Photograph by Orren Jack Turner
This past weekend we thoroughly enjoyed the performances at
the annual Wakkerstroom Music Festival. Such talent!
While listening to the classical music coming forth from
violin, piano, marimba, clarinet, bassoon, organ and the rest, the following came
to mind. It originally appeared in the November 1955 edition of Reader's Digest.
The Night I Met Einstein
by Jerome
Weidman
When I was a
very young man, just beginning to make my way, I was invited to dine at the
home of a distinguished New York philanthropist.
After dinner
our hostess led us to an enormous drawing room. Other guests were pouring in,
and my eyes beheld two unnerving sights: servants were arranging small gilt
chairs in long, neat rows; and up front, leaning against the wall, were musical
instruments.
Apparently I
was in for an evening of Chamber music.
I use the phrase “in for” because music meant
nothing to me. I am almost tone deaf. Only with great effort can I carry the
simplest tune, and serious music was to me no more than an arrangement of
noises.
So I did
what I always did when trapped: I sat down and when the music started I fixed
my face in what I hoped was an expression of intelligent appreciation, closed
my ears from the inside and submerged myself in my own completely irrelevant
thoughts.
After a
while, becoming aware that the people around me were applauding, I concluded it
was safe to unplug my ears. At once I heard a gentle but surprisingly
penetrating voice on my right:
“You are
fond of Bach?” the voice said.
I knew as
much about Bach as I know about nuclear fission. But I did know one of the most
famous faces in the world, with the renowned shock of untidy white hair and the
ever-present pipe between the teeth. I was sitting next to Albert Einstein.
“Well,” I
said uncomfortably, and hesitated. I had been asked a casual question. All I had
to do was be equally casual in my reply.
But I could
see from the look in my neighbour’s extraordinary eyes that their owner was not
merely going through the perfunctory duties of elementary politeness.
Regardless of what value I placed on my part in the verbal exchange, to this man
his part in it mattered very much.
Above all, I
could feel that this was a man to whom you did not tell a lie, however small.
“I don’t
know anything about Bach,” I said awkwardly. “I’ve never heard any of his
music.”
A look of
perplexed astonishment washed across Einstein’s mobile face.
“You have
never heard Bach?”
He made it
sound as though I had said I’d never taken a bath.
“It isn’t
that I don’t want to like Bach,” I replied hastily. “It’s just that I’m tone deaf,
or almost tone deaf, and I’ve never really heard anybody’s music.”
A look of
concern came into the old man’s face. “Please,” he said abruptly, “You will
come with me?”
He stood up
and took my arm. I stood up. As he led me across that crowded room I kept my
embarrassed glance fixed on the carpet. A rising murmur of puzzled speculation
followed us out into the hall.
Einstein
paid no attention to it. Resolutely he led me upstairs.
He obviously
knew the house well. On the floor above he opened the door into a book-lined
study, drew me in and shut the door.
“Now,” he
said with a small, troubled smile. “You will tell me, please, how long you have
felt this way about music?”
“All my
life,” I said, feeling awful. “I wish you would go back downstairs and listen,
Dr. Einstein. The fact that I don’t enjoy it doesn’t matter.”
He shook his
head and scowled, as though I had introduced an irrelevance.
“Tell me,
please,” he said. “Is there any kind of music that you do like?”
“Well,” I
answered, “I like songs that have words and the kind of music where I can
follow the tune.”
He smiled
and nodded, obviously pleased. “You can give me an example, perhaps?”
“Well,” I
ventured, “almost anything by Bing Crosby.”
He nodded
again, briskly. “Good!”
He went to a
corner of the room, opened a phonograph and started pulling out records.
I watched
him uneasily. At last he beamed. “Ah!” he said.
He put the
record on and in a moment the study was filled with the relaxed, lilting
strains of Bing Crosby’s “When the Blue of the Night Meets the Gold of the
Day”.
Einstein
beamed at me and kept time with the stem of his pipe.
After three
or four phrases he stopped the phonograph.
“Now,” he
said. “Will you tell me, please, what you have just heard?”
The simplest
answer seemed to be to sing the lines. I did just that, trying desperately to
stay on tune and keep my voice from cracking. The expression on Einstein’s face
was like the sunrise.
“You see!”
he cried with delight when I finished. “You do have an ear!”
I mumbled
something about this being one of my favourite songs, something I had heard
hundreds of times, so that it didn’t really prove anything.
“Nonsense!”
said Einstein. “It proves everything! Do you remember your first arithmetic
lesson in school? Suppose, at your very first contact with numbers, your
teacher had ordered you to work out a problem in, say, long division or
fractions. Could you have done so?”
“No, of
course not.”
“Precisely!”
Einstein made a triumphant wave with his pipe stem. “It would have been
impossible and you would have reacted in panic. You would have closed your mind
to long division and fractions. As a result, because of that one small mistake
by your teacher, it is possible your whole life you would be denied the beauty
of long division and fractions.”
The pipe
stem went up and out in another wave.
“But on your
first day no teacher would be so foolish. He would start you with elementary
things - then, when you had acquired skill with the simplest problems, he would
lead you up to long division and to fractions.”
“So it is
with music.” Einstein picked up the Bing Crosby record.
“This
simple, charming little song is like simple addition or subtraction. You have
mastered it. Now we go on to something more complicated.”
He found
another record and set it going. The golden voice of John McCormack singing “The
Trumpeter” filled the room.
After a few
lines Einstein stopped the record.
“So!” he
said. “You will sing that back to me, please?”
I did - with
a good deal of self-consciousness but with, for me, a surprising degree of
accuracy. Einstein stared at me with a look on his face that I had seen only
once before in my life: on the face of my father as he listened to me deliver
the valedictory address at my high school graduation.
“Excellent!”
Einstein remarked when I finished. “Wonderful! Now this!”
“This”
proved to be Caruso in what was to me a completely unrecognizable fragment from
“Cavalleria Rusticana.”
Nevertheless,
I managed to reproduce an approximation of the sounds the famous tenor had
made. Einstein beamed his approval.
Caruso was
followed by at least a dozen others. I could not shake my feeling of awe over
the way this great man, into whose company I had been thrown by chance, was
completely preoccupied by what we were doing, as though I were his sole
concern.
We came at
last to recordings of music without words, which I was instructed to reproduce
by humming. When I reached for a high note, Einstein’s mouth opened and his
head went back as if to help me attain what seemed unattainable. Evidently I
came close enough, for he suddenly turned off the phonograph.
“Now, young
man,” he said, putting his arm through mine. “We are ready for Bach!”
As we
returned to our seats in the drawing room, the players were tuning up for a new
selection. Einstein smiled and gave me a reassuring pat on the knee.
“Just allow
yourself to listen,” he whispered. “That is all.”
It wasn’t
really all, of course. Without the effort he had just poured out for a total
stranger I would never have heard, as I did that night for the first time in my
life, Bach’s “Sheep May Safely Graze.” I have heard it many times since. I
don’t think I shall ever tire of it. Because I never listen to it alone. I am
sitting beside a small, round man with a shock of untidy white hair, a dead
pipe clamped between his teeth, and eyes that contain in their extraordinary
warmth all the wonder of the world.
When the
concert was finished I added my genuine applause to that of the others.
Suddenly our
hostess confronted us. “I’m so sorry, Dr. Einstein,” she said with an icy glare
at me, “that you missed so much of the performance.”
Einstein and
I came hastily to our feet. “I am sorry, too,” he said. “My young friend here
and I, however, were engaged in the greatest activity of which man is capable.”
She looked
puzzled. “Really?” she said. “And what is that?”
Einstein
smiled and put his arm across my shoulders. And he uttered ten words that - for
at least one person who is in his endless debt - are his epitaph:
“Opening up
yet another fragment of the frontier of beauty.”
George
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