Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 May 2021
Mozart and Salieri
Salieri encountered Mozart;
Took him friendly by the arm,
And smiled a thin-lipped ambiguous smile.
This was Italian charm.
Mozart observed the smile of Salieri
But was not enough observant,
(For the Angel of Death had called already
In the guise of an upper servant).
‘Maestro,’ said Salieri. ‘Dear Maestro,
It is happy that we met.’
(‘We’ll end this sharp boy's tricks,’ he thought
‘He’ll not get by – not yet!’)
‘And as for that post of kapellmeister
We’ll do what we can do.’
But something black within him whispered:
‘He is greater, is greater than you.
‘He is great enough to oust you, one day,
And take your place at Court.’
(‘Not if Salieri is Salieri,’
Salieri thought.)
‘It is happy that we met,’ said Salieri
‘I wish I could ask you to dine –
But I have, alas, a pressing engagement.
You will stay for a glass of wine?’
No one carried Mozart to nobody's grave
And the skies were glazed and dim
With a spatter of out-of-season rain
(Or the tears of the Seraphim).
Then two stern angels stood by that grave
Saying: ‘Infidel, Freemason,
We are taking your soul where it willed to be judged
At the throne of Ultimate Reason.’
But the Queen of the Night in coloratura
Horrors trilled at the sun,
For she looked at the soul of Wolfgang Amadeus
And she knew she had not won.
They lifted that soul where the great musicians
In contrapuntal fires
Through unlimited heavens of order and energy
Augment the supernal choirs.
And the spirit of Johann Sebastian, harrowed
With abstract darts of love,
Escorted the terrible child Mozart
Through courteous mansions above.
And hundred-fisted Handel erected
Great baroque arches of song
As the Cherubim and the Seraphim
Bandied Mozart along.
But Mozart looked back again in compassion
Below the vault of the stars
To where the body of Beethoven battered
Its soul on the prison bars.
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