Mozart’s Starling
- Robert Cording
A little fool lies here
Whom I hold dear —
— Mozart, lines of a poem for his pet starling
None of his friends understood.
A poem for a bird? —
and a funeral, and the ridiculous
request that they dress in formal attire.
But when Mozart whistled a yet-to-be
fragment of a piano concerto
in the marketplace, the bird
may have sang it back to him —
the starling appears in his diary
of expenses, May 27, 1784,
along with a transcription of its song.
What fun they must have had,
he whistling a melody, the bird,
a virtuoso mimic, echoing it back,
interspersed among its clicks
and slurs and high-pitched squeals.
Music to Mozart’s ears,
that dear bird who sang incessantly
for the duration of its three
short years in Mozart’s company.
His little fool was wise indeed —
it could hear a squeaking door,
a teapot letting off its steam,
a woman crying or rain pinging
in metal buckets and gurgling
in gutters, even a horse’s snort
or Mozart scratching notes,
and sing it back until Mozart, too,
could hear the cockeyed,
nonstop music in the incidental
bits and pieces of the world going by,
the exuberant excess of it all.
A little fool lies here
Whom I hold dear —
— Mozart, lines of a poem for his pet starling
None of his friends understood.
A poem for a bird? —
and a funeral, and the ridiculous
request that they dress in formal attire.
But when Mozart whistled a yet-to-be
fragment of a piano concerto
in the marketplace, the bird
may have sang it back to him —
the starling appears in his diary
of expenses, May 27, 1784,
along with a transcription of its song.
What fun they must have had,
he whistling a melody, the bird,
a virtuoso mimic, echoing it back,
interspersed among its clicks
and slurs and high-pitched squeals.
Music to Mozart’s ears,
that dear bird who sang incessantly
for the duration of its three
short years in Mozart’s company.
His little fool was wise indeed —
it could hear a squeaking door,
a teapot letting off its steam,
a woman crying or rain pinging
in metal buckets and gurgling
in gutters, even a horse’s snort
or Mozart scratching notes,
and sing it back until Mozart, too,
could hear the cockeyed,
nonstop music in the incidental
bits and pieces of the world going by,
the exuberant excess of it all.
3 Comments:
Is this your way of saying that you might agree with some of my forgiven sins from the hotel of fools who honestly believe they are gods?
Ya! That's it Victor! How did you ever figure "IT" out? :)
Peace
I like the last stanza especially.
We actually have quite a few starlings around here, along with the sparrows and the bewinged rats (pigeons).
Liam,
Yeah, the exuberant excess of it all. sounds almost Hopkins-ish.
The bewinged rats = fledermice :)
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