
In a small, barely-furnished apartment in the Archbishop’s palace at Salzburg, in Austria-Hungary, on a winter’s morning in the year 1766, a boy of ten years of age was seated at a table, his head resting upon his hand and his eyes turned towards the window. Before him were scattered a number of sheets of manuscript music-paper, several of which were covered with notes, which his childish fingers had patiently traced amidst a plentiful sprinkling of blots and smears.
There was something pathetic about the appearance of the motionless little figure, with its pale face, surmounted by a profusion of brown curls, and the fixed, earnest expression in the large dark eyes—a pathetic seriousness that implied a depth of reflection far beyond his years, and to which the work upon which he was engaged lent additional significance. Thus absorbed, the child paid no heed to the entry of a servant bearing a tray, upon which was spread a simple breakfast; and, following the instructions which he had received, the man laid the tray on the table and quitted the room in silence. Outside the door, however, the old servant paused for a moment in a listening attitude, as if to catch the chink of moving cup and platter, and thus be assured that the child had begun his meal. But as no sound came from within, old Hans shook his head gravely, turned the key in the lock, and, muttering to himself, descended the stairs.
The old servitor was puzzled, and somewhat troubled in mind as well, by the boy’s deep abstraction. That his master the Archbishop cherished any feelings of harshness or resentment towards the solitary little prisoner Hans refused to believe. Indeed, the Archbishop had confided to him that he merely desired to test the child’s powers of writing original music. But to the old man’s mind such a test was far too severe to be applied to one so young, and something in the boy’s far-away look had touched his heart and tempted him to disobey the stringent command which he had received not to converse with the little writer. Even now, as he was descending the stairs, he felt almost like a criminal in leaving the boy locked in his room without a word of comfort or encouragement, and he was half inclined to turn back on some excuse to speak with the prisoner and inquire how he felt. At that moment, however, the ringing of a distant bell summoned him to his master’s presence.
Archbishop Sigismund was pacing to and fro in the dining-room when his servant entered, his forehead puckered with a frown, and his eyes fixed on the carpet. But he at once checked himself in his walk, and, turning to Hans, said abruptly: ‘Have you taken the child his food?’ ‘Yes, your Grace,’ was the reply. ‘And—er—how did he seem—well, eh?’ ‘Quite well, your Grace.’ ‘You are sure of that?’ a trifle anxiously. ‘Perfectly sure, your Grace,’ replied the old man, though he would have liked to have added a word as to his doubts concerning the child’s happiness; but the Archbishop dismissed him with a wave of the hand, and, turning away, seated himself at the breakfast-table.
