The Second Life of Christmas Trees by Mark Perlberg In frozen January, my friends and I would drag discarded Christmas trees from the sidewalks of our shivering town to an empty lot. One match and fire raced down a dry sprig like a spurt of life. A puff of wind and the pile ignited, flamed above our heads. Silk waves. Spice of pitch and balsam in our nostrils. We stood in a ring around the body of the fire— drawn close as each boy dared, our faces stinging from the heat and cold, lash of that wild star burst on a winter night. "The Second Life of Christmas Trees" by Mark Perlberg, from The Impossible Toystore. © Louisiana State University Press, 2000. Reprinted with permission. (buy now) It's the birthday of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (works by this musician), born in Salzburg, Austria (1756). He only lived for 35 years but he started his career early — a child prodigy from a family of musicians. He toured all over Europe and wrote his first opera at age 11. Mozart died at the age of 35 in mysterious circumstances. There is a popular image of him as poor and miserable, working on a funeral requiem as he was dying. But overall, his final year was a good and productive one. He was living in Vienna. He was still getting commissions. He didn't have a lot of money in the year 1791, but then again, he rarely did — he and his wife, Constanze, never seemed able to live on what Mozart made. It was a busy year. In the first months of 1791, he wrote dance music for the winter balls at the court and the Piano Concerto No. 27. In the summer, a messenger came, asking Mozart to write a requiem for his patron, Count Franz von Walsegg who had lost his wife and wanted to commission a requiem in her honor. He was working on the opera La Clemenza di Tito to celebrate the coronation of Emperor Leopold as King of Bohemia. It premiered in early September. Three weeks later, his opera The Magic Flute opened in Vienna and was a big hit. In October, he finished Clarinet Concerto in A. Then a cantata for his Freemason lodge, which he directed himself on November 18th. Finally, he put all his energy toward the Requiem, but just after the performance of his cantata, he became extremely ill. He had a fever, and his whole body was swollen. He continued writing the Requiem right up until his death, which was only two weeks after he became sick. No one knows what Mozart's illness was, and there are dozens of theories: rheumatic fever, tuberculosis, endocarditis, syphilis, congestive heart failure, kidney disease, and poisoning. He died on December 5th, 1791 and was buried in a mass, unmarked grave, a common practice for the middle-class of Vienna. Mozart said, "Music, in even the most terrible situations, must never offend the ear but always remain a source of pleasure." On this day 102 years ago, modernist fiction writer Katherine Mansfield (books by this author) wrote to editor and essayist John Middleton Murry, whom she'd been dating for more than seven years: "It is ten minutes past eight. I must tell you how much I love you at ten minutes past eight on a Sunday evening, January 27th, 1918. … My love for you tonight is so deep and tender that it seems to be outside myself as well. I am fast shut up like a little lake in the embrace of some big mountains. If you were to climb up the mountains, you would see me down below, deep and shining — and quite fathomless, my dear. You might drop your heart into me and you'd never hear it touch bottom. I love you — I love you — Goodnight. Oh Bogey, what it is to love like this!" They got married that spring, in early May 1918 — but then split up two weeks after their wedding. Be well, do good work, and keep in touch.® |