet and besides watching
rehearsal from the wings queued for tickets in the gallery for the operas and
ballet.
She was astoundingly
knowledgeable especially in modern music, which she loved. She could talk knowledgeably about Beethoven, Berlioz, Herne Heinz, Wagner and Stravinsky as well as himself.
“You
should try Mahler” Simon said.
“I don’t do symphonic music.
I get so bored at concerts as I am always waiting for the curtain to go up. That's why I like opera”
Simon was not impressed that this young lady with impeccable taste did not like Mahler and told her she would learn to love Mahler as she grew
older. He suggested Symphony 2 Second Movement as a start. In her school uniform Antoinette still looked 12 years old. She
had not grown one inch.
She looked him straight in the eyes and said seriously. "Mahler is never performed and I cannot afford the records! Long playing records are expensive".
She looked him straight in the eyes and said seriously. "Mahler is never performed and I cannot afford the records! Long playing records are expensive".
Tea was served, China as there was no lemon and Tring, trying to be helpful suggested that Antoinette should learn Schubert. Antoinette had a small voice
but would be suitable for this genre. Antoinette was at a disadvantage, as she
had never come across Schubert. Tchaikovsky, and Stravinsky wrote ballet music
and it appeared that Schubert wrote songs.
“My dear young lady, you
should sing Schubert, I know it is written for the male voice but your tiny
voice would suit it and it is not as if you will ever be performing it in
public, is it” Tring delivered in a condescending manner.
Antoinette looked at Tring
rather like Alice in Wonderland looking at the caterpillar on the mushroom.
“Tring
and I perform the two Schubert cycles often” said Simon softly. He could see
that Tring was in danger of putting Antoinette off
“ I’ll make a point of
looking up the songs up when I get home. I am not a singer I am a ballet
dancer.” said Antoinette defensively.
“Antoinette Miller,” said
Tring for that was her surname and this was the first time he had grasped the
suitability of the name , “ Why ‘Die Schöne Müllerin’ Tring exclaimed in glee sounding more like Lewis Carrol's caterpillar than ever!
‘Yes, you shall be King’s
“Schöne Müllerin”
The Beautiful Miller Maid Chapter 3 Part 2 can be found here.
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