Summer Legends
THE EGYPTIAN FIRE-EATER
“NEXT Easter he must go to N—- to school. —Fact.—It is high time;
he is eleven years old, and here he is running wild with the
street-boys.— That's what I say.”
He, that is, I, hung my head, and I felt more like crying than
laughing. I had passed eleven sumly boyhood years in the little
country town, I stood in high esteem among my playmates, and
would rather be the first in the ranks of my birthplace than
second in the metropolis.
Through the gray mist, which surrounded my near future like a
thick fog, gleamed only one light, but a bright, attractive
light; that was the theatre, the splendor of which I had already
learned to know. The white priests in the “Magic Flute,”
Sarastro's lions, the fire-spitting serpents, and the gay, merry
Papageno,— such things could not be seen at home; and when my
parents promised me occasional visits to the theatre, as a reward
for diligence in study and exemplary conduct, I left the Eden of
my childhood, half consoled.
Young trees, transplanted at the proper time, soon take root.
After a tearful farewell to my friends and a slight attack of
home-sickness, I was quite content. I was received into the
second class at the gymnasium, and drank eagerly of the fountain
of knowledge; a certain Frau Eberlein, with whom I found board
and lodging, cared for my bodily welfare.
She was a widow, and kept a little store, in which, with the
assistance of a shop-girl, she served customers, who called from
morning to night. She dealt principally in groceries and
vegetables, but besides these, every conceivable thing was found
piled up in her shop: knitting-yarn, sheets of pictures,
slate-pencils, cheese, pen-knives, balls of twine, herring, soap,
buttons, writing-paper, glue, hairpins, cigar-holders, oranges,
fly-poison, brushes, varnish, gingerbread, tin soldiers, corks,
tallow candles, tobacco-pouches, thimbles, gum-balls, and
torpedoes. Besides, she prepared by means of essences, peach
brandy, maraschino, ros solis, and other liqueurs, as well as an
excellent ink, in the manufacture of which I used to help her.
She rejoiced in considerable prosperity, lived well, and did not
let me want for anything.
My passion for the theatre was a source of great anxiety to good
Frau Eberlein. She did not have a very good opinion of the art in
general, but the comedy she despised from the bottom of her
heart. Therefore she made my visiting the theatre as difficult as
possible, and it was only after long discussions, and after the
shop-girl had added her voice, that she would hand over the
necessary amount for purchasing a ticket. The shop-girl was an
oldish person, as thin as a giraffe which had fasted for a long
time, and was very well read. She subscribed regularly to a
popular periodical with the motto, “Culture is freedom,” and Frau
Eberlein was influenced somewhat by her judgment. This
kind-hearted woman was friendly towards me, and as often as her
employer asked, “Is the play a proper one for young people?” she
would answer, “Yes,” and Frau Eberlein would have to let me go.
Those were glorious evenings. Long before it was time for the
play to begin, I was in my seat in the gallery, looking down from
my dizzy height, into the house, still unlighted. Now a servant
comes and lights the lamps in the orchestra. The parquet and the
upper seats fill, but the reserved seats and the boxes are still
empty. Now it suddenly grows light; the chandelier comes down
from an opening in the ceiling. The musicians appear and tune
their instruments. It makes a horrible discord, but still it is
beautiful. The doors slam; handsomely dressed ladies, in white
cloaks gay officers, and civilians in stiff black and white
evening dress take their seats in the boxes. The conductor mounts
his elevated seat and now it begins. The overture is terribly
long, but it comes to an end. Ting-aling-aling, — the curtain
rises. Ah ! —
I soon decided in my own mind that it should be my destiny,
sometime, to delight the audience from the stage, but I was still
undecided whether I would devote myself to the drama or the
opera, for it seemed to me an equally desirable lot to shoot
charmed bullets in “Der Freischutz” or, hidden behind elderberry
bushes, to shoot at tyrannical Geslers in “William Tell.” In the
mean time I learned Tell's monologue, “Along this narrow path the
man must come,” by heart, and practiced the aria, “Through the
forest, through the meadows.”
Providence seemed to favor my plan, for it led me into all
acquaintance with a certain Lipp, who, on account of his
connections, was in a position to pave my way to the stage.
Lipp was a tall, slender youth, about sixteen years old, with
terribly large feet and hands. He usually wore a very faded,
light-blue coat, the sleeves of which hardly came below his
elbows, and a red vest. He had a rather stooping gait, and a
beaming smile continually played about his mouth. Besides, the
poor fellow was always hungry, and it was this peculiarity which
brought about our acquaintance.
On afternoons when there was no school, and I went out on the
green to play ball with my companions or fly my kite, Frau
Eberlein used to put something to eat in my pocket. Lipp soon
spied it out, and he knew how to get a part, or even the whole of
my luncheon for himself. He would pick up a pebble off the
ground, slip it from one hand to the other several times, then
place one fist above the other, saying:—
“This hand, or that?
Burned is the tail of the cat.
Which do you choose?
Upper or under will lose!”
If I said “upper,” the stone was always in the lower hand, and
vice versa. And Lipp would take my apple from me with a smile,
and devour it as if he were half famished.
Why did I allow it ? In the first place, because Lipp was beyond
me in years and in strength, and in the second place, because he
was the son of a very important personage. His father was nothing
less than the door-keeper of the theatre; a splendid man with a
shining red nose and coal-black beard reaching to his waist. The
wise reader now knows how young Lipp came by a light blue coat
and red vest.
My new friend from his earliest years had been constantly on the
stage. He played the gamin in folk-scenes and the monster in
burlesques. Besides, he was an adept at thunder and lightning; by
means of cracking a whip and the close imitation of the neighing
of horses, he announced the approaching stage-coach; he lighted
the moon in “ Der Freischutz”; and with a kettle and pair of
tongs gave forewarning of the witches' hour. When I opened my
heart to Lipp and confided to him that I wanted to go on the
stage, he reached out his broad hand to me with emotion and said,
“And so do I.” Hereupon we swore eternal friendship, and Lipp
promised as soon as possible to procure me an opportunity for
putting my dramatic qualifications to the test. From that hour
his manner changed towards me. Before, he had treated me with
some condescension, but now his behavior towards me was more like
that of a colleague. Moreover, the game of chance for my lunch
came to an end, for from that time forth I shared it with him
like a brother.
The fine fellow kept his promise to make a way for me to go on
the stage. A few evenings later (“Der Freischutz” was being
played) I stood with a beating heart behind the scenes, and
friend Lipp stood by my side. In my hand I held a string, with
which I set the wings of the owl in the wolf's glen in rhythmic
motion. My companion performed the wild chase. By turns he
whistled through his fingers, cracked a whip, and imitated the
yelping of the hounds. It was awfully fine.
“You did your part splendidly,” said Lipp to me at the end of the
scene; “next time you must go out on the stage.”
I swam in a sea of delight. A short time after, “Preciosa” was
given, and Lipp told me that I could play the gypsy boy. They put
a white frock on me and wound red bands crosswise about my legs.
Then a chorister took me by the hand and led me up and down the
back of the stage two or three times. That was my first appearance.
It was also my last. The affair became known. In school
I received a severe reprimand, and in addition, as a
consequence of the airy gypsy costume, a cold with a
cough, which kept me in bed for a day or two.
“It serves you right,” said Frau Eberlein. “He who will not hear
must feel. This comes from playing in the theatre. If your
blessed grandmother knew that you had been with play-actors she
would turn in her grave.”
Crushed and humiliated, I swallowed the various teas which my
nurse steeped for me one after another. But with each cup I had
to listen to an instructive story about the depravity of actors.
In order to lead me back from the way of the transgressors to the
path of virtue, Frau Eberlein painted with glowing colors; one
story in particular, in which occurred three bottles of
punch-essence never paid for, made a deep impression on me. But
Frau Eberlein's anecdotes failed to make me change my resolves.
Soon after, something very serious happened. Lipp's father, the
door-keeper of the theatre, after drinking heavily, fell down
lifeless by the card table in the White Horse; and my friend, in
consequence of this misfortune, came under the control of a
cold-hearted guardian, who had as little comprehension of the
dramatic art as Frau Eberlein. Lipp was given over to a
house-painter; who, invested with extended authority, took the
unfortunate fellow as an apprentice.
Lipp was inconsolable at the change in his lot. The smile
disappeared from his face, and I too felt melancholy when I saw
him going along the street in his paint-bespattered clothes, the
picture of despair.
One day I met the poor fellow outside the city gate, where the
last houses stand, painting a garden fence with an arsenic-green
color. “My good friend,” he said, with a melancholy smile, “I
cannot give you my hand, for there is paint on it; but we are
just the same as ever.” Then he spoke of his disappointed hopes.
“But,” he continued, “because they are deferred, they are not put
off forever, and these clouds” (by this he referred to his
present apprenticeship as painter) “will pass away. The time will
come — I say no more about it; but the time will come.”
Here Lipp stopped speaking and dipped his brush in the paint pot,
for his master was coming around the corner of the house.
One day Lipp disappeared. The authorities did everything in their
power to find him, but in vain; and since, at that time, the
river, on which the city stood, had overflowed its banks, it was
decided that Lipp had perished. The on]y person who did not share
in this opinion was myself. I had a firm conviction that he had
gone out into the wide world to seek his fortune, and that some
day he would turn up again as a celebrated artist and a
successful man. But year after year passed by and nothing was
heard of Lipp.
I had entered upon my fifteenth year, was reading Virgil and
Xenophon, and could enumerate the causes which brought the Roman
empire to ruin. But in the midst of my classical studies, I did
not lose sight of the real aim of my life, the dramatic art; and
as the stage had been closed to me since my first appearance, I
studied in my own room the roles in which I hoped to shine later.
Then I had already tried my skill as a dramatic author, and in my
writing-desk lay concealed a finished tragedy. It was entitled
“Pharaoh.” In it occurred the seven plagues of Egypt and the
miracles of Moses; but Pharaoh's destruction in the Red Sea
formed the finale from which I promised myself the most brilliant success.
Therefore I went about dressed as a regular artist. My
schoolmates imitated the University students,— wore gay-colored
caps, dark goldenred bands, and carried canes adorned with
tassels; but I wore over my wild hair a pointed Calabrian hat,
around my neck a loose silk handkerchief fastened together in an
artistic knot, and in unpleasant weather a cloak, the red-lined
corner of which I threw picturesquely over my left shoulder.
In this attire I went about in my native town, where I was
accustomed to spend my summer vacations. The boys on the street
made sport of me by their words and actions, but I thought, “What
does the moon care when the dog bays at her!” and holding my head
high, I walked past the scoffers.
Every year, in the month of August, a fair was held in the little
town. On the common, tents and arbors were put up, where beer and
sausages were furnished. Further entertainment was provided in
the way of rope-dancers, jugglers, a Punch-and-Judy show,
fortune-tellers, monstrosities, wax figures, and tragedies.
As a spoiled city youth, I considered it decidedly beneath my
dignity to take part in the people's merrymaking; but I couldn't
get out of it, and so I went with my parents and brothers and
sisters to the opening of the festival out in the park, and
walked more proudly than ever under my Calabrian hat.
The sights were inspected one after another, and in the evening
we all sat together in the front row of a booth, the proprietor
of which promised to exhibit the most extraordinary thing that
had ever been seen.
The spectacle was divided into three parts. In the first a little
horse with a large head was brought out, which answered any
questions asked him by nodding, shaking, and beating his hoofs.
In the second part two trained hares performed their tricks. With
their forelegs they beat the drum, fired off pistols, and in the
“ Battle with the Hounds,” they put to flight a whining terrier.
The proprietor had kept the best of all,— that is, the Egyptian
fire-eater, called “Phosphorus,” — for the last part. The curtain
went up for the third time, and on the stage, in fantastic
scarlet dress, with a burning torch in his left hand, there stood
a tall —ah! a form only too well known to me. It was Lipp, who
had been looked upon as dead.
I saw how the unfortunate fellow with a smile put a lump of
burning pitch in his mouth, and then everything began to swim
around me, I pulled my hat down over my eyes, made my way through
the crowd howling their applause, and staggered home exhausted.
During the rest of the festival I kept myself in strict
seclusion. I announced that I was not well, and this was really
no untruth, for I was very miserable. “That is because he is
growing,” said my anxious mother; and I assented, and swallowed
submissively the family remedies which she brought to me.
At last the fair was over, and the Egyptian fire-eater had left
the town. But the poor fellow did not go far. In the city where
he exhibited his skill he was recognized and arrested, because he
had avoided service in the army. To be sure, he was set free
again after a few weeks as unqualified; but in the mean time his
employer with the performing hares had gone nobody knew where,
and Lipp was left solely dependent on his art, which he practiced
for some time in the neighboring towns and villages.
The end of his artistic career is sad and melancholy. He fell a
victim to his calling. As an ambitious man he enlarged his
artistic capabilities; he ate not only pitch but also pieces of
broken glass, and an indigestible lamp-chimney was the cause of
his destruction.
When I returned to the city I burned my tragedy of “Pharaoh,” and
sold my cloak and Calabrian hat to an old-clothes dealer. I was
thoroughly disgusted with the career of an artist, and whenever
afterwards I was inclined to relapse, Frau Eberlein would call
out to me, “Do you, too, want to die from a lamp-chimney ?” Then
I would bend my head and bury my nose in my Greek grammar.
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