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Thumbs And Fugues
by [?]

I

“Ready, father–ready!” shouted the small boy. He was standing on the top step of a flight of stairs leading to the organ-loft of the Hofchapel, peering in. His round, stolid face and short, square legs gave no hint of the excitement that piped in his shrill voice.

The man at the organ looked leisurely around, nodding his big head and smiling. “Ja, ja, S’bastian–ja,” he said placidly. His fingers played slowly on.

The boy mounted the steps to the organ and rubbed his cheek softly against the coat sleeve that reached out to the keys. The man smiled again a big, floating smile, and his hands came to rest.

The boy looked up wistfully. “They’ll all get there before we do,” he said quickly. “Come!”

The man looked down absently and kindly. “Nein, S’bastian.” He patted the round head beside him. “There is no need that we should hurry.”

They passed out of the chapel, across the courtyard and into the open road. For half an hour they trudged on in silence, their broad backs swinging from side to side in the morning light. Across the man’s back was slung a large violin, in its bag; and across the back of the boy hung a violin like that of the father, only shorter and fatter and squarer, and on his head was a huge woollen cap. He took it off and wiped the perspiration from his white forehead.

The man looked down at him once more and halted. “Now, but we will rest here,” he said gently. He removed the violin-bag carefully from his back and threw himself on the ground and took from his pocket a great pipe.

With a little sigh the boy sat down beside him.

The man nodded good-naturedly. “Ja, that is right.” He blew a puff of smoke toward the morning clouds; “the Bachs do not hurry, my child–no more does the sun.”

The boy smiled proudly. He looked up toward the ball of fire sailing above them and a change came over his face. “We might miss the choral,” he said wistfully. “They won’t wait, will they?”

The big man shook his head. “We shall not be late. There is my clock.” He nodded toward the golden sun. “And I have yet another here,” he added, placing a comfortable hand on his big stomach.

The boy laughed softly and lay quiet.

The man opened his lips and blew a wreath of smoke.

“There will be more than a hundred Bachs,” he said slowly, “and you must play what I have taught you–not too slow and not too fast.” He looked down at the boy’s fat fingers. “Play like a true Bach and no other,” he added.

The boy nodded. “Will Uncle Christoph be there?” he asked after a pause.

“Ja.”

“And Uncle Heinrich?”

“Ja, ja!”

The boy gave a quick sigh of contentment.

His father was looking at him shrewdly. “But it is not Uncle Heinrich that will be making a player of you, and it is not Uncle Christoph. It is only Johann Sebastian Bach that can make himself a player,” he said sternly.

“Yes, father,” replied the boy absently. His eyes were following the clouds.

The man blew great puffs of smoke toward them. “It is more than a hundred and twenty years ago that we came from Hungary,” he said proudly.

The boy nestled toward him. “Tell me about it.” He had heard the story many times.

“Ja, ja,” said the man musingly…. “He was my great-grandfather, that man–Veit Bach–and your great-great-grandfather.”

The boy nodded.

“And he was a miller—-“

He dropped into silence, and a little brook that ran over the stones near by babbled as it went.

The boy raised his eyes. “And he had a lute,” he prompted softly.

“Ja, he had a lute–and while the mill-wheel turned, he played the lute–sweet, true notes and tunes he played–in that old mill.”

The boy smiled contentedly.

“And now we be a hundred Bachs. We make music for all Germany. Come!” He sprang to his feet. “We will go to the festival, the great Bach festival. You, my little son, shall play like a true Bach.”