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diff --git a/37996-h/37996-h.htm b/37996-h/37996-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..a822b1a --- /dev/null +++ b/37996-h/37996-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,8027 @@ + +<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" + "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"> + +<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"> + <head> + <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" /> + <title> + The Project Gutenberg eBook of Beethoven, by Elliott Graeme. + </title> + <style type="text/css"> + p { margin-top: .75em; + text-align: justify; + margin-bottom: .75em; + } + h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6 { + text-align: center; /* all headings centered */ + clear: both; + } + hr { width: 33%; + margin-top: 2em; + margin-bottom: 2em; + margin-left: auto; + margin-right: auto; + clear: both; + } + + table {margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;} + + body{margin-left: 10%; + margin-right: 10%; + } + + .pagenum { /* uncomment the next line for invisible page numbers */ + /* visibility: hidden; */ + position: absolute; + left: 92%; + font-size: smaller; + text-align: right; + } /* page numbers */ + + .linenum {position: absolute; top: auto; left: 4%;} /* poetry number */ + .blockquot{margin-left: 5%; margin-right: 10%;} + .sidenote {width: 20%; padding-bottom: .5em; padding-top: .5em; + padding-left: .5em; padding-right: .5em; margin-left: 1em; + float: right; clear: right; margin-top: 1em; + font-size: smaller; color: black; background: #eeeeee; border: dashed 1px;} + + .bb {border-bottom: solid 2px;} + .bl {border-left: solid 2px;} + .bt {border-top: solid 2px;} + .br {border-right: solid 2px;} + .bbox {border: solid 2px;} + + .center {text-align: center;} + .smcap {font-variant: small-caps;} + .u {text-decoration: underline;} + + .caption {font-weight: bold;} + + .figcenter {margin: auto; text-align: center;} + + .figleft {float: left; clear: left; margin-left: 0; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-top: + 1em; margin-right: 1em; padding: 0; text-align: center;} + + .figright {float: right; clear: right; margin-left: 1em; margin-bottom: 1em; + margin-top: 1em; margin-right: 0; padding: 0; text-align: center;} + + .footnotes {border: dashed 1px;} + .footnote {margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-size: 0.9em;} + .footnote .label {position: absolute; right: 84%; text-align: right;} + .fnanchor {vertical-align: super; font-size: .8em; text-decoration: none;} + + .poem {margin-left:10%; margin-right:10%; text-align: left;} + .poem br {display: none;} + .poem .stanza {margin: 1em 0em 1em 0em;} + .poem span.i0 {display: block; margin-left: 0em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;} + .poem span.i2 {display: block; margin-left: 2em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;} + .poem span.i4 {display: block; margin-left: 4em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;} + </style> + </head> +<body> + + +<pre> + +Project Gutenberg's Beethoven: A Memoir (2nd Ed.), by Elliott Graeme + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Beethoven: A Memoir (2nd Ed.) + +Author: Elliott Graeme + +Release Date: November 12, 2011 [EBook #37996] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BEETHOVEN: A MEMOIR (2ND ED.) *** + + + + +Produced by David E. Brown, Jane Hyland, Bryan Ness and +the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at +http://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from scanned +images of public domain material from the Google Print +project.) + + + + + + +</pre> + + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_i" id="Page_i">[Pg i]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/beethoven.jpg" alt="BEETHOVEN." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><br />BEETHOVEN</span> +<h5>Maclure & Macdonald, Lith. London</h5> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_ii" id="Page_ii">[Pg ii]</a></span></p> +<br /></div> + +<h1>BEETHOVEN<br /><br /></h1> + +<h3>A Memoir<br /></h3> + +<h2><span class="smcap">By</span> ELLIOTT GRAEME<br /></h2> + +<h4>WITH AN INTRODUCTORY ESSAY</h4> +<h5><span class="smcap">By Dr.</span> FERDINAND HILLER<br /> +OF COLOGNE<br /></h5> +<h3>SECOND EDITION<br /></h3> + +<p class="center">"How glorious it is to live one's life a thousand times!"</p> +<p><span style="margin-left:35em;" class="smcap">Beethoven</span></p> +<h5>LONDON<br /> +CHARLES GRIFFIN AND COMPANY<br /> +STATIONERS' HALL COURT<br /></h5> + +<div class="center">1876.<br /> +[<i>The right of translation is reserved.</i>] +<br /></div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">[Pg iii]</a></span><br /><br /></p> + +<h3>PREFACE<br /></h3> + +<p>The following brief sketch can lay no claim to originality; it is +merely a slight <i>résumé</i> of the principal events in the +master's life (from the works of Schindler, Ries, and Wegeler, and +more especially from Marx and Thayer), and is intended for those who, +without the leisure to go deeply into the subject, yet desire to know +a little more about the great Tone-poet than can be gathered from the +pages of a concert programme, however skilfully annotated.</p> + +<p>The few letters introduced have been translated +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">[Pg iv]</a></span>as nearly as possible in the manner in +which they were written. Beethoven's epistolary style was simple, fervent, original, but +certainly not polished.</p> + +<p>The author feels convinced that any shortcomings +in the "Memoir" will be more than +atoned for by Dr. Hiller's eloquent and appreciative +"<i>Festrede</i>," which seems to have been +dictated by that poetic genius, the possession +of which he so modestly disclaims.</p> + +<p style="margin-left:40em;">E.G.</p> +<p style="margin-left:2em;"><span class="smcap">London</span>,<br /><span style="margin-left:-2em;"><i>17th December, 1870.</i></span></p> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h3>PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION</h3> + + +<p>The first edition of this little book was exhausted +within a few months of publication, and I have +repeatedly been asked since to reprint it, but have +hitherto withheld my consent, trusting to be able +to undertake a more comprehensive work on the +subject. As, however, the necessary leisure for this +is still wanting to me, and the demand for the +"Memoir" continues, it is fated to reappear, and +I can but commend it again to the kind indulgence +of the reader.</p> + +<p>Several rectifications as to dates, &c., have been +made throughout, in accordance with the recent +researches of <span class="smcap">Alexander Thayer</span>, and the +chapter entitled <i>Lehrjahre</i> has been partly rewritten +on the basis of <span class="smcap">Nottebohm's</span> <i>Beethoven's Studien</i> +(<i>Part I., Unterricht bei Haydn und Albrechtsberger</i>) +by far the most important contribution to Beethoven-literature +which has appeared for some time. It +may, indeed, be considered the first step to the +<i>systematic</i> study of the Master, and as such deserves +to be better known in England than is at present +the case.</p> + + +<p style="margin-left:40em;">E.G.</p> +<p style="margin-left:2em;"><span class="smcap">London</span>,<br /><span style="margin-left:-1em;"><i>August, 1876</i></span></p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[Pg v]</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h3>CONTENTS</h3> + + + +<div class='center'> +<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary=""> +<tr><td> </td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">page</span></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Essay</span> <i>quasi</i> Fantasia "On the Hundredth Anniversary of Beethoven's Birth," by Dr. Ferdinand Hiller</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_vii">vii</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Chap. I.—Introductory</span>: Origin of the Family Van Beethoven—The Electorate of Cologne—Court of Clemens August the Magnificent—Ludwig van Beethoven the Elder—Johann van Beethoven—Bonn in 1770</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Chap. II.—Boyhood</span>: Birth—Early Influences and Training—Neefe—First Attempts at Composition—The Boy-Organist—Max Friedrich's National Theatre—Mozart and Beethoven—Disappointment</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_12">12</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Chap. III.—Youth</span>: Despondency—The Breuning Family—Literary Pursuits—Count Waldstein—National Theatre of Max Franz—King Lux and his Court—The Abbé Sterkel—Appointment as Court Pianist—First Love—Second Visit of Joseph Haydn</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_31">31</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Chap. IV.—Lehrjahre</span>: Arrival in Vienna—Studies with Haydn—Timely Assistance of Schenk—Albrechtsberger—Beethoven as a Student—His Studies in Counterpoint—What did Beethoven compose in Bonn?—Why have we so few examples of <i>fugue</i> in his early works?—Letters to Eleanore v. Breuning</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_46">46</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Chap. V.—The Virtuoso</span>: Family Occurrences—Music in Vienna—Van Swieten—Prince Lichnowski—Beethoven's Independence, Personal Appearance, Manners—Rasoumowski Quartet—Occurrences in Lichnowski Palace—First Three Trios—Artistic Tour to Berlin—Woelfl—Beethoven as an Improvisatore—Steibelt</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_69">69</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Chap. VI.—Conflict</span>: Deafness and its Consequences—His Brothers' Influence—Letters to Wegeler—"Mount of Olives"—Beethoven's Will—Beethoven as a Conductor—As an Instructor—Sinfonia Eroica—"Leonora" ("Fidelio")—"Adelaïde"</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_93">93</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Chap. VII.—Love</span>: The Fourth Symphony—Julia Guicciardi—Letters to an Unknown—To Bettina Brentano—Beethoven's Attachments—Domestic Troubles—Frau Nanette Streicher—Daily Life—Composing "<i>im Freien</i>"</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_127">127</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Chap. VIII.—Victory and Shadow</span>: Period of Greatest Creative Activity—Hummel—The Battle of Vittoria—Congress of Vienna—Maelzel—Pecuniary Difficulties—Adoption of Nephew—The Philharmonic Society—The Classical and Romantic Schools—The Jupiter Symphony—His Nephew's Conduct—Last Illness</td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_147">147</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Remarks on the Pianoforte Sonatas, by Dr. Hiller</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_171">171</a></td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Catalogue of Beethoven's Works</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_178">178</a></td></tr> +</table></div> + + +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/b_page_011.jpg" alt="" title="" /> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[Pg vii]</a></span><br /><br /></div> + +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/b_page_012.jpg" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + + +<h3>THE HUNDREDTH ANNIVERSARY OF BEETHOVEN'S BIRTH<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor"><span style="font-size:.8em;">[1]</span></a></h3> + +<p style="margin-left:35em;">"<i>Quasi Fantasia.</i>"<br /></p> + + +<p>The year 1749 brought us Goethe; 1756, Mozart; +1759, Schiller; and 1770, Beethoven. Thus, within +the short space of twenty-one years four of the +greatest poetic geniuses were born—four men of +whom not only the German Fatherland, but all +mankind must be proud.</p> + +<p>And even more happy than proud, since the most +splendid gift which the Divine Being from time to +time vouchsafes to poor humanity is that of genius. +Through it we receive the highest good in which we +are capable of participating—the forgetfulness of self +in a nobler life. Genius it is that gives us, if but for +a few short hours, that which the believer awaits with +earnest hope in another and a better world.</p> + +<p>Has there ever existed a poet who transported our +souls into his ideal kingdom with more irresistible +force than our Beethoven? Certainly not. More +universal effects have been achieved by others, but +none more deep or noble. Nay, we may say without<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[Pg viii]</a></span> +exaggeration that never did an artist live whose +creations were so truly <i>new</i>;—his sphere was the +unforeseen.</p> + +<p>Amidst so much that is trivial and dispiriting in art +and life, the widely diffused interest, the delight in +the creations of the wondrous man is a bright sign of +our times. I do not say the <i>comprehension</i> of them; +that is not, and cannot be the case. But there are, +perhaps, no poems in the love and admiration of +which so many of the highest intellects concur as the +tone-poems of our master. To the essential nature +of our Art, which bears within itself the all-reconciling +element of love, must we attribute the fact that +against it the most violent differences in religious, +political, and philosophical opinion make no stand—it +is the might of Beethoven's genius which subdues +the proudest minds, while quickening the pulsations +of the simplest hearts.</p> + +<p>If in anything the will of man shows itself weak, +nay, helpless, it is in the matter of intellectual creation. +A very strong will (is not even this beyond the reach +of most?) may lead to great learning, to brilliant +technical acquirements, to virtue itself—a spontaneous +poetic thought in word, tone, or colour, it will never +be able to bring forth. Thus, the true relation of +genius to us is that of a star, diffusing light and +warmth, which we enjoy and admire. Since, however, +to the higher man recognition and gratitude are +necessities, since he desires to add intelligence and +reverence to his admiration, and would willingly offer +up love also to the subject of it, he begins to investi<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[Pg ix]</a></span>gate. +He asks, what the divine germ, existing even in +the lisping child, demanded for its development; what +brought it out into blossom—what influences worked +upon it beneficially—to what extent he who was so +nobly gifted was supported and furthered by moral +strength—how he used the talent committed to him—finally, +how he fought through the life-struggle from +which no mortal is exempt.</p> + +<p>And then he inquires again and further; which of +his qualities, which of the properties peculiar to himself, +affect us most strongly?—in what relation does +he stand to the development of his art—in what to +that of his nation?—how does he appear with regard +to his own century?</p> + +<p>A mere attempt at answering these questions, and +the many connected with them, would require an +enormous apparatus of a biographic and æsthetic +nature, including a knowledge of the history of art +and culture, and an acquaintance with musical technicalities. +It does not fall either within our power or +the scope of these pages to make any approach to +such a task. A few slight hints may suffice to prevent +our forgetting (amid the extraordinary and all-engrossing +occurrences of the present time) the day +which sent to us a hundred years ago the no less +extraordinary man, who, a prophet in the noblest +sense of the word, foresaw and declared (though only +in tones) the nobleness and greatness which will be +revealed by the German people, if friendly stars shine +upon their future.</p> + +<p>A species of caste seems to have been implanted<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[Pg x]</a></span> +in man by nature—there are families of statesmen, +warriors, theologians, artists. It will nevertheless be +admitted that while it is often the case that circumstances, +family traditions, cause the sons to follow in +their fathers' footsteps, it frequently happens that the +calling lays hold of the man, becomes, in the truest +sense of the word, a <i>calling</i>.</p> + +<p>Several of our first composers have sprung out of +families in which the profession of music was chiefly +followed—but certainly not many. One thing, however, +was common to nearly all—they were marvellous +children, prodigies. <i>Prodigy!</i> now-a-days an +ominous word, recalling immediately to mind industrious +fathers, who force on concerts, and musical +attainments which do not refresh by their maturity, +but only excite astonishment at the precocity of +those from whom they are exacted. The abuse of +the phenomenon has brought the latter itself into a +bad light. A musical hothouse plant forced into +premature bloom through vanity or the thirst for +money may soon become stunted; none the less, +however, does the fact remain, that no intellectual +gift shows or develops itself earlier than that of +music. Bach, Handel, Mozart, Hummel, Rossini, +Mendelssohn, Clara Schumann, Liszt, Joachim, were +prodigies. Nature knows what she is about. He +alone to whom this wondrous tone-language has become +a second mother tongue, will be able to express +himself with freedom in it; but how soon do we +begin to attempt our mother tongue! And how few +succeed in really learning to <i>speak</i> it!<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[Pg xi]</a></span></p> + +<p>It would be inexplicable had not our Beethoven +been also a prodigy. He was one, but after such a +sound, healthy sort, that those about him were more +struck by the thought of his great future, than enthusiastic +about his achievements at the time. The +compositions which have been preserved to us from +his boyish days bear traces, even then, of the frank, +honest mode of expression which remained his to +the end of his career. Naturally, their contents are +trifling; what has a boy of twelve years to communicate +to the world, if his inner life develop itself +according to nature? Borne onwards by his artistic +readiness, he attained, however, at a very early age +an honourable, independent position with regard to the +outer world. He had barely quitted childhood when +he was organist at the Elector's Court in Bonn. At +a later period he occupied for several years the post +of violist in the orchestra. The viola was then one of +the most neglected orchestral instruments, and we +must form but a slight estimate of Beethoven's +achievements upon it. It was, however, invaluable +for him, the future Commander of the instrumental +tone-world, to have served <i>in the line</i>. In fact, every +striving young composer ought, as a matter of duty, +to act for at least one year as member of an orchestra, +were it only at the great drum. It is the surest +method of making the individuality of the different +sound organs ineffaceably one's own. When the +latter are entrusted to capable executants (as was the +case in the Electoral orchestra), the idea of a definite +personality is added to the peculiarity of the instru<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[Pg xii]</a></span>ment, +which is not at all a bad thing. How often in +later years may the image of one or other of his +former colleagues have presented itself vividly and +helpfully to the mind of the master, as he sat meditating +over a score! How often may he have heard +in spirit an expressive solo performed by one of +them!</p> + +<p>The stimulus which Beethoven received from +singers in those early days at Bonn did not work +very deeply. His own father, indeed, was one of the +Elector's vocalists, and sang both in church and on +the stage. But he was a sorry fellow, who saw in his +gifted son only a means of extricating himself from +his gloomy pecuniary difficulties, and certainly not +the man to inspire him for the wedding of Word to +Tone—the noblest union ever contracted.</p> + +<p>Even in the most magnificent of Beethoven's vocal +works there exists a certain roughness; the words +domineer over the melody, or the latter over the +poem. That perfect union—that melting in one +another of both factors—which is peculiar to Mozart +and Handel is found only separately (<i>vereinzelt</i>) in +him. Would a youth spent in the midst of a great +song-world have led our master along other paths?</p> + +<p>Certainly not without significance for his development +was the fact, that he was born on the lovely +banks of our joyous old Rhine. Do we not sometimes +hear it surging like a wave of the mighty +stream through the Beethoven harmonies? Do we +not feel ourselves blown upon by the fresh mountain +air? And do not the cordial, true-hearted melodies,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xiii" id="Page_xiii">[Pg xiii]</a></span> +which so often escape from the master, breathe the +very magic of one of those enchanting evenings +which we talk or dream away on the shore of the +most truly <i>German</i> stream? The taste for an open-air +life (a life <i>im Freien</i>, in freeness, as the German +language so nobly expresses it) remained faithful to +him until the end; and we can scarcely picture him +to ourselves better than as wandering in forests and +valleys, listening for the springs which sparkled within +himself.</p> + +<p>Scientific knowledge, even in its most elementary +form, was hardly presented to the notice of the young +musician, and if at a later period any interest in such +pursuits had arisen within him, he would have been +obliged to dismiss it. On the other hand, he buried himself +with his whole soul in the loftiest works of poetry, +that second higher world, and always came back with +renewed delight upon the works of Homer, Shakspere, +Goethe, and Schiller. Many and varied were the influences +which they exerted upon him. They were to him +"intellectual wine," as Bettina once named his music. +But those are completely mistaken who expect to +find, either in them or anywhere else, positive expositions +or elucidations of Beethoven's compositions, +as some have occasionally attempted to do, building +their theory partly on utterances of the master. +When the latter refers the constantly inquiring secretary, +Schindler (I know not on what occasion), to +Shakspere's "Tempest," it was, after all, only an +answer—nothing more. The awakening of pure +musical imagination is just as inexplicable as are its<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xiv" id="Page_xiv">[Pg xiv]</a></span> +results. One thing alone stands firm,—that which +speaks to the heart, came from the heart,—but the +life-blood which pulsates at the heart of the true +artist is a thousand times more richly composed than +that which flows in our veins. No æsthetic physiologist +will ever be able to analyze it completely. And, +in life, is it only the deep thoughts, the extraordinary +occurrences, which call forth all our sensations, out of +which alone our happiness and our misery are formed? +Is not a calm, serene autumn day enough to entrance +our inmost nature? a single verse to console us? the +friendly glance of a maiden to throw us into the sweetest +<i>reverie</i>? What trifling influences affect the eternally +rising and falling quicksilver of our hopes! And +thus the smallest occasions may have been sufficient +to cause vibration in a soul so highly strung as Beethoven's. +Most powerfully, however, in such a genius, +worked the pure creative impulse, that eternally glowing +fire in the deepest recesses of his nature, with its +volcanic—but, in this instance, blissful eruptions.</p> + +<p>We know that Beethoven proceeded as a young +man to Vienna, which he never afterwards left. He +found there (at least in the first half of his residence) +enthusiastic admirers, intelligent friends, admission to +distinguished circles, and lastly, that most necessary +evil—money. Nobody will grudge to the lively, good-humoured, +imperial city the fame of being able to +designate as her own a brilliant line of our greatest +tone-poets. But then she ought not to take it amiss +that we should wonder how, within her walls, at <i>that</i> +time, so magnificent an artistic development as Beet<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xv" id="Page_xv">[Pg xv]</a></span>hoven's +should ever have been accomplished. Shall +we say, not <i>because</i>, but—<i>in spite of</i> her? or shall we +utter the supposition that no agglomeration of men +can be sufficient for genius, since it treads a way of +its own, which bears no names of streets? When, +however, the question comes under discussion, of the +relation of a great composer to <i>that</i> public among +whom his lot is cast, we cannot deny that it is easier +to understand how a Handel created his oratorios in +the so-called unmusical London, than how Beethoven +composed his symphonies in the musical Vienna of +the period. The former found himself in London in +the midst of a grand public life,—grand were the +powers over which he held sway, like the continually +increasing throngs of listeners who streamed to his +performances. When, on the other hand, we hear of +the difficulty with which Beethoven, during the course +of a quarter of a century, succeeded in giving about a +dozen concerts in which his Titanic orchestral poems +were performed <i>for the first time</i>, we become faint at +heart. And I cannot do otherwise than express my +conviction that, under other conditions, no inconsiderable +portion of his works, which are (to use Schumann's +expression) <i>veiled symphonies</i>, would have +revealed their true nature. The world of the musician +would hardly have been more enriched thereby, +but the musical public would have benefited. For +millions would have been edified, where now hundreds +torment themselves (with quartets and sonatas) for +the most part in vain.</p> + +<p>Yes! these symphonies and overtures, with their<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xvi" id="Page_xvi">[Pg xvi]</a></span> +unpretending designations, are the first poems of our +time, and they are <i>national poems</i> in a far truer sense +than the songs of the Edda, and all connected with +them, ever can or will be for us, despite the efforts of +littérateurs and artists. Yes! in the soul of this +Rhinelander, who every day inveighed against the +town and the state in which he lived, who was +zealous for the French Republic, and ready to +become Kapellmeister to King Jerome—in this soul +was condensed the most ideal Germania ever conceived +by the noblest mind. With the poet we may +exclaim, "For he was ours!"—<i>ours</i> through what +he uttered—<i>ours</i> through the form in which he spoke—<i>ours</i>, +for we were true to the proverb in the way +we ill-treated and misunderstood him.</p> + +<p>"Industry and love" Goethe claims for his countrymen. +No artist ever exercised these qualities +with regard to his art in a higher degree than did +Beethoven. <i>She</i> was to him the highest good—no +care, no joy of life could separate him from her. +Neither riches nor honours estranged him from the +ideal which he perceived and strove after so long as +he breathed. He never could do enough to satisfy +himself either in single works or in his whole career. +He spared himself no trouble in order to work out +his thoughts to the fullest maturity, to the most +transparent clearness. To the smallest tone-picture +he brought the fullest power. His first sketches, +like the autographs of his scores, show in the plainest +manner that inflexible persistency, that unwearied +patience, which we presuppose in the scientific in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xvii" id="Page_xvii">[Pg xvii]</a></span>vestigator, +but which, in the inspired singer, fill us +with astonishment and admiration. In all conflicts +(and every artistic creation is a conflict) the toughest +difficulty is <i>to persevere</i>.</p> + +<p>Truth was a fundamental part of Beethoven's character. +What he sang came from his deepest soul. +Never did he allow himself to make concessions +either to the multitude and its frivolity, or to please +the vanity of executants. The courage which is +bound up with this resembles the modest bravery of +the citizen, but it celebrates even fewer triumphs +than the latter.</p> + +<p>Beethoven was proud, not vain. He had the consciousness +of his intellectual power—he rejoiced to +see it recognised—but he despised the small change +of every-day applause. Suspicious and hasty, he +gave his friends occasion for many complaints, but +nowhere do we find a trace of any pretension to hero-worship. +He stood too high to feel himself honoured +by such proceedings; but, at the same time, he had +too much regard for the independent manliness of +others to be pleased with a homage which clashed +against that.</p> + +<p>What a fulness of the noblest, the sublimest conceptions +must have lived and moved in him to admit +of their crystallizing themselves into the melodies +which transport us!—softness without weakness, +enthusiasm without hollowness, longing without sentimentality, +passion without madness. He is deep +but never turgid, pleasant but never insipid, lofty +but never bombastic. In the expression of love, fer<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xviii" id="Page_xviii">[Pg xviii]</a></span>vent, +tender, overflowing with happiness or with +melancholy, but never with ignoble sensuality. He +can be cordial, cheerful, joyful to extravagance, to +excess—never to vulgarity. In the deepest suffering +he does not lose himself—he triumphs over it. He +has been called humorous—it is a question whether +music, viewed in its immediateness and truth, be +capable of expressing humour—yet it may be that +he sometimes "smiles amid tears." With true +majesty does he move in his power, in his loftiness, +in the boldness of his action, which may rise to defiance—never +to senseless licence. A little self-will +shows itself here and there, but it suits him well, for +it is not the self-will of obstinacy, but of striving. +He can be pious, never hypocritical; his lofty soul +rises to the Unspeakable; he falls on his knees with +humility, but not with slavish fear, for he feels the +divinity within. A trace of heroic freedom pervades +all his creations, consequently they work in the cause +of freedom. The expression, "<i>Im Freien</i>"—liberty! +might serve as the inscription on a temple dedicated +to his genius!</p> + +<p>Like Nature herself, he is varied in his forms, without +ever relinquishing a deep-laid, well-concerted +basis; he is rich in the melodies which he produces, +but never lavish; he acts in regard to them with +a wise economy. In the working out of his thoughts +he unites the soundest musical logic to the richest +inventive boldness. Seldom only does he forget the +words of Schiller,—"In what he leaves <i>unsaid</i>, I +discover the master of style."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xix" id="Page_xix">[Pg xix]</a></span></p> + +<p>This wise economy does not forsake him either in +the selection or the number of the organs which he +employs. He avoids every superfluity, but the spirits +of sound which he invokes must obey him. Nevertheless, +not to slavish servitude does he reduce them; +on the contrary, he raises them in their own estimation +by that which he exacts from them. What +might be urged against him, perhaps, is that he +sometimes makes demands upon them to which they +are not adequate, that his ideal conception goes +beyond their power of execution.</p> + +<p>He has spoken almost exclusively in the highest +forms of instrumental music, and where, in one way +or other, words are added to these, he has always +been actuated by high motive. He sings of Love +and Freedom with Goethe, of Joy with Schiller, of +the heroism of Conjugal Love in "Fidelio;" in his +solemn Mass he gives expression to all those feelings +which force their way from man to his Maker.</p> + +<p>Enough, enough! we would never have done, were +we to say all that could be said about such a mind. +Dare we now really claim his creations, which breathe +the highest humanity, as specially <i>German</i>? I think +this will be granted us when we add to it the consideration +that our greatest poets and thinkers have, +in like manner; struck root firmly in their nationality, +whence they have grown up—away, beyond—into +those regions from which their glance embraced but +<i>one</i> nobly striving human family.</p> + +<p>It has been often declared that we, for long, felt +and recognised our national unity only through<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xx" id="Page_xx">[Pg xx]</a></span> +the works of our poets, artists, and philosophers; +but it has never been fully recognised that it was +our first tone-poets in particular, who caused the +essential German character to be appreciated by +other nations. There are, perhaps, no two German +names which can rejoice in a popularity—widely +diffused in the most dissimilar nations—equal to +that of Mozart and Beethoven. And Haydn, and +Weber, and Schubert, and Mendelssohn! what a +propaganda have they made for the Fatherland! +That they speak a <i>universal</i> language does not prevent +their uttering in it the best which we possess +<i>as Germans</i>.</p> + +<p>Nevertheless, as men are constituted, it is not to +be denied that what enchants does not on that +account overawe them; they <i>esteem</i> the beautiful, +they <i>respect</i> only force and strength, even should +these work destroyingly.</p> + +<p>Well, then! Germany has now shown what she +can do in this way; she will bloom afresh, and +follow out her high aims in every direction. The +consideration which we could long since have claimed +as a people, will then be freely accorded to the +German state.</p> + +<p>As a musician, I can wish for the nation nothing +better than that it should resemble a Beethoven +symphony,—full of poetry and power; indivisible, +yet many-sided; rich in thought and symmetrical +in form; exalted and mighty!</p> + +<p>And for the Beethoven symphonies I could wish +directors and executants like those of whom the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xxi" id="Page_xxi">[Pg xxi]</a></span> +world's history will speak when considering the +nineteenth century. But History, if at all true to her +task, must also preserve the name of the man who, +nearly seventy years ago, created the Eroica,—an +achievement in the intellectual life which may place +itself boldly by the side of every battle which has +left invigorating and formative traces on the destiny +of mankind.</p> + +<p> +<span class="smcap">Ferdinand Hiller.</span><br /> +</p> + +<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> This Essay also appeared in Germany in the <i>Salon</i>.</p></div> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 140px;"> +<img src="images/b_page_026.jpg" width="140" height="150" alt="" title="" /> +<br /><br /><br /><br /></div> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter"> +<img src="images/b_page_028a.jpg" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + + +<h2>BEETHOVEN:</h2> + +<p class="center">A Memoir.</p> + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h3>CHAPTER I</h3> + +<p class="center">INTRODUCTORY</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>Origin of the family <span class="smcap">Van Beethoven</span>—The Electorate of Cologne—Court +of Clemens August the Magnificent—Ludwig van Beethoven +the Elder—Johann van Beethoven—Bonn in 1770.</p></div> + +<div class="figleft" style="margin-left: 0em; margin-right: 0em; margin-bottom: 0em; margin-top: 0em;"> +<img src="images/t.jpg" alt="" title="" /> +</div> +<p>owards the middle of the seventeenth +century there lived in a Belgian village +near Louvain a family of the name <span class="smcap">Van +Beethoven</span>. To their position in life we have no +clue, unless it be that contained in the name itself +(<i>beet</i>, root; <i>hof</i>, garden), which after all only indicates +that the occupation of some remote progenitor was +akin to that of the "grand old gardener" from whom +we all claim descent. The question, however, is +immaterial.</p> + +<p>A member of this family left his native place, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span> +in the year 1650 settled in Antwerp, where he married, +and became the founder of a race, one of whom +was destined to render the hitherto obscure name +immortal.</p> + +<p>The grandson of this Beethoven had twelve children, +the third of whom, Ludwig, followed the +example of his great-grandsire, and quitted the +paternal roof at an early age. It has been imagined +that this step was the result of family disagreements; +however that may be, it is certain that after the +lapse of some years Ludwig was again in friendly +correspondence with his relations.</p> + +<p>The youth bent his steps towards the home of +his ancestors, where he probably had connections, +and succeeded in getting an appointment for the +period of three months in one of the churches of +Louvain. As this was merely to fill the place of +the <i>Phonascus</i> who was ill, young Beethoven found +himself when the three months were over again adrift.</p> + +<p>He was but eighteen; tolerably well educated, +however; a cultivated musician, and the possessor of +a good voice. With these qualities he was pretty +sure of making his way, and in the following year +we hear of him at Bonn, the seat of government of +the splendour-loving Clemens August, Elector of +Cologne.</p> + +<p>It has been thought that he received a special summons +thither, but this is, to say the least, doubtful. +It is more probable that the young man, with the +love of change and the confidence in his own abilities +natural to his age, was drawn to Bonn by the dazzling<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span> +reports that were spread far and wide of the Mæcenas +then on the episcopal throne.</p> + +<p>A few words may not be out of place here as to +the nature of the independent Ecclesiastical States +(and specially of Cologne), which occupy so large a +space in the history of Germany prior to the French +Revolution; since the fact of the great master having +been born in one of these communities had an influence +on his career which would have been wanting +had fate placed him in a state of more importance, +politically speaking.</p> + +<p>We in England are inclined to hold somewhat in +contempt the petty German court—the "Pumpernickel" +of Thackeray,—with its formality, its gossip, +its countless rules of etiquette, and its aping the doings +of its greater neighbours. And yet in this ridicule +there is a touch of ingratitude, for how greatly are +we indebted to these "Serene Transparencies," and +their love of pomp and display! How many masterpieces +of art owe to their fostering care their very +existence! How many men eminent in science and +literature have to thank them for that support and +encouragement without which their works, if produced +at all, must have fallen to the ground dead-born! +People talk of the divine power, the inherent energy +of genius, but what a loss is it for the world when +that energy is consumed in the effort of keeping soul +and body together! The divine power will and +does manifest itself at length, but enfeebled and +distorted by the struggle which might have been +averted by a little timely aid.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span></p> + +<p>These prince-bishops of Cologne generally belonged +to some royal house, the office being in fact regarded +as a convenient sinecure for younger sons. They +were chosen by the Chapter, subject only to the +approval of the Pope and the Emperor, as the supreme +spiritual and temporal heads, the people themselves +having no voice in the matter.</p> + +<p>They ruled over a small territory of about thirty +German miles in length, and in some places only +two or three in breadth. Within this limited area +there were several wealthy and flourishing towns; +among which, strangely enough, that which gave its +name to the diocese was not included, a feud of the +thirteenth century between the reigning archbishop +and the burghers of Cologne having resulted in the +recognition of the latter as a free imperial city, and +the removal of the court to Bonn, which continued to +be the seat of government until the abolition of the +Electorate in 1794.</p> + +<p>Were it not that the loss of so wealthy a town as +Cologne was of no small moment to the episcopal +coffers, the change must have been agreeable rather +than otherwise, for Bonn, even in those days, fairly +bore the palm from Cologne as a place of residence. +Here, then, for about five hundred years, the little +state flourished, better perhaps than we, with our +modern ideas as to the union of the temporal and +spiritual power are willing to admit, and especially +in the last fifty years of its existence, was this the case.</p> + +<p>Debarred by the limited income at their disposal +from taking any prominent part in political life, cut<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span> +off from ordinary domestic ties and interests, the +archbishops were driven to seek compensation for +these deprivations in some favourite pursuit; and to +their credit be it said, not the delights of the chase +or the table alone engaged their attention. The old +genius of appreciation of art transferred its presence +from the Arno to the Rhine, and began to exert in +the Electors of Cologne an influence of great importance +in the æsthetic development of Germany.</p> + +<p>The four last Electors especially distinguished +themselves, and shed a lustre on their court, by the +number of talented men they drew around them, and +the liberal patronage they bestowed on music and +the drama. Joseph Clemens, the first of these, was +himself a composer, after the usual fashion of royal +dilettanti, no doubt, but a keen discerner of talent +in others.</p> + +<p>His successor, Clemens August, had passed his +youth in Rome, where, although modern taste was +on the decline, the imperishable monuments of art +by which he was surrounded seem to have breathed +something of their own spirit into him. He did a +great deal towards beautifying the town of Bonn; +built, besides churches and cloisters, an immense +palace, the present university, and greatly enlarged +the villa of Poppelsdorf, now the Natural History +Museum. His household was conducted on the most +magnificent scale, grand fêtes were of common occurrence, +and his court was thronged by celebrities of +every rank.</p> + +<p>Especially did the reputation of the court music<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span> +stand high. The archbishop, like his predecessor, +was a connoisseur, and selections from the operas of +Handel and the cantatas of Sebastian Bach were +performed at Bonn in a style worthy of the imperial +court at Vienna.</p> + +<p>It was to this brilliant little capital, then, that +young Ludwig van Beethoven made his way in the +year 1732, with a light heart and still lighter purse, +and begged for an engagement as one of the court +musicians, which distinction, after the customary +year's probation, was formally granted him, with an +annual stipend of four hundred guldens, at that time +considered a very good income for so young a man.</p> + +<p>His career seems to have been uniformly successful +and honourable. Existing documents speak of him +as successively simple <i>Musicus</i>, then <i>Dominus van +Beethoven</i>, next as <i>Musicus Anticus</i>, and finally in the +year 1761 as <i>Herr Kapellmeister</i>, when his name also +figures third in a list of twenty-eight <i>Hommes de +chambre Honoraires</i> in the "Court Calendar." This +success is the more remarkable when we reflect that +Ludwig van Beethoven the elder was no composer, +and in those days the musical director in the service +of a prince was expected to produce offhand, at an +hour's notice, appropriate music for every family +occurrence, festival or funeral; so that his appointment +as kapellmeister must have created no little +jealousy, especially as there were several eminent +composers at court. But in truth it would have been +impossible for him to find much time for composition +amid the multifarious duties that devolved upon him. +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>In addition to the general responsibility over all +pertaining to musical matters, including the oversight +of the numerous singers, choristers, and instrumentalists +in the Elector's service, he was expected +to conduct in church, in the theatre, on private +occasions at court, to examine the candidates for +vacancies in the choir and orchestra, and also to take +the bass part in several operas and cantatas. Truly +the Herr Kapellmeister held no sinecure, if his royal +master did!</p> + +<p>Notwithstanding, he seems to have led a quiet, +even-going life, able, unlike the most of his colleagues, +to lay by a little sum of money, happy in the exercise +of his art (alas, poor man! domestic bliss was +denied him), respected and beloved by all.</p> + +<p>Such was the grandfather of the great Beethoven. +He died when the boy was but three years of age; +nevertheless the old man in the scarlet robe usually +worn at that time by elderly people, with his dark +complexion and flashing eye, seems to have made no +ordinary impression on Beethoven's childish mind. +He always spoke with reverence of his grandfather, +whom he doubtless regarded as the founder of the +family, and the only relic that he cared to have when +settled in Vienna was a portrait of the old man, +which he begs his friend Wegeler in a letter to send +him from Bonn.</p> + +<p>We have hinted that Ludwig van Beethoven was +not happy in his home. If every one is haunted by +some skeleton, his was grim enough. Not many years +after their marriage his wife Josepha had become<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span> +addicted to drinking, and in fact her habits were such +that it was found necessary to place her in the restraint +of a convent at Cologne. Thayer attributes this +failing to grief for the loss of her children, only one of +whom lived to manhood; but this trait in her character +was unfortunately reproduced in her son Johann.<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></p> + +<p>The latter appears to have been a man of vacillating, +inert temperament, gifted with a good voice and +artistic sensibility, but not capable of any sustained +effort. At the age of twenty-four we find him filling +the post of Tenor in the Electoral Chapel with the +miserable stipend of one hundred thalers, and not +distinguished in any way, unless we except his ingenuity +in spelling or misspelling his own name in the +petitions which he from time to time addressed to +the Elector for an increase of salary. In these he +calls himself <i>Bethoven</i>, <i>Betthoven</i>, <i>Bethof</i>, <i>Biethoffen</i>; +but this instance does not warrant us in concluding +that he was a man of no education whatever, for the +orthography even of those who considered themselves +scholars was at that time very erratic.</p> + +<p>At the age of twenty-seven, on an income not +much larger than that just mentioned, Johann van +Beethoven took unto himself a wife. The entry in +the register of the parish of St. Remigius runs thus:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p> +"Copulavi— <span style="margin-left:30em;"> "Nov. 12, 1767.</span> +</p> + +<p>"<span class="smcap">Johannem van Beethoven</span>, filium +legitimum <span class="smcap">Ludovici van Beethoven</span> et <span class="smcap">Mariæ +Josephæ Poll</span>,</p> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span></p> +<p class="center">Et<br /></p> + +<p><span class="smcap">Mariam Magdalenam Keferich</span>, +viduam <span class="smcap">Leym</span>, ex Ehrenbreitstein, filiam <span class="smcap">Henrici +Keferich</span> et <span class="smcap">Annæ Mariæ Westroffs</span>."</p></div> + +<p>The object of his choice was a young widow, +Maria Magdalena, daughter of the head cook at the +castle of Ehrenbreitstein. Her first husband, Johann +Leym, one of the <i>valets de chambre</i> to the Elector of +Treves, had left her a widow at the age of nineteen. +The fruit of this plebeian union between the tenor +singer of the Electoral Chapel and the daughter of +the head cook to his Grace the Archbishop of Treves +was the great maestro.</p> + +<p>What a downfall must the discovery of this fact +have been to the numerous Viennese admirers of +Beethoven, who for long persisted in attributing to +him a noble origin, confounding the Flemish particle +<i>van</i> with the aristocratic <i>von</i>! It was impossible, they +thought, that Beethoven's undoubted aristocratic +leanings could be compatible with so humble a +parentage. Hence the absurd fable, promulgated by +Fayolle and Choron, which represented him as a +natural son of Frederic II., King of Prussia, which +was indignantly repudiated by Beethoven himself.</p> + +<p>In general careless of his own reputation, he could +not bear that the slightest breath of slander should +touch his mother; and in a letter addressed to Wegeler +begged him to "make known to the world the honour +of his parents, particularly of his mother." Her +memory was always regarded by him with the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span> +deepest tenderness, and he was wont to speak +lovingly of the "great patience she had with his +waywardness."</p> + +<p>We cannot conclude this short sketch better than +by presenting the reader with Thayer's picturesque +description of Bonn, as it must have appeared in the +eyes of the young Beethoven.</p> + +<p>The old town itself wore an aspect very similar to +that of the present day. There were the same +churches and cloisters, the same quaint flying bridge, +the same ruins of Drachenfels and Godesberg towering +above the same orchard-embedded villages. The +Seven Hills looked quietly down on the same classic +Rhine, not as yet desecrated by puffing tourist-laden +steamboat or shrieking locomotive.</p> + +<p>Gently and evenly flowed the life-current in the +Elector's capital, no foreboding of nineteenth century +bustle and excitement causing even a ripple on the +calm surface.</p> + +<p>"Let our imagination paint for us a fine Easter or +Whitsun morning in those times, and show us the +little town in its holiday adornment and bustle.</p> + +<p>"The bells are ringing from castle tower and church +steeple; the country people, in coarse but comfortable +garments (the women overladen with gay colours), +come in from the neighbouring villages, fill the +market-places, and throng into the churches to early +mass.</p> + +<p>"The nobles and principal citizens, in ample low-hanging +coats, wide vests, and knee-breeches (the +whole suit composed of some bright-coloured stuff<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>silk, +satin, or velvet), with great white fluttering cravats, +ruffles over the hands; buckles of silver, or even +of gold, below the knee and on the shoes; high frizzed +and powdered perruques on the head, covered with a +cocked hat, if the latter be not tucked underneath +the arm; a sword by the side, and generally a gold-headed +cane; and, if the morning be cold, a scarlet +mantle thrown over the shoulders.</p> + +<p>"Thus attired they decorously direct their steps to +the castle to kiss the hand of his Serene Highness, or +drive in at the gates in ponderous equipages, surmounted +by white-powdered, cocked-hatted coachman +and footman.</p> + +<p>"Their wives wear long narrow bodices with immense +flowing skirts. Their shoes with very high +heels, and the towering rolls over which their hair is +dressed, give them an appearance of greater height +than they in reality possess. They wear short +sleeves, but long silk gloves cover their arms.</p> + +<p>"The clergy of different orders and dress are attired +as at the present day, with the exception of the +streaming wigs. The Electoral Guard has turned +out, and from time to time the thunder of the firing +from the walls reaches the ear.</p> + +<p>"On all sides strong and bright contrasts meet the +eye; velvet and silk, 'purple and fine linen,' gold +and silver. Such was the taste of the period; expensive +and incommodious in form, but imposing, +magnificent, and indicative of the distinction between +the different grades of society."</p> + +<p>Such was the Bonn of 1770.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span></p> + +<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> We are told on good authority that the elder Beethoven had invested +his money in "two cellars of wine," which he bought from the growers +of the district, and sold into the Netherlands. An unlucky speculation! +Johann, we learn, was early an adept at "wine-tasting."—<span class="smcap">Thayer</span>, +Vol. i. App., p. 328.</p></div> +</div> + + +<div class="figcenter" ><br /><br /> +<img src="images/b_page_039a.jpg" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + + +<h3>CHAPTER II</h3> + +<p class="center">BOYHOOD.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>Birth—Early Influences and Training—Neefe—First Attempts at Composition—The +Boy Organist—Max Friedrich's National Theatre—Mozart +and Beethoven—Disappointment.</p></div> + +<div class="figleft" style="margin-left: 0em; margin-right: 0em; margin-bottom: 0em; margin-top: 0em;"> +<img src="images/o.jpg" alt="" title="" /> +</div> +<p>n the 17th of December, 1770, in the old +house in the Bonngasse, Ludwig van +Beethoven first saw the light. He was not +the eldest child, Johann having about eighteen +months previously lost a son who had also been +christened Ludwig.</p> + +<p>Beethoven's infant years flew by happily, the +grandfather being still alive, and able to make good +any deficiency in his son's miserable income; but in +the year 1773 the old man was gathered to his +fathers, and the little household left to face that +struggle with poverty which embittered Beethoven's +youth.</p> + +<p>The father, however, was not yet the hardened, +reckless man he afterwards became, and could still +take pleasure in the manifest joy exhibited by his +little son whenever he sat at the pianoforte and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span> +played or sang. The sound of his father's voice was +sufficient to draw the child from any game, and great +was his delight when Johann placed his little fingers +among the keys and taught him to follow the melody +of the song.</p> + +<p>On the title-page of the three Sonatas dedicated +to the Elector Maximilian Friedrich, Beethoven says, +"From my fourth year music has been my favourite +pursuit;" and such would seem to have been really +the case.</p> + +<p>The readiness with which the child learned was, +however, unfortunate for him. No long interval had +elapsed since the extraordinary performances of the +young Mozarts had astonished the whole musical +world, and the evil genius of Johann van Beethoven +now prompted him to turn his son's talents to the +same account. He resolved to make of Ludwig +a prodigy, and foresaw in his precocious efforts a +mine of wealth which would do away with any +necessity for exertion on his part, and allow him +to give full scope to what was fast becoming his +dominant passion.</p> + +<p>With this end in view he undertook the musical +education of his boy, and the little amusing lessons, +at first given in play, now became sad and serious +earnest. Ludwig was kept at the pianoforte morning, +noon, and night, till the child began positively to +hate what he had formerly adored.</p> + +<p>Still the father was relentless: Handel, Bach, +Mozart, all had been great as child-musicians; and if +the boy (only a baby of five years) showed signs of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span> +obstinacy or sulkiness, he must be forced into submission +by cruel threats and still more cruel punishments. +Many a time was the little Ludwig seen in +tears, standing on a raised bench before his pianoforte, +thus early serving his apprenticeship to grief.</p> + +<p>In short, Johann was fast doing all he could to +ruin the genius of his son, when, fortunately for the +world, it soon became evident that if Ludwig were to +do wonders as a prodigy, he would require a better +teacher than his father, and the boy was accordingly +handed over to one Pfeiffer, an oboist in the theatre, +and probably a lodger in Johann's house.</p> + +<p>This man seems to have been of a genial, kindly +nature, though only too willing to second his landlord's +views with regard to the boy; for we learn that +when the two came home from the tavern far on in +the night (as was too often the case) the little Ludwig +would be dragged from his bed and kept at the +pianoforte till daybreak! Beethoven seems, however, +to have had a great regard for Pfeiffer, who was +an excellent pianist, and from whom he declared he +had learned more than from any one else.</p> + +<p>On hearing many years after that he was broken +down and in poverty, he sent him, through Simrock +the music publisher, a sum of money.</p> + +<p>This ruthless conduct on the part of Johann, though +unjustifiable and inhuman, probably layed the foundation +of the technical skill and power over the +pianoforte which so greatly distinguished Beethoven. +It is not positively certain that the father gained his +end, and made money by exhibiting the child, though<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span> +we have the testimony of the widow Karth (who as a +child inhabited the same house as the Beethovens) +that on one occasion the mother made a journey to +Holland and Belgium—probably to some relations in +Louvain,—where she received several considerable +presents from noble personages before whom the +wonder-child had performed. This, however, is a +mere childish reminiscence, not to be depended on, +though it certainly coincides with all we know of +Johann's character.</p> + +<p>The boy was also forced to learn the violin, and +this he disliked infinitely more than the piano, a fact +which puts to flight the pretty anecdote narrated in +the "Arachnologie" of Quatremère Disjonval, who +gravely states that whenever the boy began to practise—in +an old ruined garret filled with broken furniture +and dilapidated music-books—a spider was in the +habit of leaving its hiding-place, and perching itself +upon his violin till he had finished. When his mother +discovered her son's little companion she killed it, +whereupon this second Orpheus, filled with indignation, +smashed his instrument! Beethoven himself +remembered nothing about this, and used to laugh +heartily at the story, saying it was far more probable +that his discordant growls frightened away every +living thing—down to flies and spiders.</p> + +<p>When he was nine years old, Pfeiffer left Bonn to +act as bandmaster in a Bavarian regiment, and the +boy was placed under the care of Van den Eeden, +the court organist. At his death, which took place +not long after, Ludwig was transferred to his suc<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>cessor, +Christian Gottlob Neefe, whose pupil he remained +for several years.</p> + +<p>This Neefe, long since forgotten, was one of the +best musicians of the time, and thought worthy to be +named in the same breath with Bach and Graun. +He was a ready composer, and the favourite pupil of +Johann Adam Hiller, Bach's successor as Cantor in +the Thomasschule at Leipzig. He appears, moreover, +to have been an amiable, conscientious man, +and so high did his artistic reputation stand that he, +although a Protestant, was tolerated as organist in +the archbishop's private chapel.</p> + +<p>How comes it, then, that with all these qualifications +Beethoven would not afterwards allow that he +had profited by his instructions? The question is +not easily solved. Beethoven himself wrote from +Vienna to his old teacher in 1793, "I thank you for +the advice which you often gave me whilst striving in +my divine art. If I ever become a great man you +have a share in it."</p> + +<p>Notwithstanding this tribute there was a coldness +between them. It may be that master and pupil had +not that entire sympathy with each other which is +essential to any worthy result from the relationship.</p> + +<p>Beethoven, as we know, was self-willed, and overflowing +with an originality which, even at that early +age, would not easily brook dictation. Neefe, on the +other hand, was a <i>young</i> man, and endowed, as he +himself tells us in his Autobiography, with a certain +satirical tendency, which he may have allowed somewhat +too free play in criticising<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span> +his young pupil's efforts in composition. If the latter +conjecture be correct, it gives the clue to the earnest +advice Beethoven was wont to give the critics in after +years—never to judge the performances of a beginner +harshly, as "many would thus be deterred from following +out what they might, perhaps, have ultimately +succeeded in." Contempt to a sensitive, shrinking +nature is like the blast of the east wind on a tender +flower; downright condemnation is easier to bear +than the sneer which throws the young aspirant, +smarting and humiliated, back into himself—his best +energies withered for the moment.</p> + +<p>Whatever Beethoven's feeling to Neefe may have +been, it did not, at any rate, prevent his making +very decided progress under his tuition, at which +the organist himself rejoiced, as we learn from the +following letter written by him, and published in +<i>Cramer's Magazine</i>—the first printed notice of Beethoven:—"Louis +van Beethoven, son of the Tenor +mentioned above, a boy of eleven years, with talent +of great promise. He plays the pianoforte with +great execution and power, reads very well at sight, +and, to say all in brief, plays almost the whole of +Sebastian Bach's 'Wohl-temperirte Clavier,' which +Herr Neefe has put into his hands. He who knows +this collection of preludes and fugues through all the +keys (which one might almost call the <i>non plus ultra</i>) +will understand what this implies. Herr Neefe has +also given him, so far as his other occupations permit, +some introduction to the study of thorough-bass. +Now he exercises him in composition, and for his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span> +encouragement has had printed in Mannheim nine +variations for the pianoforte written by him on a +March. This young genius deserves help in order +that he may travel. He will certainly be a second +Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart if he continue as he has +begun."</p> + +<p>What could be kinder than the tone of this letter?</p> + +<p>The allusion to Mozart in the last sentence does +credit to Neefe's discernment, as the great composer +was at that time comparatively little known. It is +to be presumed that at this period Beethoven also +studied the works of C.P.E. Bach, since there is +evidence that he was familiar with them. His progress, +in short, was such that we find him in 1782, when +he had not completed his twelfth year, installed as +Neefe's representative at the organ, while the latter +was absent on a journey of some duration.</p> + +<p>Thus we may picture the boy Beethoven to ourselves, +at an age when other children are frolicsome +and heedless, as already a little man, earnest, grave, +reserved, buried in his own thoughts, his Bach, and his +organ. He had no time to join his young companions +in their games, even had his inclination prompted +him to do so; for besides the hours devoted to music, +he attended the public school, where he went through +the usual elementary course, and learned besides a +little Latin. His knowledge of the latter must, however, +have been very slight, as when composing his +first Mass he was obliged to make use of a translation, +which, considering that he was brought up in a +Catholic family, is singular enough. Johann v. Beet<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>hoven +was not the man to waste money, as he thought, +on giving his son a liberal education, so that the +degree of culture attained by Beethoven was due only +to his own efforts and the influences afterwards thrown +around him.</p> + +<p>In the year 1783 the three sonatas already alluded +to were published, Beethoven at the time being nearly +thirteen—not <i>eleven</i> years of age as was stated,—the +falsifying of his age being part of his father's plan +with regard to him. We give the dedication entire, +because (though probably not written wholly by +Beethoven himself) it offers a curious contrast to his +subsequent ideas regarding the princes and great +ones of the earth:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>"Most illustrious Prince! From my fourth year +music has been my favourite pursuit. So early +acquainted with the sweet Muse, who attuned my +soul to pure harmonies, I won her, and methought +was loved by her in return. I have now attained my +eleventh year, and my Muse has often whispered to +me in hours of inspiration, Try to write down the +harmonies of thy soul! Eleven years old, thought I, +how would the character of author become me? and +what would riper artists say to it? I felt some +trepidation. But my Muse willed it—I obeyed, and +wrote.</p> + +<p>"And dare I now, most Serene Highness, venture +to lay the first fruits of my youthful labour before +your throne? and may I hope that you will cast on +them the encouraging glance of your approval? Oh +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>yes! for knowledge and art have at all times found +in you a wise protector, a generous patron; and rising +talent has thriven under your fatherly care. Filled +with this cheering conviction I venture to approach +you with these youthful efforts.</p> + +<p>"Accept them as the pure offering of childlike +reverence, and look with favour,</p> + +<span style="margin-left:10em;">"Most illustrious Prince,</span><br /> + +<span style="margin-left:12em;">"On them and their young composer,</span><br /> + +<span style="margin-left:15em;">"<span class="smcap">Ludwig van Beethoven</span>."</span><br /> +</div> + +<p>It has been generally imagined that Neefe was +paid by the Elector for the instruction given to +Beethoven, but this is merely a supposition, without +any proof whatever. It is more than likely that +Neefe considered the assistance rendered to him by +the boy an equivalent for his lessons. We have seen +how, as early as 1782, he was qualified to relieve him +in the organ duty, rather a heavy task, owing to the +number of services at which the organist was expected +to be present.</p> + +<p>In addition to this, Neefe soon found another +way of employing him—but this will require a little +explanation.</p> + +<p>Whilst awaiting his appointment as court organist, +Neefe had acted as musical director to a troupe of +singers known as the Grossmann Company, from +the name of the leader and organizer. This was +one of the best operatic companies in Germany, +all its members being actors of experience and +reputation.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span></p> + +<p>Now it had entered the Elector's head to take this +company into his own service, and found a national +theatre (in imitation of that at Vienna) which should +serve as a school of refinement for the worthy citizens +of Bonn. Neefe found himself, therefore, burdened +with double duties as conductor and organist, and in +the season of 1783, owing to the absence of one of his +colleagues (the well-known Lucchesi), was almost +overwhelmed with work. He found it impossible to +attend the morning rehearsals in the theatre, and +accordingly young Ludwig was appointed <i>cembalist</i> +in the orchestra, <i>i.e.</i>, to preside at the pianoforte. In +those days this was considered a distinction (as such +Haydn regarded it in London), and in fact only an +accomplished musician could fill the post, as all the +accompaniments were played from the score.</p> + +<p>To this early initiation may be attributed the +extreme facility with which Beethoven read, <i>a prima +vista</i>, the most involved and complicated scores, even +when in manuscript, and that manuscript written by +a Bach in a manner calculated to drive any ordinary +reader to despair.</p> + +<p>For two seasons young Ludwig was the accompanist +at all rehearsals, and in addition to the advantage +of thus working out in the most practical way all that +he learned of theory, he also gained a thorough +acquaintance with the works of Grétry and Gluck.</p> + +<p>The operas were varied by dramatic representations, +and these must have had an immense influence on +the observant, reflective boy; for the <i>répertoire</i> of +the company was large, and embraced not only the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span> +standard pieces of the day, but the new plays of +Lessing, and "The Robbers" of Schiller, which had +begun to create a ferment of excitement throughout +Germany; besides translations from Molière, Goldoni, +and our own Garrick and Cumberland.</p> + +<p>To return to our young <i>cembalist</i>, the two years +1783-84 must have been a busy time to him between +the chapel and the orchestra, but not a penny did he +receive for his services, although he may have earned +a trifle by playing the organ every morning at the +six o'clock mass in the church of St. Remigius.</p> + +<p>When he was thirteen, however, through Neefe's +influence he was nominated officially to the post he +had so long filled in reality, that of assistant organist, +and would have drawn a salary but for an event which +threw him back again.</p> + +<p>The Elector Max Friedrich died, the operatic +company was dismissed, and Neefe, having nothing +to do but play his organ, had no further need of an +assistant.</p> + +<p>This must have been a great blow to the boy; not +that he cared for the money in itself, but he knew +how it would have lightened his poor mother's cares, +and shed a gleam of sunshine over the poverty-stricken +household.</p> + +<p>His father was now beginning to throw off all +restraint; his failing was generally known, and more +than once he was rescued from the hands of the +police and brought home by his son in a state of +unconsciousness. Long ere this, two sons, Caspar +Anton Carl and Nikolaus Johann, respectively four<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span> +and six years younger than Ludwig, had been added +to the family, and doubtless many were the secret +councils between the boy and his mother as to how +the few thalers of Johann (<i>minus</i> what was spent in +the alehouse) could be made to meet the needs of the +household. It was probably about this time that +Beethoven began to give lessons, that most wearisome +of all employments to him, and so for more than a +year, to the great hindrance of his own studies, contributed +his mite to the general fund.</p> + +<p>The year 1785, however, brought with it a little +heartening; Ludwig's former appointment as assistant +organist was confirmed by the new Elector, and with +the yearly stipend of a hundred thalers an era of hope +dawned for the lad.</p> + +<p>Max Franz, Archbishop of Cologne, was the +youngest son of Maria Theresa, and the favourite of +his brother, the Emperor Joseph II., whom he +strongly resembled in character and disposition.</p> + +<p>To any one familiar with the musical history of the +period and the Emperor's relation to Mozart, this will +be sufficient to indicate the pleasure with which the +Bonn musicians must have hailed his advent. Nor +were their expectations disappointed; Max Franz +surpassed his predecessors not only in the munificence +of his support, but (what is perhaps of more +importance) in the real interest shown by him in the +progress of art at his court. Neither did he confine +his patronage to music alone (though, as was natural +in a son of Maria Theresa, this was his first care); +painting, science, and literature alike felt the in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>fluence +of his generous mind. The university was +founded and endowed by him, and the utmost efforts +made to meet that universal demand for a higher +culture, and that striving after truth in art, which the +works of Schlegel, Lessing, Schiller, Goethe, and +others were rapidly disseminating throughout the +length and breadth of Germany. As Wegeler (the +friend and biographer of Beethoven, at that time +a medical student of nineteen) writes, "It was a +splendid, stirring time in many ways at Bonn, so +long as the genial Elector, Max Franz, reigned +there." It can readily be imagined, therefore, that +a youth so full of promise as Beethoven could not +escape the notice of such a prince, and that to his +own talents, backed by the recommendation of Neefe—not +to the influence of any patron—he owed the +only official appointment ever held by him.</p> + +<p>For the next year he seems to have had a comparatively +easy life, his salary no doubt going to his +mother, and the little he could make by teaching +carefully put aside for a great purpose he had formed. +A characteristic anecdote of this period is worth repeating, +inasmuch as Beethoven himself used often +to speak of it with glee in after life as a specimen of +his boyish achievements.</p> + +<p>In the old style of church music, on the Tuesday, +Friday, and Saturday of Passion Week it was usual to +sing select portions from the Lamentations of Jeremiah, +consisting of short phrases of from four to six +lines. In the middle of each phrase a pause was +made, which the accompanist was expected to fill up<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span> +as his fancy might dictate by a free interlude on the +pianoforte—the organ being prohibited during these +three days. Now it so happened that the singer to +whom this was allotted in the Electoral Chapel was +one Heller, a thoroughly well-practised but somewhat +boastful musician. To him Beethoven declared +that he was able to throw him out in his part without +employing any means but such as were perfectly +justifiable. Heller resented the insinuation, and +rashly accepted a wager on the subject. When +the appropriate point was reached, Beethoven ingeniously +modulated to a key so remote from the +original one, that although he continued to hold fast +the key-note of the latter, and struck it repeatedly +with his little finger, Heller was completely thrown +out, and obliged abruptly to stop. Franz Ries the +violinist, father of the afterwards celebrated Ferdinand, +and Lucchesi, who were present, declared +themselves perfectly astounded at the occurrence, +and the mystified singer rushed in a tumult of rage +and mortification to the Elector and complained of +Beethoven. The good-humoured Max Franz, however, +rather enjoyed the story, and merely ordered +the young organist to content himself with a more +simple accompaniment for the future.</p> + +<p>In the spring of 1787, Ludwig at length reached +the height of his boyish aspirations. His little +savings had accumulated to what was in his eyes +a large sum, and he looked forward with eagerness +to a journey to Vienna. It has been supposed that +the funds for this visit were supplied by others, but<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span> +this is improbable. At that time Beethoven had no +wealthy friends; there is no evidence to show that +the Archbishop assisted him, and certain is it that no +money was forthcoming from his father. We are +obliged to fall back upon the supposition that his +own scanty earnings, eked out perhaps by his mother, +were his only means, especially as we know that +they proved insufficient for his purpose, and that he +was obliged to borrow money for his journey home.</p> + +<p>What were Beethoven's intentions with regard to +this visit?</p> + +<p>His father's conduct, which must have many a +time brought the flush of shame to his young brow, +his mother's evidently failing health, the numerous +unsupplied wants of the family, now increased by +the birth of a daughter,<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a>—all these circumstances +combined to urge on his sensitive, loving nature the +necessity of making some exertion, of taking some +decided step for the assistance of his dear ones.</p> + +<p>Vienna, so far away, was his goal; there were assembled +all the great and noble in art—Gluck, +Haydn, Mozart! the very mention of these names +must have roused the responsive throb of genius +in the lad. To Vienna he would go, and surely if +there were any truth in the adage that "like draws +to like," these men must recognise the undeveloped +powers within him; and help him to attain his object.</p> + +<p>That some such hopes as these must have beat +high in Beethoven's breast, animating him for the +effort, is evident from the reaction that set in, the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span> +despair that took possession of him when he found +himself forced by the iron course of events to abandon +his project.</p> + +<p>Arrived in the great capital he obtained an interview +with Mozart, and played before him. The +maestro, however, rewarded his performance with but +feeble praise, looking upon it as mere parade; and +probably in technical adroitness the boy before him +was far behind the little Hummel, at that time under +his tuition; for Beethoven's style, through his constant +organ-playing, was somewhat heavy and rough.</p> + +<p>Beethoven, sensitively alive to everything, perceived +Mozart's opinion, and requested a thema for +an improvisation. Somewhat sceptically Mozart +complied, and now the boy, roused by the doubt cast +upon his abilities, extemporized with a clearness of +idea and richness of embellishment that took his +auditor by storm. Mozart went excitedly to the +bystanders in the anteroom, saying, "Pay heed to +this youth—much will one day be said about him in +the world!"</p> + +<p>The amiable Mozart did not live to see the fulfilment +of his prophecy, but he appears to have taken +an interest in the boy, and to have given him a few +lessons.</p> + +<p>Beethoven afterwards lamented that he had never +heard Mozart play, which may perhaps be accounted +for by the fact that the master was much occupied at +the time with his "Don Giovanni," and also had that +year to mourn the loss of his father.</p> + +<p>The following letter fully explains the cause of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span> +Beethoven's sudden departure from Vienna, and the +apparent shipwreck of all his hopes:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"> +<p> +"<i>Autumn.</i> <span style="margin-left:30em;"><i>Bonn</i>, 1787.</span> +</p> + +<p>"<span class="smcap">Most worthy and dear Friend</span>,—I can +easily imagine what you must think of me—that +you have well-founded reasons for not entertaining +a favourable opinion of me, I cannot deny.</p> + +<p>"But I will not excuse myself until I have explained +the reasons which lead me to hope that my apologies +will be accepted.</p> + +<p>"I must tell you that with my departure from Augsburg, +my cheerfulness, and with it my health, began +to decline. The nearer I came to my native city, the +more frequent were the letters which I received from +my father, urging me to travel as quickly as possible, +as my mother's health gave great cause for anxiety. +I hurried onwards, therefore, as fast as I could, although +myself far from well. The longing to see +my dying mother once more did away with all +hindrances, and helped me to overcome the greatest +difficulties. My mother was indeed still alive, but in +the most deplorable state; her complaint was consumption; +and about seven weeks ago, after enduring +much pain and suffering, she died.</p> + +<p>"Ah! who was happier than I, so long as I could +still pronounce the sweet name of mother, and heard +the answer! and to whom can I now say it? To the +silent images resembling her, which my fancy presents +to me?</p> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span></p> +<p>"Since I have been here, I have enjoyed but few +happy hours. Throughout the whole time I have +been suffering from asthma, which I have reason +to fear may eventually result in consumption. To +this is added melancholy, for me an evil as great as +my illness itself.</p> + +<p>"Imagine yourself now in my position, and then I +may hope to receive your forgiveness for my long +silence.</p> + +<p>"With regard to your extreme kindness and friendliness +in lending me three carolins in Augsburg, I +must beg you still to have a little indulgence with +me, as my journey cost me a great deal, and here +I have not the slightest prospect of earning anything. +Fate is not propitious to me here in Bonn.</p> + +<p>"You will forgive my having written at such length +about my own affairs; it was all necessary in order to +excuse myself.</p> + +<p>"I entreat you not to withdraw your valuable +friendship from me; there is nothing I so much +desire as to render myself worthy of it.</p> + +<p><span style="margin-left:8em;">"I am, with all esteem,</span><br /> + +<span style="margin-left:10em;">"Your most obedient servant and friend,</span><br /> + +<span style="margin-left:14em;" class="smcap">"L. v. Beethoven</span>,<br /> + +<span style="margin-left:18em;">"<i>Cologne Court Organist</i>.</span></p> + +<p>"<i>To</i> Monsieur de Schaden,<br /> +"<i>Counsellor at Augsburg</i>."</p> +</div> + +<p>When years afterwards Ferdinand Ries came as a +boy of fifteen to Beethoven in Vienna, and solicited<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span> +his help and countenance, the master, who was much +occupied at the time, told him so, adding, "Say to +your father that I have not forgotten how my mother +died. He will be satisfied with that." Franz Ries +had, in fact, at the time of the mother's illness, lent +substantial assistance to the impoverished family; +and this to the heart of the son was a sure claim on +his lasting gratitude.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span></p> + +<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> Margaret, who died while still an infant.</p></div> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" ><br /><br /> +<img src="images/b_page_057.jpg" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + + +<div class="figcenter" ><br /><br /> +<img src="images/b_page_058a.jpg" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<h3>CHAPTER III</h3> + +<p class="center">YOUTH.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>Despondency—The Breuning Family—Literary Pursuits—Count +Waldstein—National Theatre of Max Franz—King Lux and his Court—The +Abbé Sterkel—Appointment as Court Pianist—First Love—Second +Visit of Joseph Haydn.</p></div> + +<div class="figleft" style="margin-left: 0em; margin-right: 0em; margin-bottom: 0em; margin-top: 0em;"> +<img src="images/h.jpg" alt="" title="" /> +</div> +<p>ow "flat, stale, and unprofitable" must everything +in Bonn have appeared to our Beethoven +after the charms of Vienna—charms +real in themselves, and surrounded by the ideal +nimbus of his fresh young hopes and strivings! The +desolate, motherless home, his neglected orphan brothers, +his drunken father, the weary round of teaching,—it +was no light task for an impetuous, ardent +genius to lift; but it had to be faced, and with a +noble self-sacrifice he entered on the dreary path +before him.</p> + +<p>He had his reward—the very occupation which he +disliked more than any other, opened up to him a +friendship which secured to him more peace and +happiness than he had yet known, and whose influence<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span> +was potent throughout his whole life—that, namely, +with the family Von Breuning.</p> + +<p>Madame von Breuning was a widow; her husband, +a state councillor and a member of one of the best +families in Bonn, had perished in the attempt to +rescue the Electoral Archives from a fire that had +broken out in the palace, and since this calamity she +had lived quietly with her brother, the canon and +scholar, Abraham v. Keferich, solely engaged in the +education of her children. These were four in number: +three boys—Christoph, Stephan, and Lenz; and one +girl—Eleanore. It appears that Beethoven (who was +about four years older than Stephan) was receiving +violin lessons at the same time with the latter from +Franz Ries; and Stephan, struck, no doubt, with the +genius of his fellow-pupil, managed to get him introduced +to his mother's house in the capacity of +pianoforte teacher to the little Lenz. Madame von +Breuning was not slow to perceive the extraordinary +gifts of her son's new acquaintance; and learning +incidentally, with her woman's tact, the sad state of +matters at home, opened her heart as well as her +house to the motherless boy. He soon became one +of the family, and used to spend the greater part of +the day and often the night with his new friends.</p> + +<p>It is impossible to over-estimate the value of this +friendship to the young man. What a contrast to +his own neglected home did the well-ordered house +of Madame v. Breuning present! Now for the first +time he was admitted to mix on equal terms with +people of culture; here he first enjoyed the refining<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span> +influence of female society (did any remembrance of +Leonore suggest his ideal heroine?); and here also +he first became acquainted with the literature of his +own and other countries.</p> + +<p>The young Breunings were all intellectual, and in +the pursuit of their studies they were encouraged and +assisted by their uncle, the canon. Christoph wrote +very good verses, and Stephan also tried his hand at +some, which were not bad. The striving of these +young people would naturally lead our sensitive +musician to reflect on his own defective education, +and to endeavour so to rectify it as to render himself +worthy of their friendship. Beethoven's love of the +ancient classical writers may be traced to this period, +when Christoph and Stephan were studying them in +the original with their uncle, though it is not probable +that he ever learned Greek. His knowledge of Homer +was gained through Voss's translation, and his well-worn +copy of the "Odyssey" testifies to the earnest +study it had received from him. French and Italian +he seems to have been acquainted with so far as +he deemed it necessary; but his principal literary +studies were confined to Lessing, Bürger, Wieland, +and Klopstock. The last especially was his favourite, +and his constant companion in the solitary rambles +among the mountains which he was fond of indulging +in. There, alone with the nature he venerated, the +sonorous lines and rolling periods of the German +Milton sank deeply into his mind, to be reproduced +years after in immortal harmonies. At a later period +Klopstock was replaced in Beethoven's esteem by<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span> +Goethe, of whose poems he was wont to say that +they "exercised a great sway over him, not only by +their meaning, but by their rhythm also. Their +language urged him on to composition."</p> + +<p>But of all the blissful influences which tended to +make this time the happiest in his life, not one was +so powerful as that of Madame von Breuning herself. +To her everlasting honour be it said that she was the +first of the very few individuals who ever thoroughly +understood the morbid and apparently contradictory +character of Beethoven; and greatly is it to the credit +of the latter that he merited the love of such a woman. +Not his abilities alone gave him a place in her heart; +it was his true, noble, generous nature that won for +him a continuance of the favours first bestowed upon +the artist. Madame v. Breuning thoroughly appreciated +Beethoven; he felt that she did. Hence the +tacit confidence that existed between them—he +coming to her as to a mother, and she advising him +as she would have done one of her own sons. +Beethoven used to say of her that she understood +how to "keep the insects from the blossoms."</p> + +<p>Even she, however, sometimes failed in one point, +that, namely, of inducing him to give his lessons +regularly. It has been hinted before that this was +an unpalatable task to Beethoven. Wegeler describes +him as going to it <i>ut iniquæ mentis asellus</i>, and this +dislike grew with every succeeding year. Even his +subsequent relation to his illustrious friend and pupil, +the Archduke Rudolph, was in the highest degree +irksome to him; he looked upon it as a mere court<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span> +service. But while in Bonn our composer was not in +a position to choose his occupation. "Necessity +knows no law," and the higher claims of genius were +forced to submit to very sublunary considerations. +Madame v. Breuning's representations would sometimes +succeed so far as to induce him to go to the house +of his pupil; but it was generally only to say that he +"could not give his lesson at that time—he would +give two the next day instead." On such occasions +she would smile and say, "Ah! Beethoven is in a +<i>raptus</i> again!" an expression which the composer +treasured up mentally, and was fond of applying to +himself in after life.</p> + +<p>About this time also Beethoven gained another +friend, Count Waldstein, a young nobleman, who was +passing the probationary time previously to being admitted +into the Teutonic Order, at Bonn, under the +Grand-Master, Max Franz. Beethoven afterwards +expressed his obligations to him in the dedication of +the colossal sonata Op. 53.</p> + +<p>He became a frequent visitor to the young organist's +miserable room, which he soon enlivened by the +present of a grand pianoforte, and here the friends—to +outward appearance so different—doubtless passed +many a happy hour, for Waldstein was an excellent +musician, and an enthusiastic admirer of Beethoven's +improvisations.</p> + +<p>These were also one of the great pleasures in the +Breuning circle, where Wegeler relates that Beethoven +would often yield to the general request, and depict +on the pianoforte the character of some well-known<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span> +personage. On one occasion Franz Ries, who was +present, was asked to join, which he did—probably +the only instance on record of two artists improvising +on different instruments at one and the same +time.</p> + +<p>We have long lost sight of Johann v. Beethoven, +however, and must retrace our steps to see what has +become of him. By the year 1789 he had grown so +hopelessly incapable that it was proposed to send +him out of Bonn on a pension of one hundred thalers, +while the remaining hundred of his former salary +should be spent on his children. This plan was not +fully carried out, but the father's salary was by the +Elector's orders paid into Ludwig's hands, and entrusted +to his management; so that the young man +of nineteen was the real head of the family.</p> + +<p>The Elector Max Franz now followed the example +of his predecessor, and established a national theatre. +Beethoven was not this time <i>cembalist</i> to the company; +he played the viol in the orchestra, whither he was +often accompanied by his friend Stephan Breuning, +who handled the bow creditably enough. For four +years Beethoven occupied this post, and the solid +advantage it was to him is shown in his subsequent +orchestration.</p> + +<p>In the autumn of the year 1791 an incident occurred +which broke the monotony of the court life, and gives +us an interesting side-glimpse of our young musician. +The Teutonic Order, referred to before, held a grand +conclave at Mergentheim, at which the Elector as +Grand-Master was obliged to be present. He had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span> +passed some months there two years before, and +had probably found time hang somewhat heavy on +his hands; at any rate, he resolved that his private +musical and theatrical staff should attend him on +this occasion.</p> + +<p>The announcement of this determination was +received with great approbation by all concerned, +and Lux, the first comedian of the day, was +unanimously chosen king of the expedition. His +Majesty then proceeded to appoint the various +officers of the household, among whom Beethoven +and Bernhard Romberg (afterwards the greatest +violoncellist of his time) figure as Scullions. Two +ships were chartered for the occasion, and King Lux +and his court floated lazily down the Rhine and the +Main, between the sunny vine-clad hills where the +peasants were hard at work getting in the best +harvest of the year. It was a merry time, and, as +Beethoven afterwards said, "a fruitful source of the +most beautiful images."</p> + +<p>We can imagine the boat gliding peacefully along +under the calm moonlit sky—Beethoven sitting by +himself, enjoying the unusual <i>dolce far niente</i>; his +companions a little apart are chanting a favourite +boat-song; the harmonious sounds rise and fall, alternating +with the gentle ripple on the water—and the +young maestro, pondering on his future life, tries to +read his destiny in the "golden writing" of the stars. +Is not some such scene the background to the +Adagio in the "Sonata quasi Fantasia," dedicated to +the Countess Giulietta?<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span></p> + +<p>At Aschaffenburg, Simrock, a leading member of +the company (afterwards the celebrated music-publisher), +deemed it necessary that a deputation (which +included Beethoven) should pay a visit of respect to +the Abbé Sterkel, one of the greatest living pianists.</p> + +<p>They were very graciously received, and the Abbé, +in compliance with the pressing request of his visitors, +sat down to the pianoforte, and played for some +time. Beethoven, who had never before heard the +instrument touched with the same elegance, listened +with the deepest attention, but refused to play when +requested to do so in his turn. It has been mentioned +that his style was somewhat hard and rough, and he +naturally feared the contrast with Sterkel's flowing +ease. In vain his companions, who, with true <i>esprit +de corps</i>, were proud of their young colleague, urged +him to the pianoforte, till the Abbé turning the +conversation on a work of Beethoven's, lately published, +hinted, with disdain either real or assumed, +that he did not believe the composer could master +the difficulties of it himself. (The work alluded to +was a series of twenty-four variations on Righini's +Theme "Vieni Amore.") This touched Beethoven's +honour; he yielded without further hesitation, and +not only played the published variations, but invented +others infinitely more complicated as he went +along, assuming the gliding, graceful style of Sterkel +in such a manner as utterly to bewilder the bystanders, +who overwhelmed him with applause.</p> + +<p>It was perhaps after this display that he was promoted +to a higher post in King Lux's service by the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span> +royal letters patent, and to this weighty document +a great seal—stamped in pitch on the lid of a little +box—was attached by threads made of unravelled +rope, which gave it quite an imposing aspect. Seven +years afterwards Wegeler discovered this <i>plaisanterie</i> +carefully treasured among Beethoven's possessions, +a proof of the enjoyment afforded him by this excursion.</p> + +<p>At Mergentheim the sensation created by the +Elector's musicians was immense. In an old newspaper +exhumed by the indefatigable Thayer, the +following notice of Beethoven occurs.</p> + +<p>The writer is Carl Ludwig Junker, chaplain to +Prince Hohenlohe, and himself a composer and +critic of no mean reputation. After giving a general +account of the whole orchestra, he goes on:—</p> + +<p>"I have heard one of the greatest players on the +pianoforte, the dear, worthy Beethoven.... I +believe we may safely estimate the artistic greatness +of this amiable man by the almost inexhaustible +wealth of his ideas, the expression—peculiar to +himself—with which he plays, and his great technical +skill. I should be at a loss to say what quality of +the great artist is still wanting to him. I have heard +Vogler<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> play on the pianoforte often, very often, and +for hours at a time, and have always admired his +great execution; but Beethoven, in addition to his +finished style, is more speaking, more significant, +more full of expression,—in short, more for the heart; +consequently as good an Adagio as an Allegro player. +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>Even the first-rate artists of this orchestra are his +admirers, and all ear when he plays. He is excessively +modest, without any pretensions whatever.... +His playing differs so materially from the +ordinary mode of touching the piano, that it appears +as though he had intended to lay out a path for +himself, in order to arrive at the perfection which he +has now attained."</p> + +<p>But even the pleasantest things must come to an +end, and the expedition to Mergentheim was no +exception to the rule. In a few weeks, Archbishop, +musicians, and actors were once more at Bonn, busily +engaged in preparing for Christmas.</p> + +<p>About this time Beethoven was nominated Court +pianist, an appointment due partly to his friend, +Count Waldstein, partly also to the following circumstance, +which gave the Elector a striking proof of his +young <i>protégé's</i> abilities. A new Trio by Pleyel had +been sent to Max Franz, and so great was his impatience +to hear it that nothing would content him +but its immediate performance, without previous +rehearsal, by Beethoven, Ries, and Romberg.</p> + +<p>To hear was to obey, and the Trio was played +at sight very fairly, the performers keeping well +together. It was then discovered that two bars in +the pianoforte part had been omitted, and supplied +by Beethoven so ingeniously that not the slightest +break was perceptible!</p> + +<p>In the same year, 1791, Beethoven wrote the music +for a splendid <i>bal masqué</i>, organized by his friend +Waldstein, and attended by all the nobility for miles<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span> +around. It was believed for long that Waldstein +was the author of the music.</p> + +<p>Beethoven, meanwhile, continued his intimacy with +the Breuning family, where from time to time +another attraction offered itself in the person of +Fräulein Jeannette d'Honrath, a young lady of +Cologne, who occasionally paid a visit of a few +weeks to her friend Eleanore.</p> + +<p>It has been asserted by some writers that Beethoven +was insensible to the charms of woman, and +that love was to him a sealed book! For the refutation +of this statement it is only necessary to turn to +his works, which breathe a very different story to such +as have ears to hear. For those who have not, let +the testimony of his friend Wegeler suffice: "Beethoven +was <i>never</i> without a love, and generally in the +highest degree enamoured." The reason why his +love was fated never to expand and ripen will be +explained in its own place. Here it is sufficient to +say that Beethoven, while glowing with fire and +tenderness, eminently calculated to love and be loved, +was throughout his whole life, and in every relation, +delicacy itself; his nature shrunk instinctively from +anything like impurity.</p> + +<p>To return: Mademoiselle Jeannette, a fascinating +little blonde, divided her attentions so equally +between Beethoven and his friend Stephan, and sang +so charmingly about her heart being <i>desolé</i> when the +time for parting came, that each believed himself the +favoured one, until it transpired that the "Herzchen +had long since been bestowed" in its entirety on a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span> +gallant Austrian officer, whom the young lady subsequently +married, and who afterwards rose to the +rank of general.</p> + +<p>There does not seem to have been any attachment +between Beethoven and Leonore; she was his pupil, +his sister,<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> but nothing more; her affections were +already given to young Wegeler, whose wife she +afterwards became.</p> + +<p>So our Beethoven was left to gnaw his fingers for +the loss of his pretty Jeannette, and to flutter on the +outside of the crowd which hovered round fair Barbara +Koch, the beauty of Bonn, daughter of a widow, +proprietress of a coffee-house or tavern.</p> + +<p>What! exclaims the reader, is this an instance of +the so-called "aristocratic leanings" of Beethoven?</p> + +<p>We must beg him in reply not to look at things +through exclusively British and nineteenth century +spectacles. The position of worthy Frau Koch was, +if not distinguished, certainly respectable.</p> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span></p> +<p>Lewes, in his Life of Goethe, was obliged to combat +with the same prejudice in his account of the poet's +student days at Leipzig, and we cannot do better +than quote his words with regard to the society to be +found in a German Wirthshaus of the period:—</p> + +<p>"The <i>table d'hôte</i> is composed of a circle of +habitués, varied by occasional visitors, who in time +become, perhaps, members of the circle. Even with +strangers conversation is freely interchanged, and in a +little while friendships are formed, as natural tastes +and likings assimilate, which are carried out into the +current of life."</p> + +<p>The habitués of Frau Koch's house were the professors +and students at the university, and such +members of the Electoral household as were engaged +in artistic pursuits. It was a rendezvous for them all, +where science, literature, art, and politics were discussed +by able men; and here, doubtless, Beethoven, +with his friends Stephan Breuning and young Reicha +(nephew of the director), spent many a pleasant +evening. The fair Babette was, as we have hinted, +no small attraction. She was a cultivated woman, +and the great friend of Eleanore v. Breuning. She +afterwards became governess to the children of +Count Anton von Belderbusch, whom she finally +married.</p> + +<p>We now come to an event which completely changed +the current of Beethoven's life—the return of Joseph +Haydn from his second visit to London. As he +passed through Bonn the musicians gave him a +public breakfast at Godesberg, on which occasion<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span> +Beethoven laid before him a cantata of his composition—probably +that on the death of Leopold II. It met +with the warmest praise from Haydn, but the author +apparently did not think highly of it himself, as it +was never printed.</p> + +<p>Whether the arrangements were made at this time +for Haydn's reception of Beethoven as his pupil, +or negotiated afterwards through Waldstein, is not +known. Certain it is that in the October of 1792 we +find his long-delayed hopes on the point of realization, +a pension from the Elector having removed all difficulties.</p> + +<p>Beethoven had often bemoaned in secret, and +specially to his friend Waldstein, the irregular, broken +instruction he had received, attributing Mozart's early +success to the systematic course of study he had +pursued under the guidance of his father. It is a +question, however, whether Beethoven—even had he +enjoyed the advantages of Mozart—would ever have +composed with the facility of the latter. Thayer +thinks not; there is evidence enough in the symphonies, +&c., of our great master to prove that he +"earned his bread by the sweat of his brow."</p> + +<p>The following note from Waldstein evinces the +deep interest he took in Beethoven, and his faith in +the young composer's genius:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>"<span class="smcap">Dear Beethoven</span>,—"You are now going to +Vienna for the realization of your wishes, so long +frustrated. The Genius of Mozart still mourns and +laments the death of his disciple. He found refuge +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>with the inexhaustible Haydn, but no scope for action, +and through him he now wishes once more to be +united to some one. Receive, through unbroken +industry, the spirit of Mozart from the hands of +Haydn.</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin:18em;">"Your true friend,</span><br /> +<span style="margin:22em;" class="smcap">"Waldstein.</span><br /> +"Bonn, <i>29th October, 1792</i>."<br /> +</p></div> + +<p>In the beginning of November, then, 1792, Beethoven +finally took leave of his boyhood's friends—father +and brothers, Wegeler, Franz Ries, Neefe, +Reicha, Waldstein, pretty Barbara Koch, and, hardest +of all, the Breunings.</p> + +<p>Some of these he saw for the last time.</p> + +<p>He was destined never again to tread the old +familiar streets of Bonn.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span></p> + +<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> One of the greatest pianists of the time.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> The following birthday greeting, surrounded by a wreath of flowers +and accompanied by a silhouette of Eleanore, was found among Beethoven's +papers:— +</p> +<p> +"Glück und langes Leben<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wünsch' ich heute Dir,</span><br /> +Aber auch daneben<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wünsch' ich etwas mir!</span><br /> +Mir in Rücksicht Deiner<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wünsch' ich Deine Huld,</span><br /> +Dir in Rücksicht meiner<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Nachsicht und Geduld!</span><br /> +<br /> +"Von Ihrer Freundin und Schülerin,<br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left:6em;" class="smcap">"Lorchen v. Breuning</span>.<br /> + +"1790."</p></div> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" ><br /><br /> +<img src="images/b_page_072.jpg" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" ><br /><br /> +<img src="images/b_page_073a.jpg" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<h3>CHAPTER IV</h3> + +<p class="center">LEHRJAHRE.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>Arrival in Vienna—Studies with Haydn—Timely Assistance of Schenk—Albrechtsberger—Beethoven +as a Student—His Studies in Counterpoint—Letters +to Eleanore v. Breuning.</p></div> + +<div class="figleft" style="margin-left: 0em; margin-right: 0em; margin-bottom: 0em; margin-top: 0em;"> +<img src="images/b.jpg" alt="" title="" /> +</div> +<p>ehold, then, our young musician at the +long-desired goal—free from all depressing, +pecuniary cares, with his pension secure from +the Elector, and a little fund of his own to boot. He +reached the capital about the middle of November, +alone and friendless; nor is there any proof that the +advent of the insignificant, clumsily built provincial +youth made the slightest sensation, or roused the +interest of one individual among the many thousands +who thronged the busy streets.</p> + +<p>His first care, as shown from a little pocket-book +still preserved, was to seek out a lodging suitable to +his slender purse; his next, to procure a pianoforte. +The first requirement he at length met with in a +small room on "a sunk floor," which commended itself +by the low rent asked for it. Here Beethoven con<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>tentedly +located himself until fortune's smiles had +begun to beam so brightly on him that he felt entitled +to remove to more airy lodgings.</p> + +<p>We may be sure that he lost no time in setting +about the purpose which he had most at heart, and +enrolling himself among Haydn's pupils, for he could +not have been more than eight weeks in Vienna when +the master wrote to Bonn, "I must now give up all +great works to him [Beethoven], and soon cease composing."</p> + +<p>The harmony, however, which at first existed between +Haydn and his pupil was soon disturbed. The +former seems to have been always pleased with the +work executed by Beethoven, who, on the contrary, +was very much dissatisfied with the instruction given +by the master. He was obliged, in this instance, to +make the same experience that he had formerly +confided to Junker, at Mergentheim, regarding pianoforte +players, viz., that he had seldom found what he +believed himself entitled to expect. Distance lends +enchantment to the view; and the keen, striving +worker soon discovered that Haydn was not the +profound, earnest thinker that his longing fancy had +painted in Bonn.</p> + +<p>But an unexpected help was at hand. One day as +he was returning from his lesson at Haydn's house, +his portfolio under his arm, he met a friend whose +acquaintance he had only recently made, but with +whom he was already on intimate terms—Johann +Schenk, a thorough and scholarly musician, afterwards +well known as the composer of the "Dorf<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>barbier," and one of the most amiable of men. To +him Beethoven confided his troubles, bitterly lamenting +the slow progress his knowledge of counterpoint +made under Haydn's guidance. Somewhat +astounded, Schenk examined the compositions in +Beethoven's portfolio, and discovered many faults +which had been passed over without correction.</p> + +<p>Haydn's conduct in this instance has never been +explained. Generally conscientious in the discharge +of his duties as an instructor, this carelessness must +have arisen either from a pressure of work, or from +some undefined feeling with regard to Beethoven, +which prompted him to give him as little assistance +as possible. The latter supposition is hardly compatible +with the terms in which he wrote of his pupil +to Bonn, but Beethoven could never shake off the +idea that Haydn did not mean well by him—a suspicion +which was strengthened by what afterwards +occurred.</p> + +<p>Excessively irritated by Schenk's discovery, Beethoven +would have gone on the impulse of the moment +to reproach Haydn and break off all connection with +him. Schenk, however, who had early perceived +Beethoven's worth, succeeded in calming him, promising +him all the assistance in his power, and pointing +out the folly of a course which would inevitably +have led to the withdrawal of the pension from Max +Franz, who would naturally have disbelieved any +complaint against the greatest master of the day, +and have attributed Beethoven's conduct to wrong +motives. The young man had the sense to perceive<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span> +the justice of these remarks, and continued to bring +his work to Haydn (Schenk always giving it a strict +revisal) until the latter's journey to England in 1794 +afforded a feasible opportunity of providing himself +with a better teacher.</p> + +<p>Thus, although neither cordially liked the other, a +tolerable appearance of friendship was maintained. +It was, perhaps, impossible that, between two such +totally different natures the connection could have +been otherwise. Haydn was genial and affable; +from his long contest with poverty, rather obsequious; +not apt to take offence or to imagine slights; ready +to render unto Cæsar his due; in short, a courtier.</p> + +<p>What greater contrast to all this can be imagined +than our proud, reserved, brusque Beethoven? <i>He</i> +pay court to princes, or wait with "bated breath" +upon their whims! He, the stormy republican, who +regarded all men as on the same level, and would +bow to nothing less than the Divine in man!</p> + +<p>Haydn, who had laughingly bestowed on him the +title of the "Great Mogul," probably felt that there +was no real sympathy, or possibility of such a feeling, +between them. Nevertheless, as we have said, they +continued to outward seeming friends, though Beethoven's +suspicions would not allow him to accept +Haydn's offer of taking him to London. He accompanied +him, however, in the summer to Eisenstadt, +the residence of Prince Esterhazy, Haydn's +patron, and on this occasion left the following note +for Schenk, which shows the friendly feeling existing +between them:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>"<span class="smcap">Dear Schenk</span>,—I did not know that I should +set off to-day for Eisenstadt. I should like much to +have spoken once more to you. Meanwhile, depend +upon my gratitude for the kindnesses you have shown +me. I shall endeavour, so far as is in my power, to +requite you.</p> + +<p>"I hope to see you soon again, and to enjoy the +pleasure of your society. Farewell, and don't quite +forget</p> + +<p><span style="margin-left:30em;">"Your <span class="smcap">Beethoven</span>."</span><br /> +</p></div> + +<p>One of Beethoven's peculiarities may as well be +referred to here in passing. Although living in the +same town with many of his friends—nay, within a +few minutes walk of them,—years would elapse without +their coming in contact, unless they continually +presented themselves to his notice, and so <i>would</i> not +let themselves be forgotten. Absorbed in his creations, +the master lived in a world of his own; consequently, +many little circumstances in his career, in +reality proceeding from this abstraction, were at the +time attributed to very different motives.</p> + +<p>His connection with Schenk is an instance of this. +Though both inhabited Vienna, they had not met for +many years, when in 1824 Beethoven and his friend +Schindler encountered Schenk—then almost seventy +years of age—in the street. If his old teacher had +spent the intervening years in another world, and +suddenly alighted from the clouds, Beethoven could +not have been more surprised and delighted. To +drag him into the quietest corner of the "Jägerhorn"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span> +(a tavern close at hand) was the work of a moment, +and there for hours the old friends mutually compared +notes, and reviewed the ups and downs of fortune +that had befallen them since the days when the Great +Mogul used to storm Schenk's lodgings and abuse +his master. When they parted it was in tears, never +to meet again.</p> + +<p>The opportune departure of Haydn allowed Beethoven +to place himself under the instruction of Albrechtsberger, +the cathedral organist. This man, +who counted among his pupils not only Beethoven, +but Hummel and Seyfried, was a walking treatise on +counterpoint; but far from investing the science with +any life or brightness, it was his delight to render it, +if possible, more austere and stringent than he had +found it, and to lay down rules which to a fiery, impulsive +nature were positively unbearable. Nevertheless, +Pegasus can go in harness if need be. Beethoven, +who, like every true genius, was essentially +modest in his estimate of himself, and had already +felt the want of a thoroughly grounded knowledge, +submitted to Albrechtsberger's routine for a period +of about fifteen months—beginning almost at the +elements of the science, and working out the dry-as-dust +themes in his master's Gradus ad Parnassum, +until he had gained for himself an insight into the +mysteries of fugue and canon.</p> + +<p>This is not the commonly received notion of Beethoven's +student-days. Ries in his "Notices" has the +following:—</p> + +<p>"I knew them all well [<i>i.e.</i>, Haydn, Albrechts<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>berger, and Salieri, who gave Beethoven instruction +in writing for the voice]; all three appreciated Beethoven +highly, but were all of <i>one</i> opinion regarding +his studies. Each said Beethoven was always so +obstinate and self-willed that he had afterwards much +to learn through his own hard experience, which he +would not accept in earlier days as the subject of instruction. +Albrechtsberger and Salieri especially were +of this opinion."</p> + +<p>But this testimony ought not to be accepted for +more than it is worth. Haydn, absorbed in his own +pursuits, and utterly unable to fathom Beethoven's +nature—the very reverse of his own; Albrechtsberger, +the formal contrapuntist, far more concerned +about the outside of the cup, the form of a composition, +than about its contents; Salieri, the superficial +composer of a few trashy operas long since forgotten,—how +were these men competent to pass +judgment on a <i>Feuerkopf</i> like Beethoven?</p> + +<p>A little further examination of the question in the +light of recent researches will enable the reader to +judge for himself whether the master was an earnest, +willing student, or not.</p> + +<p>Until very lately, the main source whence biographers +drew their accounts of the <i>Lehrjahre</i> was +the work published by the Chevalier von Seyfried, +which purported to be a correct transcription of +Beethoven's "Studies in Thorough-bass." This +volume, as given to the world, was garnished with +a number of sarcastic annotations, professedly +emanating from Beethoven himself, wherein the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span> +theoretical rule under consideration at the moment +is held up to ridicule. It is this circumstance, coupled +with the assertion of Ries above alluded to, which +has chiefly produced the prevalent impression regarding +Beethoven as a student. We suppose that +nine readers out of ten will have pictured to themselves +the master receiving instruction in much the +same spirit as that in which he was wont to give it +in Bonn, namely, like the rebellious colt described by +Wegeler!—Now what are the real facts of the case?—Thanks +to the unwearied exertions of Gustav +Nottebohm, we are in a position to answer the +question. In his admirable book, "Beethoven's +Studien," the <i>actual</i> work done by Beethoven under +Haydn and Albrechtsberger is at length laid before +the public, and the falsity of Seyfried's compilation +fully proved.<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> Nottebohm has no hesitation in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span> +affirming that Beethoven was a willing rather than a +mutinous scholar, and that he was always intent on +his subject, and strove hard to obtain a clear conception +of it.</p> + +<p>As for the "sarcastic" marginal remarks which +for nearly half a century have been treasured up +and smiled over by every admirer of the master +as eminently "characteristic" of him, will the +reader believe that they turn out to be characteristic +of—nothing but the unblushing impudence +of Kapellmeister Ritter von Seyfried? They +have no existence except in his imagination. The +running commentary which accompanies the exercises +is of a very different description from that +supplied by him; it contains one instance, and one +only, of an ironical tendency, and this is amusing +enough in its simplicity to have extorted a smile from +Albrechtsberger himself. One of the text-books employed +appears to have been that of Türk, who +makes use of the term "<i>galant</i>" to designate the +<i>free</i> as opposed to the <i>strict</i> style of composition. +Now what Beethoven saw lurking beneath the title +<i>galant</i>, or what stumblingblock it presented to him, +is hard to discover; but we find the expression, as often +as it occurs, invariably altered to one that suits his +notions better; and once he breaks out with, "Laugh, +friends, at this <i>galanterie</i>!" Perhaps we may arrive +at an appreciation of his distaste to the phrase, if<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span> +we translate it by the word <i>genteel</i>,—imagine Beethoven +writing in a <i>genteel</i> style!!</p> + +<p>But in addition to thus clearing away the haze of +misapprehension that had settled round our master's +character as a learner, the efforts of Thayer and +Nottebohm have also thrown much light on two +questions which have proved more or less perplexing +to all students, and to the brief consideration of which +we would now ask the reader's attention.</p> + +<p>First, then, how is it that Beethoven's genius as a +composer was so late, comparatively speaking, in +developing? At the time of his arrival in Vienna +he was in his twenty-second year, and before that age +Mozart, as we know, had produced no less than +293 works. Yet our master passed his boyhood +in an atmosphere where every influence tended to +quicken the musical life, and to hasten, rather than +retard, its growth. Are we to take the handful of +works—the little sonatas, the crude preludes, and +other trifles generally recognised as composed in Bonn, +to be the sole outcome of that period? Impossible! +Alexander Thayer may fairly be said to have +solved the problem by a single reference to chronology. +He finds that between the years 1795-1802 (that is, a +period <i>commencing immediately after the conclusion of +his studies</i>) Beethoven published no fewer than +ninety-two works, many of them of the first magnitude, +including two symphonies, an oratorio, three +concertos, nine trios, thirty-two sonatas, with and +without accompaniment—and this during a time +when his leisure for composition must have been<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span> +scant indeed. We find him in these years incessantly +occupied in more mechanical work, teaching, +perfecting his style as a pianoforte virtuoso, travelling, +continuing his studies with Salieri, and, in addition, +enjoying life as he went along, not burying himself +hermit-wise in his works, as was the case at a +later date. Moreover, in Thayer's words: "Precisely +at the time when he began to devote himself +<i>exclusively</i> to composition, this wondrous fertility +suddenly ceased. The solution lies on the surface" +viz., that many, if not most, of these works were +actually composed in Bonn, and deliberately kept +back by the author for a certain time. "Why?" +we ask; "on what account?" "Until he had +attained, by study and observation, to the <i>certainty</i> +that he stood on the firm basis of a thoroughly-grounded +knowledge," replies Thayer, Beethoven +would give nothing to the world. That goal reached, +the creations of his youthful fancy are taken in hand +again one by one; the critical file, guided by the +"dictates of an enlightened judgment," is faithfully +applied, and the composition, bearing the final +<i>imprimatur</i> of its author's satisfaction, launched to +meet its fate. Well might Beethoven laugh securely +at his critics!—he had been beforehand with them—he +had sat in judgment on himself.</p> + +<p>This view receives ample confirmation in the +newly published version of the "Studies." The +reader may reasonably take objection to the foregoing, +and may inquire: "Was not Beethoven, then, +master of the mere technicalities of composition by<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span> +the time he reached Vienna? He had been engaged +in studying the theory as well as the practice of +music for over ten years, under a master, himself +well known as a composer."—Let us hear Nottebohm +on the point. The instruction imparted by Neefe, +although calculated to be eminently helpful as +regards "the formation of taste and the development +of musical feeling," was yet "from a technical +standpoint unsatisfactory," being based, not on the +strict contrapuntal system of the early ecclesiastical +writers (the system which alone offers the necessary +<i>discipline</i> for the composer), but rather on the lighter +and more superficial method of the <i>new</i> Leipzig +school, of which Johann Adam Hiller, Neefe's +master and model, was one of the leading exponents.</p> + +<p>Beethoven seems to have divined intuitively +where his weakness lay. For the radical defect +which he recognised in his training there was but +one remedy, viz., to lay aside preconceived opinion; +to go back in all humility to the very <i>Urquelle</i>, +the Fountain-head, of Harmony, and trace out thence +for himself, slowly and painfully, the eternal channel +of <span class="smcap">LAW</span>, <i>within</i> which the mighty sound-flood may +roll and toss at will, but <i>beyond</i> whose bounds, +immutable and fixed, no mortal power may send it +with impunity.</p> + +<p>Turning to the "Studies," we find no trace of a +disposition to claim exemption from toil on the score +of genius. On the contrary!—commencing at the +very foundation (the names of the different intervals), +every branch of composition is taken up in its turn<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>—simple, +double, and triple counterpoint in all detail—and +worked at with a will (several of the exercises, +being written and rewritten two or three times), +until we arrive at Fugue, where, for a reason shortly +to be noted, there is a halt.</p> + +<p>What shall we say to the picture thus presented +to us?—A young man self-willed and impatient +by nature, at an age when submission to direct instruction +is, to say the least, unpalatable, voluntarily +placing himself under the yoke—a poet, within +whose soul divine melodies plead for freedom, and +thoughts of fire press hard for utterance, resolutely +keeping inspiration under, until he shall have penetrated +into the structure of language—a painter, in +whose desk lie sketches, marvellous in freshness, +vigour, and originality, occupying himself for weary +months in the study of anatomy! Truly our Beethoven +at this period, as at a later, comes well within +the practical definition of Genius; his "capacity +for painstaking" was "infinite." Not so, however, +his patience, as we shall presently see.</p> + +<p>Now for the second difficulty to which Nottebohm +has found a clue: how is it that in Beethoven's +earlier works we have so few instances of fugue-writing—at +the time one of the most favoured +styles of composition; and that these, when they do +occur, should from the irregularity of their construction +invariably be disappointing? Here again the +scholarship of our critic has done good service. His +minute examination of the exercises done under +Albrechtsberger has led him to the conclusion, that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span> +to the faulty teaching of the master is due the +faulty workmanship of the pupil—a somewhat +astounding discovery when we remember the high +estimation in which the contrapuntist was held by +his contemporaries. The fact remains, however, that +the instruction given by Albrechtsberger, "in several +important details of fugue building, was deficient +and not grounded;" hence, in all probability, the +rarity of fugue during the first ten years of +Beethoven's creative activity. He had not entire +mastery over its resources, and therefore hesitated +to introduce it, save in a subordinate and fitful way. +We may be surprised that the indoctrination in +the works of J.S. Bach, which we noted in the +Bonn days, should not of itself have been powerful +enough imperceptibly to mould his style. There is, +however, no trace of this at the period we are +considering. That the influence of the <i>Urvater</i><a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> of +harmony (a title applied by Beethoven himself to +John Sebastian) worked deeply into his inner life, +there can be no doubt; but its effects were not +<i>apparent</i> till a very much later date—a phenomenon, +to our thinking, only to be explained on psychological +grounds.</p> + +<p>To return. Beethoven's patience, which had held +out over two years, comes to a sudden halt on this very +question. Clear-sighted and tolerant of no incompetence, +our young "Thorough!" seems to have detected +Albrechtsberger's weak point, and there and then to +have cast off allegiance to him. The exercises up<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span> +to fugue are, generally speaking, most carefully +executed. No sooner, however, does the scholar +perceive that the master is almost as much "at sea" +as himself, and steering vaguely without a chart, +than docility is at an end; he conceives an intense +disgust for the theoretical tread-mill; growls to a +friend that he has "had enough of making musical +skeletons!" and absolves himself, without permission, +from the remainder of Albrechtsberger's course.</p> + +<p>We hear the old Theoretiker long after this grimly +warning one of his pupils against his <i>ci-devant</i> scholar: +"Have nothing to do with him. <i>He</i> never learned +anything!" "Nay," Beethoven might have replied, +had he thought it worth his while, "I learned <i>all</i> +that <i>you</i> had to teach. Would you have had me +walk with my eyes shut?" As Nottebohm remarks +"the one <i>could</i> not" teach, "the other <i>would</i> not" +learn, and so the instruction came to a close, +and Beethoven fell back upon his own resources.</p> + +<p>He had, however, by this time achieved his purpose +in the main. He had probed and examined +the received theoretical axioms, and was in a position +to decide for himself as to their actual importance. +Henceforth none were accepted by him as imperative, +simply out of deference to current ideas, and thus we +find instances again and again of an inflexible +determination to shake off all restraints, the utility +of which was not recognised by his inner consciousness. +He was wont in after years, when told of any +perplexity of the critics, to rub his hands together in +glee, saying; "Yes, yes! they are all astonished, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span> +put their heads together, because—they don't find it +in any thorough-bass book!"</p> + +<p>That independence may easily be merged in self-will, +however, he sometimes proved to demonstration, +to the delight of those who were on the watch for +flaws. Ries tells us, for instance, that on one +occasion he discovered and pointed out (in the C +minor quartet, Op. 18) two perfect fifths in succession. +"Well?" asks the master, testily, "and who has forbidden +them?" Somewhat taken aback, the scholar +keeps silence. Again the question is repeated. "But +it is a first principle!" hesitates Ries in astonishment. +"<span class="smcap">Who has forbidden them?</span>" thunders out the +master again. "Marpurg, Kirnberger. Fux,—all +the theorists." "<span class="smcap">And I allow them!</span>" is the +conclusion. But the obstinacy displayed in this and +similar anecdotes is more an expression of petulance, +than of preconsidered judgment. Beethoven, as we +know, enjoyed nothing better than an opportunity of +mystifying certain individuals as to his real thoughts +and intentions. Occasionally we hear his true voice +in the matter. A friend had remarked, regarding +the second and third "Leonora" overtures, "The artist +must create in freedom, only giving in to the spirit +of his age, and be monarch over his own materials; +under such conditions alone will true art-works come +to light." "Granted," replied Beethoven; "but he must +<i>not</i> give in to the spirit of his age, otherwise it is all +over with originality.... Had I written them +[the two overtures] in the spirit that prevailed at +the time, they would certainly have been understood<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span> +at once, as, for example, the 'Storm of Kotzeluch.' +But I cannot cut and carve out my works according +to the fashion, as they would fain have me do. +Freshness and originality create themselves, without +thinking about it."</p> + +<p>After all, let us remember that it is vain to measure +the strides of a giant with the footsteps of ordinary +men. Epoch-Makers are necessarily Law-Breakers +to the eyes of their contemporaries. Years must pass +before the import of their work is fully discerned. +Reverting to our former simile, <i>we</i> can see that while +Beethoven's critics believed him to be rebelliously +diverting the current of Harmony from the pure course +directed by a Palestrina, a Bach, a Handel, a Haydn, +a Mozart, he was in reality simply engaged in deepening +and widening its channel, that the Stream might +flow on in grander and nobler proportions to meet +the ever-growing necessities of Humanity.</p> + +<p>Beethoven continued a diligent student through +life; from those who had devoted special attention +to any particular subject he was always eager to learn, +although, as we have seen, without pledging himself +to follow their views. Thus we find him in 1799 +studying the art of quartet-writing more closely with +Förster, who excelled in that branch of composition; +and as late as 1809 he styles himself the "pupil" of +Salieri, from whom, as the friend of Metastasio, and +versed in the requirements of the Italian school, he +often sought advice in his vocal compositions.</p> + +<p>But in addition to more purely theoretic studies, Beethoven +was indefatigable in his practical investigations<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span> +into the nature and capabilities of the instruments +for which he wrote, and which his creative genius +roused to unheard-of achievements. From Herren +Kraft and Linke he learned the mechanism of the +violoncello; Punto taught him that of the horn, and +Friedlowsky that of the clarionet. He often consulted +these artists in after life regarding the suitability of +certain passages for their respective instruments, +and allowed himself to be guided by their suggestions.</p> + +<p>Far otherwise was it, however, with singers; for +them Beethoven composed as he liked, without +humouring any little predilection of the most fascinating +prima donna, or introducing a single piece for +display (one reason why Rossini was able for so long +to play the part of the successful rival). On the +other hand, the singers had their revenge, and sang +his music precisely as they listed, interpolating embellishments +and cadenze <i>a piacere</i> without the +slightest regard to his wishes.</p> + +<p>The following letters to Eleanore van Breuning +belong to this epoch:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p><span style="margin-left:30em;">"<i>Vienna, Nov. 2nd, '93.</i></span> +</p> + +<p>"<span class="smcap">Most esteemed Eleanore! my dearest +Friend!</span>—A whole year of my residence in the +capital has nearly elapsed without your having received +a letter from me, notwithstanding you have been +continually with me in the liveliest remembrance. I +have often entertained myself with the thought of +you and your dear family, but oftener still I have not +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>enjoyed the peace in doing so which I could have +wished.<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a></p> + +<p>"At such times that fatal dispute hovered before +me, and my conduct in the matter appeared to me +detestable. But it was past and gone. How much +would I give to be able to obliterate entirely from +my life the way in which I then acted! so dishonouring +to me, so opposed to my general character. +At the same time there were many circumstances +which tended to keep us apart, and I suspect that +what specially hindered a reconciliation was the +manner in which the remarks of each were repeated +to the other. We both believed that what we said +was the result of honest conviction, when in reality it +proceeded from anger inflamed by others, and so we +were both deceived. Your good and noble character, +my dear friend, warrants me in believing that you +have long since forgiven me; but they say that the +truest repentance is that in which we confess our own +faults, and this is what I desire to do. And let us +now draw the curtain over the whole affair, only +extracting the lesson from it that when a dispute +happens between friends, it is always better that no +mediator should be employed, but that friend should +address himself direct to friend.</p></div> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span></p> +<div class="blockquot"><p>"You will receive along with this a dedication,<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> +and I can only wish that it were greater and more +worthy of you. They teased me here into publishing +this little work, and I avail myself of the opportunity +to give you, my esteemed Eleanore, a proof of my +regard and friendship for yourself, and a token of my +lasting remembrance of your house. Accept this +trifle, and think of it as coming from a devoted friend. +Oh! if it only gives you pleasure, my wishes will be +quite satisfied. May it be a little reawakening of the +time when I passed so many happy hours in your +house! perhaps it may keep you in remembrance of +me until I return again, which certainly will not +happen soon. Oh! my dear friend, how we shall +rejoice then! You will find your friend a more +cheerful man, with all the former furrows of adversity +chased away through time and a happier lot.</p> + +<p>"If you should see B. Koch, I beg you to tell her +that it is unkind of her not to have written me +even once. I have written to her twice, and to Malchus<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> +three times—but no answer. Tell her that if +she will not write herself, she might, at least, urge +Malchus to do so.</p> + +<p>"In concluding my letter, I venture one more +request, namely, that it would make me very happy +to possess an Angola vest knitted by your hands, my +dear friend. Forgive this not very modest demand! +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>It arises out of my great predilection for everything +made by you; but I must tell you confidentially that +there is also a little vanity connected with it. I want +to be able to say that I possess something of one of +the best and most admired girls in Bonn. I have, it +is true, still the first which you kindly gave me in +Bonn, but it has become so old-fashioned that I can +only treasure it up in my wardrobe as something of +yours, very dear to me. You would delight me much +by favouring me soon with one of your kind letters. +Should mine give you any pleasure, I promise you +certainly, so far as lies in my power, to continue +them; since everything is welcome to me whereby I +may prove to you how much I am,</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left:25em;">"With all esteem,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left:27em;">"Your true Friend,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left:30em;" class="smcap">"L. v. Beethoven</span>.<br /> +</p> + +<p>"P.S.—You will find the v. [variations] somewhat +difficult to play, especially the shake in the coda; +but don't let this alarm you, since it is so arranged +that you have nothing to do but the shake; the other +notes you may leave out, as they occur in the violin +part. I would never have written in this manner +had I not had occasion to remark that there are +several people here in V., who, after I have extemporized +of an evening, write down many of my peculiarities +next day, and pass them off as their own.<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> As I +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>foresaw that such things would soon be published, +it occurred to me to anticipate their movements. +Another reason was also—to perplex the pianoforte +teachers here. Many of them are my mortal enemies, +and I wished to revenge myself on them in this way; +knowing that they would occasionally be asked to +play the variations, when these gentlemen would +come out in rather an unfavourable light."</p></div> + +<p>The following fragment is without date:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>"The beautiful cravat, worked by your own hands, +has caused me the greatest possible surprise. Although +in itself so pleasing, it awakened within me +feelings of melancholy. Its effect was to recall the +past, and to shame me by your generous behaviour. +In truth, I did not think that you still considered me +worthy of remembrance.</p> + +<p>"Oh! could you have been a witness of my emotions +yesterday when it arrived, you would not think +I exaggerate in saying that the recollection of you +brings the tears to my eyes, and makes me very sad. +However little I may deserve credit in your eyes, I +beg you to believe, <i>my friend</i> (allow me still to call +you so), that I have suffered and still suffer through +the loss of your friendship. You and your dear +mother I shall never forget. Your goodness to me +was such that the loss of you neither can nor will be +easily replaced. I know what I lost and what you +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>were to me, but——if I attempt to fill up this blank, +I must refer to scenes which are as unpleasant for +you to hear as for me to describe.</p> + +<p>"As a slight return for your kind remembrance of +me, I take the liberty of sending you some variations, +and the rondo with violin accompaniment. I have a +great deal to do, or I would have copied the long-promised +sonata for you. In my manuscript it is +little better than a sketch, and it would be very difficult +for Paraquin himself,<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> clever as he is, to transcribe +it. You can have the rondo copied, and then return +the score to me. It is the only one of all my compositions +suitable for you, and as you are shortly going +to Kerpen,<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> I thought it might afford you some +pleasure.</p> + +<p>"Farewell, my friend. It is impossible for me to +call you by any other name, however indifferent I +may be to you. Pray believe that I reverence you +and your mother as highly as formerly.</p> + +<p>"If it is in my power to contribute anything to +your happiness, pray do not fail to let me know, since +it is the only means left to me of proving my gratitude +for past friendship.</p> + +<p>"May you have a pleasant journey, and bring your +dear mother back in perfect health!</p> + +<p><span style="margin-left:25em;">"Think sometimes of<br /></span> +<span style="margin-left:27em;">"Your admiring Friend,<br /></span> +<span style="margin-left:30em;" class="smcap">"Beethoven</span>."<br /> +</p></div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span></p><div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> The origin of this work may not be uninteresting to the reader. +It is briefly as follows. Among the effects of Beethoven offered for +sale at the public auction of 1827 were five packets of MSS., labelled +"Exercises in Composition." These were bought by the publisher, T. +Haslinger, in the not unreasonable belief that they would be found to +present a complete view of the preparation made by the master for his +life's work. He determined to give the collection to the world, and +entrusted the editing of it to the Chevalier von Seyfried, as a friend of +Beethoven and himself a scholarly musician. In process of time the +volume appeared, and was received with very opposite sentiments by different +sections of the public: by some it was accepted as genuine; by others +rejected as a fabrication. Nottebohm's investigation has proved the +truth to lie between the two extremes. "Seyfried's book," he says, "is +neither authentic nor forged; it is a <i>falsified</i> work." Seyfried, in fact, +seems to have gone to work with incredible recklessness; his "Beethoven's +Studies" is an <i>Olla Podrida</i>, composed of not only Beethoven's own +exercises (put together without regard to natural sequence or chronology), +but of another theoretical course, probably that prepared by Beethoven +years after for the instruction of the Archduke Rudolph; while a third +element is actually introduced in the shape of Studies from a MS. written +in a strange hand, and possibly the work of another pupil of Albrechtsberger!</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> Original father—creator.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> The following remarks are eminently characteristic of Beethoven. +When his fiery nature had led him into saying or doing anything which +subsequent reflection showed him to be contrary to true friendship, his +remorse knew no bounds. Wegeler declares that his contrition was +often entirely disproportionate to the fault committed, as in the present +instance.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> Variations on Figaro's air, "Se vuol ballare."</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> Afterwards Count Marienrode, and Minister of Finance in the +kingdom of Westphalia. At a later period he filled the same office +in Wirtemberg.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> Wegeler says, "Beethoven often complained to me also of this +sort of <i>espionage</i>. He particularized the Abbé Gelinek, a very fruitful +composer of variations, in Vienna, who always settled himself in his +neighbourhood. This may have been one of the reasons why Beethoven +always looked out for a lodging in as open a place as possible."</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> <i>Paraquin</i>, contro-basso in the electoral orchestra; a thorough +musician, and universally esteemed as such.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> <i>Kerpen</i>, the residence of an uncle of Fräulein v. Breuning, where +the family usually spent some weeks in summer.</p></div> +</div> + + +<div class="figcenter" ><br /><br /> +<img src="images/b_page_096a.jpg" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + + +<h3>CHAPTER V</h3> + +<p class="center">THE VIRTUOSO.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>Family Occurrences—Music in Vienna—Van Swieten—Prince Lichnowski—Beethoven's +Independence, Personal Appearance, Manners—Rasoumowski +Quartet—Occurrences in Lichnowski's Palace—First +Three Trios—Artistic Tour to Berlin—Woelfl—Beethoven +as an Improvisatore—Steibelt.</p></div> + +<div class="figleft" style="margin-left: 0em; margin-right: 0em; margin-bottom: 0em; margin-top: 0em;"> +<img src="images/b.jpg" alt="" title="" /> +</div> +<p>eethoven's period of study embraced +over two years, during which many events +took place that produced a revolution in his +circumstances, and left him at their close in a very +different position from that in which they had found +him.</p> + +<p>The first of these was the death of his father, which +happened about a month after his arrival in Vienna, +obliged the young man to take upon himself once +more the duties of guardian to his two brothers, and +necessitated the following petition to the Elector:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>"<span class="smcap">Most Reverend and Gracious Prince</span>,—Some +years ago your Highness was pleased to grant +a pension to my father, the court tenor Van Beethoven, +and graciously to decree that one hundred thalers of +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>his salary should be placed in my hands, that I might +provide for the clothing, maintenance, and education +of my two younger brothers, and also discharge the +debts contracted by our father. I wished at once to +present this order to your Highness's treasurer; but +my father earnestly implored me not to do so, that it +might not be imagined he was incapable of superintending +his own family; and he further added that he +would himself pay me quarterly the twenty-five R. +thalers, which up to the present time was faithfully +performed.</p> + +<p>"After his death, however (in December last), when +I wished to avail myself of your Highness's kindness +and present the above-mentioned order, I was alarmed +by the discovery that my father had made away +with it.</p> + +<p>"With all dutiful respect I therefore beg your +Serene Highness kindly to renew this order, and to +instruct your treasurer to let me have the last quarter +of this gracious addition to my salary (due the beginning +of February).</p> + +<p><span style="margin-left:20em;">"Your Serene Highness's<br /></span> +<span style="margin-left:22em;">"Most obedient and faithful Servant,<br /></span> +<span style="margin-left:25em;" class="smcap">"Lud. v. Beethoven</span>, <i>Court Organist</i>." +</p></div> + +<p>This request was granted, and Franz Ries undertook +the management of the money; but after June, +1793, not only this but the pension granted to Beethoven +himself was suddenly stopped. The fruits of +the French Revolution had made themselves apparent, +and the Elector was forced to fly from Bonn and take<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span> +refuge in Mergentheim. Henceforth, Beethoven must +depend upon himself.</p> + +<p>Luckily the emergency found him prepared; he +was already esteemed as one of the best pianoforte +players of the day—nay, there were not wanting +those who assigned to him the very first place. The +recommendation of Count Waldstein, who was nearly +related to more than half a dozen of the best families +in Austria, coupled with that of the elector (uncle to +the reigning emperor), together with the fact that he +was Haydn's most promising pupil, gained for the +young man admission to the highest circles in the +capital, where his extraordinary abilities speedily +met with recognition, and placed him above all fear +of want.</p> + +<p>In accounting for the peculiar facility with which +Beethoven obtained a hearing in Vienna, the state of +society and position of art at the period must not be +forgotten.</p> + +<p>In a wide sense, and as we should understand it +now, music was not universally cultivated or appreciated. +The opera houses were two in number, one +entirely given up to Italian performances; the other +plain and unattractive, struggling under great disadvantages +to bring forward native composers.</p> + +<p>Church music was at a low ebb; the influence of +Albrechtsberger at the cathedral not tending to much +life or novelty in that branch of composition.</p> + +<p>Public concerts, such as are now of daily occurrence, +happened perhaps once a year, when funds were +required for some charity.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span></p> + +<p>Thus, music was not then the universal pursuit of +all classes. The enjoyment of it was almost entirely +limited to the privileged few—the aristocracy—who, +following the example set by the reigning family, +professed an adoration of the art, a devotion to it, +which (though, of course, in many instances genuine) +was so general, so common, as to cast a doubt upon +its reality. Music was, in short, the fashionable +rage; to be non-musical was to shut oneself out of +the pale of society—an alternative not to be thought +of without shuddering by the gay, pleasure-loving +Viennese.</p> + +<p>Accordingly the musical enthusiasm was wonderful. +We find no less than ten private theatres, each with +its full corps of actors and actresses, at most of which +operettas were performed; and an orchestral society, +composed exclusively of members of noble houses, +who gave public concerts, open only to their equals +in society, at the unwonted hour of six in the +morning.</p> + +<p>In addition to these, every nobleman had his private +orchestra, or his <i>Quartettistes</i>, or, if his means would +not admit of this, at least one eminent instrumental +player, attached to his household. As all the great +families of Austria vied with each other in the splendour +and <i>recherché</i> style of their musical entertainments, +it may easily be imagined how, in such a state +of society, Beethoven was lionized, petted, and fêted.</p> + +<p>Thayer gives a list of no fewer than thirty-one +great houses (nine of them belonging to princes) +which must have been open to him, as the owners<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span> +were all recognised, worthy dilettanti in the highest +sense—not mere followers of the fickle goddess, +Fashion. Add to these the crowd that is ever ready +to patronize him whom the leaders of <i>ton</i> have taken +by the hand, and we see that Beethoven could not +have wanted either for pupils or for opportunities of +playing at private concerts.</p> + +<p>It was, doubtless, the bustle and pressure of this +episode in his life, the contact with vulgarity in high +places, that gave him the dislike he afterwards manifested +to playing in public. At an earlier period in +Bonn, as we have seen, it was his delight to communicate +his ideas to others, and to pour forth the +inmost feelings of his soul in the presence of a little +circle of sympathising, cultivated listeners. But here, +in Vienna, to play at the command of some birth-proud +aristocrat, who regarded art and artists as +mere ministers to his pleasure—from such a task +Beethoven's mind revolted. Wegeler relates the +effect which such an occurrence would have upon +him:—</p> + +<p>"An invitation to play in society robbed him of all +gaiety. He would come to me gloomy and down-cast, +complaining that he was forced to play till the +blood tingled to his very finger tips. By degrees we +would begin to talk together in a friendly way, when +I sought to distract his thoughts and to soothe him. +When this end was achieved, I let the conversation +drop. I placed myself at my desk, and if Beethoven +wished to speak to me again, he was obliged to +seat himself on a chair before the pianoforte. Soon,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span> +and often without turning, he would strike a few +undecided chords, out of which the most beautiful +melodies were gradually developed. I dared not +hazard a remark about his playing, or only allude to +it <i>en passant</i>. Beethoven would go away quite cheerful, +and always return willingly to me. The dislike, +however, remained, and was often the occasion of +a rupture between him and his best friends."</p> + +<p>But the halcyon days had not yet arrived when the +great tone-poet could devote himself entirely to his +life-mission. His own wants and those of his brothers +had to be provided for, and accordingly the round +of pianoforte-playing was gone through, as that of +teaching had been before, and with the same result, +it paved the way to life-friendships.</p> + +<p>Amongst the distinct leaders of the musical taste +of the capital was Gottfried, Baron van Swieten, the +son of Maria Theresa's Dutch physician, and the +composer of twelve symphonies (on which Haydn's +verdict was—"as stiff as himself.") He had formerly +passed some time in Berlin, where he had become +acquainted with Friedemann and Emanuel Bach, and +had heard the "Messiah," "Judas Maccabæus," and +"Alexander's Feast." After his return to Vienna, he +acted as secretary to a musical society which met at +his house, where the great works of Bach, Handel, +and the old Italian writers (including Palestrina), were +devotedly studied. Mozart's co-operation in this undertaking +had been invaluable; but Mozart was gone, +and Van Swieten was inconsolable for his loss until +he discovered Beethoven. He was a quaint type of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span> +a race long extinct—the genuine old <i>kenner</i> or +connoisseur. One can almost see him, when at a +concert an incautious whisper was heard in the background, +rising majestically from his place, and conspicuous +from his great height, taking an awful survey +of the room to discover the offender and wither him +by a glance! In his efforts after the <i>true</i> in art, +however, no very marked line was discernible to him +between the sublime and the ridiculous; hence the +earnestness with which he persuaded Haydn (and for +which the latter never forgave him) to insert the +croaking of the frogs in the Seasons. But take him +for all in all, he was a valuable friend to Beethoven, +and as such the latter regarded him. A carefully +preserved note of his is still extant: "If nothing +comes in the way, I should like to see you here next +Wednesday, at half-past eight o'clock, with your +nightcap in your pocket."</p> + +<p>The latter precaution was not unnecessary, for the +insatiable host (after the evening's entertainment was +over and the guests gone home) would not consent +to release his young <i>protégé</i> under at least half-a-dozen +of Bach's fugues for a "good-night," or "<i>evening +blessing</i>," as he was wont to call it.</p> + +<p>Most valuable were the evenings spent in Van +Swieten's house to Beethoven, for here he was first +made fully acquainted with the majesty of Handel, +"that unequalled master of all masters," in Beethoven's +estimation, of whom he once said: "Go, and learn +of him how to produce, with small means, such great +effects!"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span></p> + +<p>Another patron of the young musician, and one +able to benefit him more substantially, was the +Prince Karl Lichnowski, the accomplished pupil of +Mozart, who, with his amiable wife Christiane, +devoted every leisure hour to artistic pursuits. This +couple, worthy in all respects of their exalted rank, +at first attracted by the wonderful improvisation of +Haydn's pupil, soon discovered, on a more intimate +acquaintance, the true nobility of soul and dazzling +genius which lay beneath the rough exterior.</p> + +<p>They were childless; with the utmost delicacy it +was proposed to Beethoven in 1794 that he should +come to them; he accepted the offer in the spirit in +which it was made, and for several years was an +inmate of the Lichnowski Palace, treated with more +than parental tenderness by the Prince and Princess. +The latter took the place of Madame von Breuning, +and Beethoven used afterwards to say laughingly, +"They wanted to train me there with <i>grandmotherly</i> +love; and the Princess Christiane would have liked +to put a glass case over me, so that no evil might +come nigh me."</p> + +<p>Not that there was never any misunderstanding +between Beethoven and his patron; on the contrary, +the Princess had very often to mediate between them. +How could it be otherwise? it was not easy for the +powerful, impulsive mind of Beethoven, with his previous +training, to accommodate itself to the smooth, +etiquette-trammelled life of a palace. To abide by a +settled routine was to him impossible; and after +a few ineffectual struggles the attempt to make him<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span> +do so was abandoned, and the artist left free to +develop himself in his own way.</p> + +<p>Wegeler relates that when he came to Vienna he +found Beethoven installed in the Lichnowski Palace, +but by no means so content with his position as one +would imagine. Amongst other things he complained +to him that the Prince's dinner-hour was fixed at four +o'clock. "Now," said he, "I ought to be at home by +half-past three to dress and trim my beard, &c. I +could not stand that!" So some restaurant was +more frequently honoured by his presence than the +Lichnowski dinner-table.</p> + +<p>It must not be thought that Beethoven forfeited +any of his independence by thus becoming an inmate +of the palace. On the contrary, he knew well, and +the Prince did also, that the advantage was mutual. +If he had a zealous and wealthy patron, the Prince +had in return the benefit of the constant presence of +the first pianist and improvisatore of the day at all +his <i>Musikabende</i>, besides the <i>éclat</i> attached to the fact +that so many of the composer's productions were first +performed at his house. Not that either of them +ever coolly balanced the one set of advantages +over against the other. This was in point of fact the +relation between them; in reality it was more like +that of father and son.</p> + +<p>The critical judgment of the Prince was highly +esteemed by Beethoven, who often allowed himself to +be persuaded by him into making alterations which +no other influence had power to effect; and his proficiency +as a pianoforte-player, which enabled him to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span> +master with comparative ease the difficulties in the +new style inaugurated by his <i>protégé</i>, confirmed +Beethoven in his own views, and gave him fresh +strength to resist those who would have had him +adopt a more simple manner of writing.</p> + +<p>Beethoven's independence of thought and action +was of vital importance in his development. "Help +thyself!" was his motto. But we are sometimes +inclined to smile at the lengths to which he carried +his favourite doctrine. For instance, having overheard +the prince (who had a peculiarly loud voice) +direct his Jäger, that whenever Beethoven and he +rang at the same time, the latter should be waited on +first; he took care that very day to procure a servant +for himself. Another time, when he had a great +desire to learn riding, and the Prince's stud had been +placed at his disposal, he would not accept the offer, +but bought an animal for his own special use. Any +one who has ever been so unlucky as to borrow a +friend's favourite horse, will not find Beethoven's conduct +in this instance so very peculiar.</p> + +<p>We can now imagine our master settled for a time, +in the possession of much that could make life enjoyable. +His days were entirely at his own disposal, +and generally occupied by study; his evenings were +passed either in his patron's <i>salon</i>, at Van Swieten's, +or at the house of some connoisseur. Wherever he +went, he was welcomed, in spite of his unpolished +manner and appearance.</p> + +<p>We have seen how, rather than submit to the +necessity of an elaborate toilette, he would content<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span> +himself with the plainest fare; but there was that in +Beethoven's <i>physique</i> which the utmost pains could +never have smoothed down to the conventional +standard. Rather short, with a figure more indicative +of strength than elegance, hair that baffled +Figaro's efforts to reduce it to order, and a broad face, +whose one redeeming point was the lofty, expansive +forehead—a true throne of genius—Beethoven presented +a <i>tout-ensemble</i> which at once marked him out +from all others, and was an index to the independent, +original spirit within.</p> + +<p>His demeanour was such as might be expected in +one who had made his own life-path, and had constantly +encountered hostility and misunderstanding; +brusque, angular, and a little defiant; but—where he +was sure of his ground—gentle and loveable as a +woman, innocent and guileless as a child.</p> + +<p>Beethoven had no time for the <i>petits-soins</i> of life, +his thoughts were too deeply engrossed with higher +matters, but that he was the bear so often represented, +we emphatically deny. Such accusations +were brought against him by those who were incapable +of appreciating either him or his works, who +would have had the great poet descend to the +common level of every-day life, fritter away precious +time and thought, and force his powerful mind to the +punctilious observance of every little social etiquette.</p> + +<p>One condition alone was necessary for Beethoven +to come out in a favourable light in society, viz, <i>he +must be understood</i>. Not flattered, not admired, not +caressed,—simply understood in his true character as a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span> +poet, an artist, a revealer of beauty undreamt of by +others. The following anecdote is an illustration of +this:—</p> + +<p>"When we were both still young (writes Herr von +Griesinger, Ambassador from the Court of Saxony +to Vienna), I only an <i>attaché</i>, and Beethoven only a +celebrated pianoforte player, but as yet little known +as a composer, we happened to be both together at +the house of Prince Lobkowitz. A gentleman, who +thought himself a great connoisseur, entered into a +conversation with Beethoven upon a poet's life and +inclinations. 'I wish,' said Beethoven, with his native +candour, 'that I was relieved from all the bargain and +sale of publication, and could meet with some one +who could pay me a certain income for life, for which +he should possess the right to publish exclusively all +that I wrote; and I would not be idle in composition. +I believe Goethe does this with Cotta, and, if I +mistake not, Handel's London publisher held similar +terms with him.'</p> + +<p>"'My dear young man,' said this grave wiseacre, +'you must not complain, for you are neither a Goethe +nor a Handel, and it is not to be expected that you +ever will be, for such masters will not be born +again.'</p> + +<p>"Beethoven bit his lips, gave a most contemptuous +glance at the speaker, and said not another word to +him. Afterwards, however, he expressed himself +pretty warmly on the subject of this flippant individual.</p> + +<p>"Prince Lobkowitz endeavoured to draw Beet<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>hoven +into more temperate habits of thought, and +said in a friendly manner, when the conversation once +turned upon this person, 'My dear Beethoven, the +gentleman did not intend to wound you; it is an +established maxim, which most men adhere to, that +the present generation cannot possibly produce such +mighty spirits as the dead, who have already earned +their fame.'</p> + +<p>"'So much the worse, your Highness,' replied +Beethoven; 'but with men who will not believe and +trust in me because I am as yet unknown to universal +fame, I cannot hold intercourse.'</p> + +<p>"Many then shook their heads, and called the +young composer arrogant and overbearing. Had +these gentry been able to look into the future, they +would have been a little ashamed of themselves."</p> + +<p>With Beethoven's residence in the Lichnowski +Palace, many characteristic anecdotes are connected, +amongst others that already referred to of his reading +the complicated Bach MS. <i>a prima vista</i>.</p> + +<p>But one of the most important features of his life +here was his connection with the Schuppanzigh Quartette, +afterwards known as the Razoumowski, which, +under his auspices, took so notable a place in musical +annals. The players were all very young (Schuppanzigh, +first violin, a boy of sixteen; Sina, second +violin, still a very young man; Weiss, viola, fifteen; +and Kraft, violoncello, only fourteen years of age), +and this was probably a recommendation in the eyes +of the Prince, who was passionately fond of the quartets +of Haydn and Mozart, and doubtless found that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span> +he could more easily inoculate young and unformed +minds with his peculiar views regarding the performance +of them, than he could persuade more +mature artists into adopting his views. Beethoven +was his able coadjutor in this attempt, and the boy-quartet, +directed by one not much older than themselves, +did honour to the discernment of their patron. +For many years they worked harmoniously together, +meeting for practice every Friday morning, and +probably no quartet-players, either before or since, +enjoyed advantages so great. For them Beethoven +composed his immortal productions, and his genius +fired and animated theirs, so that one mind and one +will alone seemed at work. The following note, preserved +by Schindler, relative to the production of the +difficult E flat major Quartet in March, 1825, shows +how his desire that his old companions should prove +equal to their reputation continued unabated to the +last:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>"<span class="smcap">My good Friends</span>,—Herewith each will receive +his part, and must with it promise allegiance, and +pledge himself in all honour to do his very best to +distinguish himself, and to vie with the others in +zeal.</p> + +<p>"Every one who wishes to take part in the affair +must sign this paper."</p> + +<p class="center">(Here follow the four signatures.)</p></div> + +<p>On one occasion a new pianoforte quartet by +Förster, a well-known composer of the day, was in +progress of rehearsal. The violoncellist was suddenly<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span> +called out, when Beethoven, who was at the pianoforte, +instantly began to sing the missing part in +addition to going on with his own, which he read for +the first time.</p> + +<p>The Prince, astonished, asked him how he could +sing music with which he was not acquainted. Beethoven +smiled and replied, "The bass <i>must</i> have been +so, otherwise the author could have known nothing +whatever of composition." On the Prince remarking +further, that Beethoven had taken the <i>Presto</i> so +quickly that it was impossible for him to have seen +the notes, he answered, "That is not at all necessary. +A multitude of faults in the printing do not signify. +If you only know the language, you don't see them +or pay any heed to them."</p> + +<p>To show the good understanding between Beethoven +and the Princess Christiane, we give the following +anecdote here, although it properly belongs to a +later period.</p> + +<p>One evening, Ries, while still Beethoven's pupil, in +performing a sonata before a large company, played +a wrong note, on which the master tapped him on the +head with one finger by way of reminder. Beethoven +next took his seat at the pianoforte, and the Princess +(who always felt for the weak, and had observed that +Ries was rather vexed by the occurrence) stationed +herself behind the composer. Beethoven played the +beginning of one of his own compositions rather carelessly, +as he was often wont to do in commencing, +when the Princess seized her opportunity, and giving +him several well-directed blows, said: "When a pupil<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span> +is punished with one finger for having failed in a +single note, the master deserves to be punished with +the whole hand for graver faults!" "Everybody +began to laugh," adds Ries, "and Beethoven the first. +He recommenced, and played admirably."</p> + +<p>In the year 1793, the first of that unparalleled +series of works which ended only in 1827 with +Beethoven's death—the three Trios for pianoforte, +violin, and 'cello, Op. I.,—was publicly performed; +that is to say, before a large and brilliant assembly +in the Lichnowski Palace. The result was most gratifying, +alike to the composer and to his friends—Beethoven +was at once recognised as the successor +of Mozart. One incident alone detracted from the +happiness of the young author. Haydn, who was +present, while warmly praising the two first trios, +strongly recommended that the last, in C minor, +should not be published.</p> + +<p>Beethoven's suspicion, already on the alert, was +fairly roused by this apparently well-meaning advice. +Why should that particular trio be kept back? He +himself thought it the best and most original of the +three, and as such it is now generally regarded.</p> + +<p>It offered, however, such a contrast to his own +simple style of trio-writing, that Haydn was, perhaps, +honest in stating as his reason for advocating its non-publication +that he did not believe the public would +understand it. Beethoven, however, was strengthened +by this occurrence in his conviction that Haydn "did +not mean well by him;" and, though he deferred to +the criticism at the time (probably more out of re<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>gard +to Lichnowski's representations) a bitter feeling +towards his former master rankled in his heart. This +did not prevent his dedicating the three Pianoforte +Sonatas, Op. II., to Haydn. The dedication, however, +was a mere mark of appreciation, not of the +man, but of his works, a compliment from one artist +to the other—not a grateful recognition of the master +by the pupil. In fact, when Haydn wished him to +inscribe on the title-page, "Pupil of Haydn," he +flatly refused, saying that he "had never learned +anything from him!"</p> + +<p>We have said that he deferred to Haydn's criticism, +but he went beyond it. If the C minor trio was not +to be published, neither should the other two. So +the unlucky works were thrust back into his portfolio, +where they lay for two years, during which the +irate composer paved the way for their proper reception +by publishing an immense number of bagatelles, +especially variations on different themes, which have +no great value beyond that attached to them as +studies in the development of Beethoven's genius.</p> + +<p>Although evincing more ingenuity and variety than +the themes treated by Mozart in the same way, they +are often found unequal to the latter in clearness.<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> +Beethoven seems to have had a lingering partiality for +this style of writing. After having abandoned it, we +find it adopted again in the Thirty-two Variations +Sérieuses on an original theme, which were written +after he had more than established his success in the +Sonata form; and, so anxious was he to have them<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span> +well understood and rendered, that he made Ries, +when studying them with him, repeat the last no +fewer than seventeen times before he was satisfied +with the effect; "though," adds Ries rather naïvely, +"I thought I played it as well as Beethoven himself!"</p> + +<p>The growth of the Thirty-three Variations, Op. 120, +we must leave to Schindler to relate:—</p> + +<p>"In the villa of Hetzendorf, Beethoven wrote the +Thirty-three Variations on a Waltz by Diabelli, a +work which delighted him uncommonly. At first +there were only to be six or seven variations, for +which modest number Diabelli had offered him eighty +ducats (the price he received for almost each of his +later Sonatas). But when he set to work, there sprang +into life first ten, then twenty, then twenty-five—and +still he could not stop. When Diabelli heard of the +twenty-five variations, he was greatly concerned +lest the work should be too large, but was at last +obliged to accept for his eighty ducats, not <i>seven</i>, but +<i>three and thirty variations</i>." The following story is a +proof of the ease with which he invented variations. +Being one evening in a box with a lady during a performance +of "La Molinare," she lamented to him that +she had once possessed a number of variations on the +air "Nel cor non più mi sento," which she had lost. +Next morning she received "Sei variazioni perdute +per la—ritrovate per Luigi v. Beethoven."</p> + +<p>The year 1795 brought with it two events: one the +arrival of his brothers in Vienna; the other his first +appearance in public as a virtuoso. Hitherto his performances +had been confined to the Lichnowski<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span> +Palace, and other private houses, and public curiosity +had long been whetted by the various rumours which +flew about concerning him. At length it was to be +gratified, on the occasion of the Annual Concert for +the Widows and Orphans of Musicians. The direction +of this was usually entrusted to Salieri, who held +the <i>bâton</i> at the Italian Opera-house, and his programme +for the year 1795 consisted of an operetta, +composed by one of his pupils, and a Pianoforte +Concerto in C major by another, Herr Louis van +Beethoven.</p> + +<p>Wegeler relates that two days before the date +fixed for the event the Concerto was not yet finished, +and there did not seem much probability of its +being ready in time, as Beethoven was suffering +much from attacks of colic, to which he was often +subject. Wegeler, from his medical knowledge, was +able to render a little assistance, and so the work progressed, +Beethoven writing as fast as he could, and +handing over each sheet as it was finished to four +copyists who were in attendance in the antechamber. +Next day, at the rehearsal, the pianoforte was found +to have been tuned half a tone lower than the other +instruments; when Beethoven, to save time, played +the whole Concerto through in the key of C sharp!</p> + +<p>Seyfried tells us that when Beethoven asked him +to turn over the leaves of several of his concertos for +him while playing in public, he found nothing but +a sheet of paper with here and there a bar filled in, +or a mass of notes unintelligible to any one but the +composer. Jahn describes Mozart as doing the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span> +same, but what a difference is there between his concertos +and—say, <i>the Emperor</i>!</p> + +<p>The year 1796 was marked by a slight variation; +Beethoven made a short journey to Prague and +Berlin, the only occasion, with the exception of his +visit to the Baths, on which he ever left Vienna or +its neighbourhood. In both cities he met with a +flattering reception. In Berlin he played his two +sonatas for pianoforte and 'cello, Op. 5, before +Frederick William II., who presented him with a +snuff-box filled with Friedrichs-d'or; "not an ordinary +snuff-box," as Beethoven was wont to remark +with grim satisfaction, "but one similar to those +given to ambassadors!"</p> + +<p>Here, also, he unwittingly incurred the enmity of +the pianist Himmel. The latter had begged Beethoven +for an improvisation, with which request our +musician complied, and then asked Himmel to favour +him in return. Nothing loath, Himmel seated himself +at the pianoforte and began a succession of +smooth running passages and arpeggios, skilfully +linked together. Beethoven listened for a while in +silence, imagining this to be the prelude, but as it +seemed to "go on for ever," he said with some +impatience, "Pray do begin now!" Himmel, however +had already exhausted his imagination and +finished his (<i>quasi</i>) improvisation.</p> + +<p>No better fate awaited others who opposed themselves +to Beethoven as improvisatori, not excepting +the celebrated pianists Woelfl and Steibelt. That +the former could ever have been seriously regarded<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span> +as the rival of Beethoven is scarcely credible to us. +Such was the case, however, and as with Gluck and +Picini in Paris, and Handel and Buononcini in +London (connected with which Swift's well-known +<i>jeu-d'esprit</i> will occur to every amateur), so it was with +Beethoven and Woelfl in Vienna. Each had his +allies, and party spirit ran so high that Beethoven, +although devoid of any feeling of rivalry, accepted +a challenge to improvise. The meeting took place +at the villa of Baron von Wetzlar, Woelfl's patron; +the pianofortes were placed side by side, and the two +artists played and improvised by turns.</p> + +<p>Inspired by the ardour of contest, each seemed to +surpass himself; never had Woelfl's technical skill +seemed greater; never had the wealth of Beethoven's +ideas shone out more resplendently. Some of +Woelfl's stoutest adherents contended that he had +gained the day in a technical point of view, and this +may, perhaps, have been the case, since his immense +hand, which enabled him to grasp tenths with the +same ease as octaves, undoubtedly gave him an +advantage. His sonata, "Non plus ultra," gives us +an idea of his execution.</p> + +<p>Beethoven, on the other hand, never cared to make +a display of mere dash and brilliancy; technicalities +were always subordinated by him to idea and feeling.</p> + +<p>The gift of improvisation must have been his to +an extent unparalleled either before or since. His +wealth of idea, certainty of form, and poetry of expression, +combined to produce an effect very different +from that achieved by ordinary extempore players,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span> +who in general, as we have seen in the case of +Himmel, mistook the art of preluding for that of +improvising. Only one conversant with that language +of music to which Beethoven often alluded, +could venture, without preparation, to speak to any +purpose in it.</p> + +<p>A circumstance that contributed to his success +was his <i>power of abstraction</i>, which, in common with +all deep thinkers, he possessed in a remarkable degree. +With the first few bars of the given Thema, +the scene before his eyes, the daylight, the bystanders, +all vanished; and Beethoven was as fully +immersed in the solitude of his own thoughts as +though he had been suddenly transported to some +desert island, with penguins and sea-gulls for listeners.</p> + +<p>Ries gives a curious instance of this utter disregard +of all outward things, in the story of the great +master's commencing one day, while giving him a +lesson, to play with the left hand the first fugue from +Graun's "Tod Jesu." Gradually the right hand was +added, and regardless of his awkward position, the +fugue developed in all conceivable manners for the +space of half an hour, when he suddenly awoke to +discover that his pupil was still in his place before +the pianoforte.</p> + +<p>In 1800 a more formidable rival appeared at +Vienna in the person of Steibelt. Having conceived +a great idea of his own powers from the flattery +of his Parisian admirers, Steibelt came to the capital +sure of conquest, and did not even consider it neces<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>sary +to visit the opponent so far beneath him. They +met accidentally at the house of Count Fries, +"where," says Ferdinand Ries, "Beethoven played +for the first time<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> his Trio in B flat major for piano; +clarionet, and 'cello, Op. 11, in which there is not +much room for display. Steibelt heard it with a +kind of condescension, paid Beethoven several compliments, +and believed himself sure of victory. He +played a quintet of his own composition, and then +improvised, and produced a great sensation by his +free use of <i>tremolo</i>, which was at that time something +quite new. To ask Beethoven to play again was +not to be thought of. Eight days after there was +again a concert at Count Fries'. Steibelt played +another quintet with great success; he had besides, +as might be easily perceived, <i>studied</i> a brilliant improvisation, +and chosen for a subject the theme on +which the finale of Beethoven's trio was built. This +disgusted the admirers of Beethoven, and displeased +the latter also. It was his turn to seat himself at the +pianoforte and to improvises. He placed himself at +the instrument with his ordinary air—I might say, +rather ill-humouredly, and as if pushed there. In +passing, he seized the violoncello part of Steibelt's +quintet, placed it upside down on the desk (was this +designedly?), and drummed out with one finger the +theme of the first few bars.</p> + +<p>"Then, impelled by his insulted and excited feelings, +he improvised in such a manner that Steibelt<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span> +quitted the room before Beethoven had ceased. He +would never meet him again, and, when invited anywhere, +always stipulated that Beethoven should not +be present."</p> + +<p>But enough of such anecdotes! Triumphs which +would have been glory to others were nothing to +him. Let us pass on and see the master in the great +struggle which prefaced the real commencement of +life's work, and was continued without intermission +until the victory was won.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span></p> + +<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> Marx, vol. i., p. 66.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> This is evidently an error. The Trio had been published in 1798.—Thayer, +Vol. II., p. 101.</p></div> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" ><br /><br /> +<img src="images/b_page_057.jpg" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" ><br /><br /> +<img src="images/b_page_058a.jpg" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + + +<h3>CHAPTER VI</h3> + +<p class="center">CONFLICT.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>Deafness and its Consequences—His Brothers' Influence—Letters to +Wegeler—"Mount of Olives"—Beethoven's Will—Beethoven as +an Instructor—a Conductor—Sinfonia Eroica—"Leonora" ("Fidelio")—"Adelaïde."</p></div> + +<div class="figleft" style="margin-left: 0em; margin-right: 0em; margin-bottom: 0em; margin-top: 0em;"> +<img src="images/s.jpg" alt="" title="" /></div> + +<p>uffering and genius! apparently so far +apart, in reality so near!</p> + +<p style="margin-left:6em:">The bitter cry of Milton,—</p> + +<p class="center"> +"Dark, dark, dark, amidst the blaze of noon!"<br /> +</p> + +<p>has gone up from many a thousand hearts to the +eternal throne; but who may presume to fathom the +dispensations of a mysterious providence? or to +question that wisdom which gives to every earthborn +soul the necessary discipline for immortality? Let +us rather wonder and adore, and—</p> + +<p style="margin-left:20em;"> +"Know how sublime a thing it is<br /> +To suffer and <i>be strong</i>."<br /> +</p> + +<p>We left our young musician in the full flush of +success, in apparently vigorous health, caressed and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span> +flattered by princes, without a rival as a virtuoso, and +fast leaving all competitors behind him as a composer, +when suddenly a cloud appears, the brightness +is overcast, and darkness comes on apace. +<i>Beethoven became deaf.</i></p> + +<p>For three years he had had premonitory fears, +which were too sadly realized in the year 1801.</p> + +<p>The loss of hearing is deprivation enough in ordinary +cases; but to a young man of excitable artist +temperament, and a musician! it seemed for a while +worse than the loss of life itself. Our Beethoven writes +thus to Wegeler:—</p> + +<p>"If I had not read somewhere that man must not +of his own free will depart this life, I should long +ere this have been no more, and that through my +own act."</p> + +<p>From this despair he was mercifully rescued. +The strong, secret voice within, impelling Beethoven +onwards and upwards to that aim which he "felt, but +could not describe," spoke now in more stirring +accents and with more thrilling emphasis amid the +profound silence and desolation of his nature.</p> + +<p>He "was not disobedient" to the heavenly call; +the triumph of mind was achieved; and from the +dark prison-house the noblest strains the world has +ever heard escaped to wake responsive echoes in the +hearts of all who have felt and suffered.</p> + +<p>But this victory was not gained without leaving +behind it evident tokens of the struggle; distrust, +suspicion, irritability, those constant attendants on +deafness, haunted Beethoven day and night, poison<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>ing +his happiness, and casting their shadow over his +childlike, benevolent disposition. Stephan Breuning +writes thus of the alteration in his friend in a letter +dated the 13th of November, 1806:—"You cannot +realize the indescribable impression made upon Beethoven +by the loss of his hearing. Imagine, with his +excitable temperament, the feeling of unhappiness, +added to reserve, distrust of his best friends, and +indecision in many things. In general, intercourse +with him is a positive exertion, in which it is impossible +to feel entirely at one's ease; the occasions on +which his old true nature shows itself are few +indeed."</p> + +<p>Schindler, also his friend and biographer, describes +him as being "like a child, devoid of all experience, +suddenly cast upon this earth from some ideal world; +like a ball, tossed from one hand to another; consequently, +at the mercy of other people. And," he +adds, "<i>so Beethoven remained throughout his whole +life</i>."</p> + +<p>These evils were increased by the presence of his +brothers, Carl and Johann (the "evil principles" of his +life, as Schindler calls them), who now began to +exercise an almost unlimited influence over him. +These men seem to have been totally incapable of +appreciating the true character or work of Ludwig; +they only saw that he was making money rapidly +(and, as they thought, easily), and determined to +take advantage of it. To this end they resolved to +obtain entire possession of him, and began by endeavouring +to alienate as far as possible Beethoven's<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span> +friends, misrepresenting to him all that occurred, +and fanning every little spark of anger into a +flame.</p> + +<p>Their efforts partially succeeded; our unhappy +composer, absorbed in his own creations, overwhelmed +by his misfortune, and intensely irritable, +was but too ready to believe all the world in league +against him, and would have shut the door against +his best friends. Prince Lichnowski alone had still +some weight with him, and when once persuaded that +he had acted unjustly, nothing could exceed Beethoven's +contrition and desire to make amends to +those he had wounded.</p> + +<p>But he would never lay any blame upon his brothers, +and even when their duplicity and falseness had been +clearly pointed out to him, he would still continue +to defend them strenuously, refusing to look upon +their conduct in any but the most favourable light, +and adding, "After all, they are my brothers."</p> + +<p>It may easily be believed how, with dispositions +such as those of Carl and Johann, this mistaken +lenity and brotherly feeling confirmed them in their +course. It was they who generally made all arrangements +with the music publishers, and through their +instrumentality many minor pieces were given to +the world which the composer had produced in +Bonn, and kept back from publication as unworthy +of his name.</p> + +<p>Such a consideration, however, had no weight with +the two; money they wanted, and were resolved to +get at all hazards. Once only did Beethoven come<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span> +into collision with them regarding this, when he discovered +that Carl had, without his knowledge, sold +a copyright which had been promised to another +person.</p> + +<p>Carl held a situation in the National Bank of +Austria, and Johann had been established by Beethoven +as an apothecary. In a very short time, however, +the latter became so wealthy (how?) as to be +able to exchange the pestle and mortar for the state +of a country gentleman. Of this he was so immoderately +proud, that one New Year's day he sent in +to his brother a card, on which was written,—</p> + +<p class="center">"Johann van Beethoven, Land Proprietor."</p> + +<p>The composer, who was at table when it was brought +to him, laughed heartily, and writing on the other +side,—</p> + +<p class="center">"Ludwig van Beethoven, Brain Proprietor,"</p> + +<p>sent it back to him.</p> + +<p>The following letters to Wegeler display, more +fully than we can describe, Beethoven's condition +during the first few years of his calamity:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"> +<p><span style="margin-left:30em;">"<i>Vienna, 29th June</i>, (1801.)</span> +</p> + +<p>"<span class="smcap">My dear good Wegeler</span>,—How much I thank +you for your remembrance of me! I have deserved +it, and sought to deserve it, so little; and yet you +are so good, and will not allow yourself to be discouraged +even by my unpardonable neglect—you +are always the same true, good, worthy friend. That +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>I could ever forget you or yours, who were once so +dear and precious to me, do not believe; there are +moments in which I long for you, and wish that it +were in my power to spend some time with you. +My fatherland, the lovely spot in which I first saw +the light, is as distinct and beautiful before my eyes +now as when I first left you. In short, I shall consider +it one of the happiest events of my life when I +am able to see you, and to greet our Father Rhine +again. When this will be I cannot positively say. +So much I will tell you—you shall not see me again +until I have become really great—not as an artist +only, but a better and more perfect man: and if the +prosperity of my country be once more re-established, +my art shall be devoted solely to the relief of the poor. +Oh blissful moment! how happy do I consider myself +in being able to procure thee—to create thee!</p> + +<p>"You want to know something about my position? +Well, after all it is not so bad. Lichnowski is still, +and always has been, my warmest friend, however incredible +it may appear to you. (Of course there were +little misunderstandings between us; but did they +not serve rather to cement our friendship?) Since +last year he has settled on me a pension of six +hundred guldens, which I am to draw until I find an +appointment suited to me. I make a great deal by +my compositions; indeed, I may say that there are +more demands upon me than I can execute. For +every one of my works I have at least six or seven +publishers, and could have more if I wished. They +do not drive bargains with me now: I demand, and +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>they pay. You see this is a very good thing. If, for +instance, I see a friend in difficulty, and am not in +funds to help him immediately, I have only to sit +down and write, and in a short time he is relieved. +I am also more economical than I used to be. If I +remain here permanently, I shall certainly contrive +to reserve one day in every year for a grand concert, +of which I have already given several. That malicious +demon, bad health, has cast a stumblingblock +in my path—for the last three years my hearing has +gradually become weaker. The original cause of this +defect is the state of my digestive organs, which, as +you know, was formerly bad enough, but has now +become much worse, for I have been constantly +troubled with diarrhœa, which has induced extreme +weakness. Frank tried to restore the tone to my +constitution by strengthening medicines, and to my +hearing by oil of almonds, but <i>prosit!</i> with no good +effect; my hearing grew worse, and my digestion remained +in the same state. This lasted till the autumn +of last year, and I was often in despair. Then one +medical <i>asinus</i> recommended cold bathing for my +complaint; another, a little more sensible, the ordinary +tepid Danube bath. This worked wonders; +my digestion became better, but my deafness continued +as bad as ever, or grew worse. Last winter +I was truly miserable, suffering so dreadfully from +colic that I fell completely back again into my +former state, in which I continued till about four +weeks ago, when I went to consult Vering;<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> partly +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>because I think my complaint requires surgical treatment, +and partly also because I have always had +confidence in him. He succeeded in almost entirely +arresting the violent diarrhœa. He ordered me the +tepid Danube bath, into which I pour every time a +phial of some strengthening mixture; but he gave me +no medicine at all, except four days ago some digestive +pills and a lotion for the ears. I must say I find +myself much stronger and better for this treatment, +but the buzzing and ringing in my ears continues day +and night.</p> + +<p>"I may say that I pass my life wretchedly; for +nearly two years I have avoided all society, because +I cannot possibly say to people, '<i>I am deaf!</i>' If I +were in any other profession it would not so much +signify, but for a musician it is a really frightful condition. +Besides, what would my enemies say to it?—and +they are not few!</p> + +<p>"To give you an idea of this extraordinary deafness, +I must tell you that in the theatre I am obliged +to lean forward quite close to the orchestra in order +to understand the actors. The high tones of the +instruments and voices I do not hear if I am a little +way off. In conversation it is surprising that there +are some people who do not observe it—they attribute +it to the absent fits which I often have. Many +a time I can with difficulty distinguish the tones, but +not the words, of any person who speaks in a low +voice; and yet, directly any one begins to shout, it is +unendurable to me. What is to be the result of all +this, the good God alone knows. Vering says that +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>my condition will certainly improve, though I may +not be perfectly restored. I have often already—cursed +my existence. Plutarch has led me to resignation. +I am resolved, if possible, to defy my fate, +although there should be moments in my life +when I shall be the most unhappy of all God's +creatures.</p> + +<p>"I beg of you not to mention my state to any one, +not even to Lorchen;<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> I only confide it as a secret to +you. I should like much if you would correspond +some day with Vering about it. Should my affliction +continue, I shall come next spring to you. You shall +hire a house for me in some lovely spot in the +country, and there I shall become a peasant for +six months. Perhaps that might bring about a +change. Resignation! what a miserable refuge! and +yet the only one left to me!</p> + +<p>"You must forgive me for adding the burden of +these friendly cares to your troubles, already gloomy +enough. Steffen Breuning<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> is now here, and we are +almost every day together; it does me so much +good to call up the old feelings. He has become +really a capital fellow, who knows something, and +has his heart pretty much in the right place, like +us all.</p> + +<p>"I have very pleasant rooms now close to the +Ramparts,<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> which is doubly advantageous for my +health. I think I shall be able to manage so that +Breuning may come to me.</p></div> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span></p> + +<div class="blockquot"> +<p>"Your Antiochus<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> you shall have, together with +plenty of music from me,—that is, if you do not fear +its costing you too much. Honestly, your love of +art rejoices me greatly. Only let me know how to set +about it, and I shall send you all my works, which +now amount to a pretty number, and are daily added to.</p> + +<p>"Instead of the portrait of my grandfather (which +I beg you to send me as soon as possible with the +mail), I send you that of his grandson, your ever +loving and affectionate Beethoven. It has been +brought out here by Artaria, who, as well as other +publishers, has often begged me for it. I shall write +next to Stoffeln<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a>, and read him a lecture about +his peevish temper. I shall sound our old friendship +well in his ears, and get him to promise sacredly not +to annoy you again in your present sad position.</p> + +<p>"Never have I forgotten one of you, my dear, good +friends, although I may not have written often to +you; but writing, as you know, was never my <i>forté</i>; +even my best friends have not heard from me for +years. I live only in my music; and, no sooner is +one thing completed, than another is begun. In fact, +as at present, I am often engaged on three or four +compositions at one time.</p> + +<p>"Write me now frequently; I shall make a point +of finding time to write you occasionally. Give my +kind regards to all, especially to the good Frau +Hofräthin<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a>, and tell her that even now I sometimes +have a 'raptus.'</p></div> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span></p> +<div class="blockquot"><p>"With regard to K——, I am not at all surprised +at the change. Fortune rolls on like a ball; and +naturally, therefore, does not always stop at what is +noblest and best. One word for Ries,<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> to whom remember +me cordially. With regard to his son,<a name="FNanchor_24_24" id="FNanchor_24_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a> I +shall write you more particularly, but I believe that +Paris offers a better field for his exertions than +Vienna, which is so overstocked that even people of +the greatest merit find it a hard matter to maintain +themselves. By autumn or winter I shall see what I +can do for him, for then everybody will have returned +to town.</p> + +<p>"Farewell, my good, faithful Wegeler. Rest assured +of the love and friendship of your</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left:30em;" class="smcap">"Beethoven</span>." +</p></div> +<hr style="width: 15%;" /> + +<div class="blockquot"><p><span style="margin-left:30em;" ><i>Vienna, November, 16th, 1801.</i></span> +</p> + +<p>"<span class="smcap">My dear Wegeler</span>,—For this fresh proof of +your solicitude about me, I must thank you the +more, that I deserve it so little. You want to know +how I am progressing, and what remedies I use; +however unwilling I am in general to refer to this +subject, I do so with the least reluctance to you.</p> + +<p>"For several months past, Vering has ordered me +to apply blisters constantly to both arms, made of +a certain kind of bark, which you doubtless know. +This is a most disagreeable remedy, inasmuch as +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>(without taking the pain into consideration) I am +deprived of the free use of my arms for a few days, +until the blisters have drawn sufficiently. It is true, +and I cannot deny it, that the buzzing and ringing +are somewhat less than formerly, especially in the +left ear, that in which my malady first commenced—but +my hearing is certainly not a whit better. +I dare not say positively that it has not rather grown +worse.</p> + +<p>"My digestion is better, especially after using the +tepid baths, when I feel tolerably well for eight or +ten days. Tonics I very seldom take, but follow +your advice now with regard to the herb-plasters. +Plunge baths Vering will not hear of. On the whole, +I am not at all pleased with him; he has far too +little solicitude or indulgence for a malady such as +mine; if I did not go to him, and this I cannot do +without great difficulty, I should never see him. +What do you think of Schmidt?<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> I am unwilling +to make a change, but it seems to me that Vering +is too much of a practitioner to gain fresh ideas by +reading. With regard to this, Schmidt appears +a very different sort of man, and might also, perhaps, +not be quite so negligent of my case.</p> + +<p>"I hear wonders of galvanism—what say you to +it? A medical man told me that he had known +a deaf and dumb child whose hearing was fully +restored by it (in Berlin), and also a man who, after +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>having been deaf for seven years, recovered his hearing. +They tell me that your friend Schmidt is +making experiments on the subject.</p> + +<p>"I lead a somewhat more agreeable life now that +I mingle more with other people. You can hardly +realize what a miserable, desolate life mine has been +for the last two years. Like a ghost did my deafness +haunt me everywhere, till I fled society, and +must have appeared a misanthrope—yet this is so +little my character.</p> + +<p>"This change has been brought about by a lovely +and fascinating girl,<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> who loves me, and whom I +love. After the lapse of two years I have again +enjoyed some blissful moments, and now for the +first time I feel that marriage can bestow happiness; +but, alas! she is not in the same rank of life as +myself; and at present, certainly I could not marry: +I must first bestir myself actively. Were it not for +my deafness, I would long ago have travelled half +round the world, and I must do it yet. For me +there is no greater pleasure than to follow and promote +my art. Do not believe that I could be happy +with you. What would there be, indeed, to make +me happier? Even your solicitude would pain me; +every moment I should read sympathy on your faces, +and should find myself only the more wretched.</p> + +<p>"Those lovely scenes of my Fatherland, what part +had I in them? Nothing but the hope of a better +future, which would have been mine, were it not for +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>this affliction! Oh! once free from this, I would span +the world! My youth, I feel it, is only beginning; +have I not always been a sickly creature? For some +time past my bodily strength has been increasing +more than ever, and my mental power as well. Every +day I approach nearer the goal which I feel, but +cannot describe. Only in this can your Beethoven +live. No rest for me! I know of none other than +Sleep, and sorry enough I am to be obliged to give +up more time to it than formerly. Let me be only +half delivered from this malady, and then—a more +perfect, mature man—I shall come to you, and renew +the old feelings of friendship.</p> + +<p>"You shall see me as happy as I am destined to be +here below,—not unhappy. No, that I could not +bear. I will grasp Fate by the throat, it shall not +utterly crush me. Oh! it is so glorious to live one's +life a thousand times! For a quiet life, I feel it, I am +no longer made.</p> + +<p>"Pray do write me as soon as possible. Persuade +Steffen to decide upon seeking an appointment somewhere +from the Teutonic Order.<a name="FNanchor_27_27" id="FNanchor_27_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a> His position here +is too fatiguing for his health, and besides, he leads +such an isolated life, that I do not see how he is ever +to get on. You know how things are here. I will +not positively say that society would lessen his de<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>pression, +but we cannot persuade him to join in it at +all. A short time ago I had some music in my house, +but our friend Steffen stayed away. Advise him to +be more calm and composed. I have already tried +all my powers on him,—without this he can never +be either happy or in good health. Tell me in your +next letter if there is any objection to my sending you +my music, even though there should be a quantity of +it. What you don't require, you can sell, and thus +get back what you paid for carriage,—and my portrait +into the bargain.</p> + +<p>"Say all that is kind and obliging to Lorchen, as +well as to her mamma and Christoph. Have you still +a little love for me? Be convinced of the love as well +as of the friendship of</p> + +<p><span style="margin-left:30em;">"Your<br /></span> +<span style="margin-left:32em;" class="smcap">Beethoven</span>." +</p></div> + +<p>The year 1800 found Beethoven already busy with +his "Mount of Olives," which, however, was not produced +till 1803. This, the master's first and last +attempt at oratorio writing, "is a striking instance of +the insufficiency of even the highest powers to accomplish +that to which the special call has not been given. +It was impossible for Beethoven to feel himself so +inspired by his task as the composer of a time when +the mind of the people was almost exclusively occupied +by religious convictions; the man of the revolutionary +period could not see or think out a Christ like +that of Bach and Handel before him. Even the pure +spring, out of which we Protestants of the eighteenth<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span> +and nineteenth centuries draw our ideas of Christ—the +Bible—flowed not for him; his Christ must first +be poetically made for him. And how? The poet +had no other aim but that of making verses for a +composer; the latter no other motive than the ordinary +creative impulse prompting him to try his powers +in a different and important sphere. The result on +both sides could not, therefore, be other than <i>Phrases</i>, +although the better of the two proceeded from the +composer, and that composer was Beethoven. To +conceal or palliate this would be derogatory to the +reverence which we all owe to Beethoven,—he stands +too high to be in need of extenuation."</p> + +<p>So far Marx; but in addition to the miserable +libretto (which imparted unreality, artificiality, to the +whole work, and especially gave to the part of the +Saviour a theatrical air which Beethoven afterwards +deplored) many peculiarities of the oratorio—with all +deference to the able critic just quoted—may be +traced to the period in which it was composed. The +very choice of subject reveals the convulsion that +was taking place in Beethoven's <i>volcanic</i> nature. +It is a question whether Beethoven would ever +have asserted his sovereignty in this branch of +composition; it may be, as Marx hints, that the +peculiar tone of thought and feeling necessary to +the successful treatment of sacred subjects was +wanting in him; but there can be no doubt that +had the master's attention been devoted to the subject +in happier days, when his tempest-tossed natures +had attained to some degree of peace and serenity,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span> +the result would have been very different. Let him +who would see Beethoven as a <i>devotional</i> writer, turn +to his Gellert songs, which breathe the very depths +of true religious feeling.</p> + +<p>The greater part of the oratorio, and also of +"Fidelio," was composed at Hetzendorf, a pretty little +village near the imperial summer palace of Schönbrunn. +Here Beethoven passed several summers in +the greatest retirement—wandering all day long, +from early dawn to nightfall, amid the leafy glades +of the park. His favourite seat was between two +immense boughs of an old oak, which branched out +from the parent stem about two feet from the ground. +This memorable tree, endeared to Beethoven as the +birthplace of many a thought, was afterwards visited +by him, in Schindler's company, in 1823.</p> + +<p>In 1802 a gleam of hope dawned upon the sufferer; +his deafness was for a time cured by the +skilful treatment of Dr. Schmidt (to whom, out of +gratitude, he dedicated his Septet arranged as a +Trio), by whose advice he went for the summer to +the village of Heiligenstadt, in the hope that the +calm, sweet influence of nature, to which he was +at all times most sensitive, might act beneficially +upon his troubled mind.</p> + +<p>This spot—this <i>consecrated town</i>—must always be +an object of veneration to those who cherish the +name of Beethoven, for here it was that he wrote +his remarkable will, or promemoria, a document +which excites our warmest sympathy, revealing, as +it does, the depths of that great heart.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span></p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>"<span class="smcap">To my Brothers, Carl and —— Beethoven.</span><a name="FNanchor_28_28" id="FNanchor_28_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a>—O +ye who consider or represent me as +unfriendly, morose, and misanthropical, how unjust +are you to me! you know not the secret cause of +what appears thus to you.</p> + +<p>"My heart and mind have been from childhood +given up to the tender feeling of benevolence, and +I have ever been disposed to accomplish something +great. But only consider that for six years I have +been afflicted by a wretched calamity, which was +aggravated by unskilful physicians—deceived from +year to year by the hope of amendment—now forced, +at length, to the contemplation of a <i>lingering disease</i> +(the cure of which will, perhaps, last for years, if +indeed it be not an impossibility).</p> + +<p>"Born with a passionate, lively temperament, +keenly susceptible to the pleasures of society, I was +obliged at an early age to isolate myself, and to pass +my life in loneliness.</p> + +<p>"When I at times endeavoured to surmount all +this, oh, how rudely was I thrust back again by the +experience—the doubly painful experience—of my +defective hearing! and yet it was impossible for me +to say to people, Speak louder, shout; for I am deaf! +Alas! how could I proclaim the weakness of a sense +which ought to have been with me in a higher degree<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span> +than with others—a sense which I once possessed in +the greatest perfection—and to an extent which few +of my profession enjoy, or ever have enjoyed! Oh, +this I cannot do! Forgive me, therefore, when you +see me turn away where I would gladly mingle with +you. My misfortune is doubly painful to me, inasmuch +as it causes me to be misunderstood. For +me there can be no relaxation in human society, +no refined conversations, no mutual outpourings of +thought. Like an exile must I live. Whenever I +come near strangers, I am seized with a feverish +anxiety from my dread of being exposed to the +risk of betraying my condition.</p> + +<p>"Thus it has been with me during these last six +months which I have spent in the country. The +orders of my sensible physician, to spare my hearing +as much as possible, were quite in accordance with +my present disposition; although often, overcome by +my longing for society, I have been tempted into it. +But what humiliation, when any one by my side heard +from afar a flute, and I heard <i>nothing</i>, or when any one +heard <i>the shepherd singing</i>, and I again heard <i>nothing</i>!</p> + +<p>"Such occurrences brought me nigh to despair; but +little was wanting, and I should myself have put an end +to my existence. <i>Art</i>—art alone—held me back! +Ah! it seemed impossible for me to quit the world +before I had done all that I felt myself destined to +accomplish. And so I prolonged this miserable life; a +life so truly wretched that a sudden change is sufficient +to throw me from the happiest condition into the +worst.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span></p> + +<p>"<i>Patience!</i> it would seem that I must now choose +her for my guide! I have done so. I trust that my +resolve to persevere will remain firm, until it shall +please the inexorable Fates to cut the thread of life. +Perhaps I may get better; perhaps not. I am prepared. +Compelled to be a philosopher in my twenty-eighth +year!<a name="FNanchor_29_29" id="FNanchor_29_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a> This is not easy—for the artist harder +than for any one else. O God! Thou lookest down +upon my heart, Thou seest that love to man and +beneficent feelings have their abode in it!</p> + +<p>"O ye who may one day read this, reflect that +you did me injustice, and let the unhappy be consoled +by finding one like himself, who, in defiance of +all natural obstacles, has done all that lay in his power +to be received into the ranks of worthy artists and +men.</p> + +<p>"My brothers, Carl and——, as soon as I am +dead, if Professor Schmidt be still alive, beg him in +my name to describe my disease, and then add these +pages to the history of my malady, that at least, so +far as possible, the world may be reconciled to me +after my death.</p> + +<p>"I also hereby declare you both heirs of my little +fortune (if so it may be called). Divide it honestly, +bear with and help one another. What you did +against me I have, as you know, long since forgiven. +I thank you in particular, brother Carl, for the attachment +which you have shown me of late. My wish is, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>that your life may be happier, and more free from +care, than mine has been. Recommend <i>Virtue</i> to +your children; it is she alone, and not money, that +can confer happiness. I speak from experience; for +it was Virtue who raised me when in distress. I have +to thank her, in addition to my art, that I did not put +an end to my life through suicide. Farewell, and +love one another! I thank all my friends, especially +Prince Lichnowski and Professor Schmidt. I should +like the instruments of Prince L. to be preserved by +one of you; but let no dispute arise between you on +this account. As soon as you perceive that it will +be more to your advantage, you have only to sell +them. How shall I rejoice, if even in the grave I can +serve you!</p> + +<p>"Thus has it happened:—with joy I hasten to +meet Death. Should he come before I have had +opportunity to develop all my artistic powers, he will +have come too soon, notwithstanding my hard fate, +and I shall wish that he had tarried a little longer; +but even then I shall be content, for he will set me +free from a state of endless suffering. Come when +thou wilt—I go courageously to meet thee!</p> + +<p>"Farewell, and do not quite forget me even in +death. I have deserved this of you, since in my life +I often thought of you, and wished to make you +happy.</p> + +<p>"So be it!<br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left:25em;" class="smcap">"Ludwig van Beethoven.</span>"<br /> +<i>Heiligenstadt, 6th October, 1802.</i>" +</p> + +<hr style="width: 15%;" /> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span></p> + +<p><span style="margin-left:25em;">"<i>Heiligenstadt, 10th October, 1802.</i></span> +</p> + +<p>"Thus I bid farewell to thee, mournfully enough. +Even the dearest hope that I brought hither with me, +the hope of being to a certain degree restored, has +utterly forsaken me. As the leaves of autumn fall +and wither, so has my hope faded. Almost as I came +do I depart; even the lofty courage which inspired +me during the lovely days of summer has vanished. +Oh, Providence! vouchsafe to me one more day of +pure happiness! The responsive echo of pure joy +has been so long a stranger to my heart. When, +when, O God! shall I again feel it in the temple of +nature and man? Never? Ah! that would be too +hard!"</p> + +<p class="center">(On the outside.)</p> + +<p>"For my brothers Carl and——, to be read and +fulfilled after my death."</p></div> + +<p>Several writers have maintained that the consequences +of Beethoven's deafness are plainly discernible +in his compositions; that he lost all idea of +harmonic relations, that his later works are mere +incongruous, erratic fancies, devoid of form and melody, +and, in short, compared to his former productions, +what the second part of "Faust" is to the first.</p> + +<p>Happily, such ideas—promulgated by theorists of +the old school like Fétis, and dilettanti of the Mozart-Italian +school like Oulibicheff—have now exploded, +and the service rendered to Art by Beethoven's latest +works—especially his pianoforte sonatas—is fully re<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>cognised. +It is these which have brought the pianoforte +to its present eminence as the most intellectual +and ideal of all instruments, and which, by their depth +of thought and loftiness of aim, have raised an insuperable +barrier between the dilettante who trifles +with music for amusement, and the artist who devotes +his life to its cultivation as a God-appointed means of +developing the divine in man.</p> + +<p>At the same time we come upon passages here +and there which Beethoven would, perhaps, have +written otherwise, had his ear, as well as his mind, +been sensitive to their effect.</p> + +<p>It is not posterity that has been the loser by Beethoven's +deafness; we, at least, ought to appreciate +the "precious jewel" which his adversity carried +within it, and has handed down to us. His contemporaries, +however, had cause to lament, for in a few +years it put a stop to all improvising and playing in +public. We read, indeed, of a plan for an artistic +tour with his pupil Ries, when the latter was to make +all arrangements for concert-giving, and to play the +pianoforte Concertos and other works, while Beethoven +conducted and improvised—but the project +never came to maturity. It was, in fact, impossible. +Beethoven entirely lost the sensitiveness of touch +which had once distinguished his playing from that +of all contemporaries; and, in his efforts to extract +some nourishment for his hungering ear, used to +hammer the pianoforte so unmercifully as generally +to break several strings. Nor could it be obviated +by a special instrument constructed for himself, nor<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span> +by a sound-conductor invented for him by the ingenious +Graff.</p> + +<p>A curious feature of his deafness was the gradual +manner in which the auricular nerve decayed; he +first lost the power of catching the higher notes of +singers or instruments, as we have seen, while deep, +low sounds were long audible to him; this may +account for the prevalence of those deep-lying tones +in almost all his later works, especially the Second +Mass and the Ninth Symphony.</p> + +<p>As a natural consequence of his affliction, he soon +became unable to conduct his own orchestral works. +This, however, was no great loss, for he had never +possessed either the self-possession or the experience +necessary to wield the <i>bâton</i> satisfactorily. Knowing +thoroughly as he did what every instrument had to +say, he listened excitedly for each in detail—without +calmly attending to the effect of the whole; at each +<i>crescendo</i> he would rise as if about to fly, gesticulating +so rapidly and energetically that the members of the +orchestra (who had enough to do to follow such new +and peculiar music) were often more bewildered than +guided by his directions. At the same time be it +distinctly understood that, however low the performance +might fall beneath his "ideal," however vexatious +the mistakes of individual performers might be, he +never lost his temper so far as to act in the manner +related by Ries in his Notices, of which the following +is a specimen:—</p> + +<p>"Beethoven was present at the first performance of +his Fantasia for pianoforte, orchestra, and chorus.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span> +The clarinettist, in a passage where the beautiful +subject of the finale has already entered, made by +mistake a repetition of eight bars. As very few +instruments are heard at this point, the error in the +execution was torturing to the ear. Beethoven rose +furiously, turned round, and insulted the musicians in +the grossest manner, and so loudly that it was heard +by the whole audience. Then, resuming his seat, he +exclaimed, "From the beginning!" The movement +was recommenced, and this time all went well, and +the success was brilliant. But when the concert was +over, the artists recollected only too well the honourable +titles by which Beethoven had publicly addressed +them; and, as if the matter had but that moment +occurred, became excessively angry, and vowed never +to play again when Beethoven was in the orchestra, +&c., &c."</p> + +<p>That the clarinettist did make a mistake is true, +but that Beethoven behaved in the outrageous way +described was most positively denied by all who were +present on the occasion, including the conductor, +Franz Clement. Where Ries got the story from is +difficult to imagine, since he was himself in St. Petersburg +at the time. On the contrary, the members of +the orchestra were all on excellent terms with Beethoven, +who prized their approval far more than that +of the general public; and was wont, when particularly +pleased with a performance, to turn round, his face +beaming with delight, and exclaim, "Bravi, tutti!" +But woe betide those who dared to question the +effect of the new and somewhat startling combina<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>tions +which he introduced! Ries found this out to +his cost. At the unexpected entrance of the horn in +the Allegro of the Eroica, he—as usual, beside his +master in the orchestra—exclaimed, "How abominably +wrong!" for which outburst he was nearly rewarded +by a box on the ear.</p> + +<p>Pianoforte playing, improvisation, and orchestral +conducting were given up one after the other—not +suddenly, for Beethoven was resolved to defy his +fate as long as possible,—but henceforth it is with +Beethoven the composer alone that we have to do.</p> + +<p>The autumn of 1802 saw him so far restored as +to be able to commence his great work on Napoleon, +which, however, on account of many interruptions, +was not finished until the year 1804.</p> + +<p>In 1802 he writes thus to his publisher, Hofmeister, +who had requested him to compose a sonata of a revolutionary +tendency:—"Are you riding to the devil +in a body, gentlemen, that you propose to me to write +<i>such a sonata</i>? At the time of the revolutionary fever +it might have done, but now, when everything is once +more in the beaten track, when Bonaparte has signed +the Concordat with the Pope—now such a sonata! +If it had been a <i>missa pro Sancta Maria a tre voci</i>, or a +<i>Vesper</i>, I would immediately have taken pen in hand +and written in ponderous notes a <i>Credo in unum</i>,—but, +good heavens! such a sonata in these fresh, dawning +Christian times! Ho! ho! I'll have nothing +to do with it!" and yet at this very time he must +have been busy with a work destined to the honour +of the great Disturber of the Peace of Europe.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span> +The idea for this emanated originally from General +Bernadotte, the French Ambassador at Vienna—a +great admirer of the composer,—and was in reality +warmly entered into by Beethoven, who, with his +red-hot Republicanism and love for Plato, was an +enthusiastic supporter of the First Consul, and +imagined nothing less than that it was Napoleon's +intention to remodel France according to the Platonic +method, and inaugurate a golden age of universal +happiness. With the news of the empire came +the destruction of this elysian prospect,—Beethoven +in a fury tore to pieces the title-page of his symphony +on which was written simply,—</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left:20em;" class="smcap">"Bonaparte.</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left:25em;" class="smcap">"Luigi v. Beethoven</span>;"<br /> +</p> + +<p>and stamping it under foot, showered a volley of +imprecations on the head of the tyrant who had +played so false a game.</p> + +<p>No persuasion could induce him at first to publish +the work, but after the lapse of some years this +masterpiece of ideal writing was given to the world +under the title of "Sinfonia Eroica per festegiare il +sovvenire d'un grand' uomo." Great man as Napoleon +had been in Beethoven's estimation, he +never could think of him otherwise than with detestation, +till the sudden collapse of the Napoleonic +idea in 1815, and the death of its promoter in 1821, +changed his wrath into a kind of grim commiseration, +which he showed by remarking that he had "seventeen +years before composed the music suited to this<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span> +catastrophe!" meaning the Funeral March in the +Eroica.</p> + +<p>This, the first great manifesto of the Sovereign of +the World of Sound, was a wonderful advance on the +first two symphonies, produced somewhere about the +years 1800-1802. In these he took up the art where +Haydn and Mozart had left it; but, "though he could +dally and tarry awhile with them, he would not +remain with them;" his greater earnestness impelled +him on to realms unknown to them, to conquest compared +with which theirs faded into comparative insignificance.</p> + +<p>In 1805 Ferdinand Ries left Vienna, after having +enjoyed Beethoven's instruction for five years. He +was, in fact, the only one whom Beethoven recognised +as his pupil (with the exception of the Archduke +Rudolph), and to him he entrusted the playing +of his concertos, &c., for the first time, when no +longer able to do so himself. The impressions which +Ries has left in his Notices, of Beethoven as an instructor, +are like his other statements, somewhat +contradictory. In one place he declares that during +the lessons the master was engaged in composition +or some similar work at one end of the room, while +he was playing at the other, and that he seldom sat +down by him for half an hour at a time. Again, +he says that Beethoven took extraordinary pains +with him—sometimes extending the lesson over two +hours, and making him repeat ten times—nay, oftener—any +passage with which he was not quite satisfied. +Probably the truth lies between these two ex<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>tremes. +Beethoven, who had no settled order in +his life, could not be expected to be systematic in +tuition; hence the impression of desultoriness left +upon the mind of the pupil. A characteristic anecdote +of this period is worth quoting.</p> + +<p>"Beethoven," says Ries, "had given me the manuscript +of his third concerto, that I might appear in +public with it for the first time as his pupil; Beethoven +conducted and turned over the pages for me. +I had begged him to compose a cadenza for me, but +he directed me to write one myself. He was satisfied +with my composition, and altered little; but one +brilliant and very difficult passage, which seemed to +him too hazardous, I was to change. The easier one +did not please me, and I could not make up my +mind to play it in public. The critical moment +arrived—Beethoven had seated himself quietly—but +when I boldly attacked the difficult cadence, he gave +his chair a violent push. The cadenza, however, +succeeded, and Beethoven was so delighted that he +exclaimed, 'Bravo!' which electrified the audience."</p> + +<p>In 1805 Beethoven produced his solitary opera, +"Leonora" (afterwards known as "Fidelio"), amid +a series of annoyances and vexations such as probably +no operatic writer, either before or since, has +ever had to contend against. What between troubles +arising out of the libretto, the overture, the singers, +the critics, and the theatrical cabals, our poor Beethoven +was well-nigh driven distracted.</p> + +<p>The story on which the opera is founded (originally +taken from the French, and so well known as to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span> +require no repetition here) is almost too slight for +dramatic purposes, inasmuch as there is but one +really powerful situation—that of the grave scene—in +the entire piece, and the whole interest, therefore, +is concentrated on the one figure, Leonora. What +Beethoven has made out of these slender materials; +how he has depicted, in all its intensity and tenderness, +that love which he was doomed never to experience, +needs no description from us.</p> + +<p>What was Beethoven's object in choosing this +theme for his labours? Was it a foreshadowing of +bliss that might be his? or was it the delineation of a +character which, in its earnestness and purity, should +be the reverse of that "Don Juan" of Mozart, of +which he once said, "The divine art ought never to +be lowered to the folly of such a scandalous +subject"?</p> + +<p>The little byplay and domestic "asides" cost our +soaring Beethoven infinitely more trouble than the +most impassioned scenas, and he was obliged to +write the little air of Marcelline, "O, wär' ich schon +mit Dir vereint," no less than thrice before he could +attain the requisite lightness.</p> + +<p>The composition of the four "Leonora" overtures +is without a parallel in musical annals. When Beethoven +had finished No. 1, in C major, he consented +to its being first tried over by a small orchestra +at Prince Lichnowski's, in the presence of a select +number of critics and connoisseurs, by whom it was +condemned as being light and almost flimsy in structure, +and as affording no clue to the contents of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span> +opera. It was therefore withdrawn, and not published +till after the composer's death.</p> + +<p>But may not the light-heartedness which distinguishes +this overture have been intentional on the +part of Beethoven? may he not have wished to represent +his heroine before the shadow of grief had +fallen upon her, in the enjoyment of the highest +wedded bliss?</p> + +<p>Marx takes this view of "Leonora" No. 1, adducing +in support of it the following extract from +one of the manuscript books in which Beethoven was +accustomed to hold intercourse with his friends:—</p> + +<p>"Aristotle, when he speaks of tragedy, says that +the hero ought first to be represented as living in the +greatest happiness and splendour. Thus we see him +in 'Egmont.' When he is in the enjoyment of felicity, +Fate comes and throws a noose over his head from +which he is not able to extricate himself. Courage +and Defiance appear upon the scene, and boldly look +Destiny—aye, and death—in the face. Clärchen's +fate interests us, like that of Gretchen in 'Faust,' +because she was once so happy. A tragedy which +begins as well as continues gloomily, is tedious."</p> + +<p>"Leonora" No. 2 was condemned on account of the +predominance of the wind instruments, and No. 3 +ultimately, because the stringed instruments had so +much to do that precision was out of the question.</p> + +<p>When, at length, the composer was satisfied with +his creation; when the singers (pacified by the +friendly intervention of Seyfried) had agreed to give +the music as it was written; when all difficulties<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span> +were apparently overcome, the unlucky composer's +annoyances reached a climax in the reception accorded +to his work by the public.</p> + +<p>With great want of judgment (purposely to annoy +him, as Beethoven thought) the opera was produced a +few days after the French troops had entered Vienna; +when all his friends and patrons, including Lichnowski, +had sought refuge at their country seats till the +storm had blown over; and the theatre was filled with +French officers and soldiers, an audience utterly incapable +of appreciating the master. As might have +been anticipated, the work was coldly received, and, +after three representations, withdrawn. In 1806 it +met with the same fate, and not till 1814 did this, the +grandest work of the German school—a work which +has fought its way to every stage in Europe, and has +been brought home to every heart by a Malibran, a +Schröder-Devrient, or a Tietjens,—obtain a favourable +hearing.</p> + +<p>During the time the opera was in progress, Beethoven +(like Mozart in producing his "Seraglio") +suffered keenly from the jealousy of some of his +opponents, and his brothers took care that every barb +should find its way home to his sensitive mind. Even +his friend Stephan Breuning, in his great desire to +help the composer, aggravated the evil by the very +warmth of his partisanship,—and thus, by constant +dwelling upon them, many little slights assumed a +disproportionate magnitude, and annoyed our poor +Beethoven intensely.</p> + +<p>But enough of darkness and despondency; life now<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span> +begins, by one of those sudden and apparently inexplicable +changes, to wear a rosier hue for the composer. +Reserving our inquiry into the cause of this, +we close this chapter with the beautiful letter to the +poet Matthison, whose "Adelaïde" he had set to +music some time previously.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>"<span class="smcap">Most esteemed Friend</span>,—You will receive, together +with this, a composition of mine which has +already been printed for several years, but of which, +to my shame, you perhaps know nothing yet.</p> + +<p>"I may, perhaps, be able to excuse myself, and to +explain why I dedicated anything to you, which came +so warmly from my heart, and yet did not make you +acquainted with it,—by the plea that, at first, I did +not know where you resided, and then my diffidence +led me to think that I had been somewhat hasty in +dedicating anything to you without knowing if it had +your approval. And, indeed, even now I send you +the 'Adelaïde' with some timidity. You yourself +know what changes a few years produce in an artist +who is constantly progressing; the more one accomplishes +in art, the less is one satisfied with former +works.</p> + +<p>"My most fervent wish will be realized if you are +not altogether dissatisfied with the music to your +heavenly 'Adelaïde,' and if you are incited by it to +compose a similar poem soon, and (should my request +not seem too bold) to send it to me forthwith, when I +shall put forth all my strength to approach your lovely +poetry in merit.</p> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span></p> +<p>"Consider the dedication as a mark of my esteem +and gratitude for the exquisite pleasure which your +poetry has always afforded, and will still afford me.</p> + +<p>"When playing the 'Adelaïde,' remember sometimes</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left:20em;"> "Your sincere admirer,<br /></span> +<span style="margin-left:25em;" class="smcap">"Beethoven</span>."<br /> +</p></div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span></p> + +<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> Surgeon-in-Chief to the army.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> Eleanore von Breuning.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> Stephan von Breuning.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> Probably in the house of Baron Pasqualati.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> A painting by Füger, Director of the Vienna Academy.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> Christoph Breuning.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> Madame von Breuning.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_23_23" id="Footnote_23_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> Franz Ries, the violinist.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_24_24" id="Footnote_24_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> Ferdinand, afterwards Beethoven's pupil.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_25_25" id="Footnote_25_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> Professor of Medicine at the Académie Joséphine, and author of +several works.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_26_26" id="Footnote_26_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> Undoubtedly the Countess Julia Guicciardi.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_27_27" id="Footnote_27_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> The Breuning family had long been in possession of one of the +most honourable posts in the Teutonic Order, four members had successively +filled the office of Chancellor, and Stephan himself was afterwards +appointed to the government of Mergentheim. He was generally +esteemed, and died a short time after Beethoven.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_28_28" id="Footnote_28_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> The omission of the name of Johann van Beethoven from this +document is somewhat unaccountable. It may have been caused +through Beethoven's irritation at his conduct. The original of the +Promemoria is now in the possession of Madame Jenny Lind-Goldschmidt.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_29_29" id="Footnote_29_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> Beethoven was at the time in his thirty-second year; but he +never knew precisely his age.</p></div> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" ><br /><br /> +<img src="images/b_page_072.jpg" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + + +<div class="figcenter" ><br /><br /> +<img src="images/b_page_096a.jpg" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<h3>CHAPTER VII</h3> + +<p class="center">LOVE.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>The Fourth Symphony—Julia Guicciardi—Letters to her—To Bettina +Brentano—Beethoven's Attachments—Domestic Troubles—Frau +Nanette Streicher—Daily Life—Composing <i>im Freien</i>.</p></div> + +<p style="margin-left:20em;"> +"In love with an Ideal,<br /> +A creature of his own imagination,<br /> +A child of air, and echo of his heart;<br /> +And like a lily on a river floating,<br /> +She floats upon the river of his thoughts."<br /> +</p> + +<div class="figleft" style="margin-left: 0em; margin-right: 0em; margin-bottom: 0em; margin-top: 0em;"> +<img src="images/w.jpg" alt="" title="" /> +</div> +<p>hence comes it that after a storm of darkness +and gloom—after the disappointment +of his "Leonora"—the next offspring of the +poet's fancy should be a symphony (No. 4), the most +delicately finished and bright in colouring which we +possess?</p> + +<p>The mystery is not easily solved. Former biographers +have at once come to the conclusion that +this was the period in which Beethoven's love for +Julia Guicciardi, alluded to in a letter to Wegeler, +had reached its climax. This hypothesis has, how<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>ever, +been put to flight by the discovery of Alexander +Thayer that the lady was married to Count +Gallenberg (afterwards the Keeper of the Archives +of the Imperial Opera) in 1803—that is, three years +before the composition of the work.</p> + +<p>Is the B flat major Symphony, after all, as much +the exponent of the master passion as is, in another +way, the C sharp minor Sonata? Or is it, with its +troubled, gloomy opening, expanding into glorious +warmth and sunshine, another evidence of Beethoven's +resolution to set fate at defiance, and to +keep at bay the monster Grief which threatened to +annihilate him? Who can tell? When the traveller, +suddenly emerging from some mist-hung mountain +gorge, steps out upon the rocky platform, he beholds +in the distance, beneath his delighted gaze, a landscape +bathed in sunshine; so to the poet's excited +fancy there must have been present some bright +vision, one of those "loftier spirits, who sported with +him and allotted to him nobler tasks," drawing a +veil over the troubled Past, and pointing him onwards +to a glorious Future.</p> + +<p>Let the Reader take which interpretation he will.</p> + +<p>We propose briefly to present to him the two +sets of letters which show us Beethoven in two different +aspects as a lover—the first <i>pur et simple</i>, the +second Platonic.</p> + +<p>Nothing is known with certainty of Beethoven's +"immortal beloved," whose name vibrates throughout +the Adagio of the Moonlight Sonata. The letters +to her (of date unknown, written from some baths in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span> +Hungary, whither he had been ordered for his health) +breathe the very intensity of passion—a passion at +times too deep for words.<a name="FNanchor_30_30" id="FNanchor_30_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a></p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p style="margin-left:30em;">"<i>Morning, 6th July.</i> +</p> + +<p >"My Angel! my All! my Second Self!</p> + +<p>"Only a few words to-day, written with a pencil (with +thine). My residence will not be definitely fixed before to-morrow. +What a ruinous waste of time!—Why this deep +sorrow where Necessity speaks? can our love exist otherwise +than by sacrifices, than by our not expecting everything? +Canst thou alter the fact that thou art not wholly mine, +that I am not wholly thine?—Alas! look into the beauties +of Nature, and calm thy mind for what must be endured. +Love demands all, and with perfect right, and thus <i>I feel +towards thee</i> and <i>thou towards me</i>, only thou forgettest so +easily that I have to live <i>for myself</i> and <i>for thee</i>,—were +we perfectly united, thou wouldst feel this trial as little as +I do.</p> + +<p>"My journey was terrible. I only arrived yesterday at +four o'clock in the morning, owing to the want of horses. +The driver chose another route, but what a fearful one! +At the last station they warned me not to travel by night, +and tried to terrify me by a forest, but this only stimulated +me, though I was wrong. The carriage broke down on +that dreadful road, a mere rough, unmade country lane, and +had not my postillions been what they were, I should have +been obliged to remain there by the wayside.</p> + +<p>"Esterhazy, on the usual route, had the same fate with +eight horses that I had with four, and yet I felt a certain +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>degree of pleasure, as I always do when I overcome anything +happily.—Now, in haste, from the outer to the inner +man! We shall probably soon see each other again. I +cannot communicate to thee to-day the reflections I have +been making, during the last few days, on my life—were +our hearts ever near to one another, I should make none +such. My heart is full of much that I have to say to thee. +Ah! there are moments in which I feel that language is +absolutely nothing. Take courage! continue to be my true, +my only treasure, my All, as I am thine. The gods must +send the rest—that which is ordained to be, and shall be +for us.</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left:25em;">"Thy faithful</span> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left:28em;" class="smcap">"Ludwig</span>."<br /> +</p></div> + +<hr style="width: 15%;" /> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>"<i>Monday evening, 6th July.</i> +</p> + +<p>"Thou grievest—thou—the dearest of all beings!—I +have just learned that the letters must be sent off very +early. Mondays and Thursdays are the only days on which +the post goes to K—-.—Thou grievest! Ah! where I +am, there thou art with me—with our united efforts I shall +attain my object—I shall pass my life with thee—what a +life!!! whereas now!!! without thee—persecuted at times +by the kindness of others, a kindness which I neither +deserve nor wish to deserve. Servility from man to his +fellow-creature pains me; and, when I consider myself in +relation to the universe, what am I? what is he who is +called the greatest? and yet even here is displayed the +Divine in man!—I weep when I think that thou wilt probably +receive no tidings of me before Saturday. However +much thou mayest love me, I love thee more fervently still—never +hide thy feelings from me.—Good night! as a +patient here I must now go to rest. Ah, God! so near<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>!—so far apart! is not our love a true celestial mansion, enduring +as the vault of heaven itself!"</p></div> + +<hr style="width: 15%;" /> + +<div class="blockquot"><p> +<span style="margin-left:38em;">"<i>7th July.</i></span> +</p> + +<p>"Good morning!</p> + +<p>"Even before I rise my thoughts throng to thee, my immortal +beloved, at times with joy, then again mournfully, +waiting to hear if fate be favourable to us. I can only live +entirely with thee, or not at all. Yes! I am resolved to +wander apart from thee until the moment shall arrive when +I may fly into thine arms, may feel my home in thee, and +send my soul encompassed by thine into the world of +spirits. Yes, alas! it must be so! Thou wilt be prepared, +for thou knowest my faithfulness. Never can another +possess my heart; never, never. Oh God! why must I fly +from what is so dear to me?—and yet my life in V—— is, +as at present, a sorrowful one. Thy love made me at once +the happiest and the most miserable of men. At my age I +require a uniformity, an evenness of life; and can this be +possible in our relations?—Angel! I have just heard that +the post goes out every day; and must stop that thou +mayest receive this letter soon.—Be calm; only by calmly +viewing our existence can we attain our aim of passing our +lives together. Be calm; love me—to-day—yesterday—what +longing, what tears for thee—for thee—for thee—my +Life! my All! Farewell! Oh! continue to love me—never +misjudge the faithful heart of thy lover.<span style="margin-left:0.5em;"> L.</span></p> + +<p>"Ever thine,<br /> +"Ever mine,<br /> +"Ever each other's."<br /> +</p></div> + +<p>It was indeed the case that no other love ever did +"possess his heart" in the same way. This was, if not<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span> +his first, at least his only <i>real</i> love. Such letters as +these Beethoven wrote to no one else; the contrast +between them and the three following (addressed +to Bettina Brentano, afterwards Madame von Arnim) +will be at once apparent:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p> +<span style="margin-left:30em;">"<i>Vienna, August 11, 1810.</i></span> +</p> + +<p>"<span class="smcap">Dearest Friend</span>,—Never has there been a more +beautiful spring than this year; I say so, and feel it too, +because in it I first made your acquaintance. You have +yourself seen that in society I am like a fish on the sand, +which writhes, and writhes, and cannot get off until some +benevolent Galatea throws it back into the mighty ocean. +I was, indeed, quite out of my element, dearest friend, and +was surprised by you at a time when discouragement had +completely mastered me—but how quickly it vanished at +your glance! I knew at once that you must be from some +other sphere than this absurd world, in which, with the best +will, one cannot open one's ears. I am a miserable being, +and yet I complain of others!!—But you will forgive me +for this with that good heart which looks out of your eyes, +and that intelligence which is hidden in your ears,—at +least they know how to flatter by the way in which they +listen.</p> + +<p>"My ears are, alas! a partition wall through which I +cannot easily have any friendly intercourse with men. +Otherwise!—perhaps!—I should have felt more assured +with you; but I could only understand the full, intelligent +glance of your eyes, which has so taken hold of me, that I +shall never forget it. Dear friend, dearest girl!—Art! who +understands her? with whom can I discuss this great goddess?... +How dear to me are the few days in which we +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>chatted together, or, I should say, rather corresponded! +I have preserved all the little notes with your witty, charming, +most charming answers, and so I have to thank my +defective hearing that the best part of those hasty conversations +is written down. Since you left I have had vexatious +hours—hours of shadow in which I can do nothing. I wandered +in the Schönbrunn Allée for about three hours after +you left, but no angel met me who could have taken possession +of me as you did, <i>my Angel</i>.</p> + +<p>"Pardon, dearest friend, this deviation from the original +key, but such intervals I must have as a relief to my heart. +So you have written about me to Goethe, have you not? +I could bury my head in a sack, so that I might not hear or +see anything of all that is going on in the world, because I +shall not meet you again, dearest angel, but I shall receive a +letter from you soon. Hope sustains me, as she does half +the world; through all my life she has been my companion. +What would otherwise have become of me?—I send you +'Kennst du das Land,' written with my own hand, as a +remembrance of the hour in which I first knew you. I send +you also another, which I have composed since I took leave +of you; my dearest <i>Herz</i>!"</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left:15em;">Herz, mein Herz, was soll das geben,<br /></span> +<span style="margin-left:17em;">Was bedränget dich so sehr;<br /></span> +<span style="margin-left:15em;">Welch ein neues, fremdes Leben,<br /></span> +<span style="margin-left:17em;">Ich erkenne dich nicht mehr.<br /></span> +</p> + +<p>"Answer me at once, dearest friend; write and tell me +what is to become of me since my heart has turned such a +rebel. Write to your most faithful friend,</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left:35em;" class="smcap">"Beethoven</span>."<br /> +</p></div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span></p> + +<hr style="width: 15%;" /> + +<div class="blockquot"> +<p><span style="margin-left:30em;">"<i>Vienna, 10th February, 1811.</i></span> +</p> + +<p>"<span class="smcap">Dear, beloved Friend</span>,—I have already had two letters +from you, and see from those to Tonie that you still +remember me, and even too kindly. Your first letter +I carried about with me the whole summer, and it has often +made me very happy. Although I do not write to you +frequently, and you see nothing at all of me, yet in thought +I write you a thousand times a thousand letters. How you +must feel in Berlin amongst all the frivolous, worldly rabble, +I could imagine, even though you had not written it to me +yourself,—mere prating about Art without any results!! The +best description of this is to be found in Schiller's poem, +'The River,' in which the Spree speaks.—You are about to +be married, dear friend, or are so already, and I have not +been able to see you even once previously. May all the +felicity with which marriage blesses those who enter into +her bonds be poured upon you and your husband! What +shall I say to you about myself? I can only exclaim with +Johanna, 'Compassionate my fate!' If I am but spared +for a few years longer, I will thank Him who embraces all +within Himself—the Most High—for this as well as for all +other weal and woe.—If you should mention me when +writing to Goethe, strive to find all those words which can +express to him my deepest reverence and admiration. I am +just about to write to him myself regarding 'Egmont,' to +which I have composed the music, solely out of love for his +poetry, which always makes me happy;—but who can sufficiently +thank a Poet, the most precious jewel of a Nation! +Now no more, my dear, good friend. I only returned this +morning from a <i>Bacchanale</i> where I laughed too heartily, +only to weep nearly as much to-day; boisterous joy often +drives me violently back upon myself. As to Clemens, +many thanks for his courtesy; with regard to the Cantata, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>the subject is not important enough for us, it is very different +in Berlin. As for my affection, the sister has so large a +share of it that not much is left for the brother—will he be +content with this? Now farewell, dear, dear friend. I imprint +a sorrowful kiss upon your forehead, thus impressing, +as with a seal, all my thoughts upon it. Write soon, soon, +often, to your Brother,</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left:35em;" class="smcap">"Beethoven</span>."<br /> +</p></div> + +<hr style="width: 15%;" /> + +<div class="blockquot"><p> +<span style="margin-left:30em;">"<i>Toeplitz, 15th August, 1812.</i></span> +</p> + +<p>"<span class="smcap">My most dear, kind Friend</span>,—Kings and princes +may indeed be able to create professors and privy councillors, +and to bestow titles and decorations, but great men they +cannot make. Spirits that tower above the common herd, +these they cannot pretend to make, and therefore they are +forced to respect them. When two men like Goethe and +myself come together, these grandees must perceive what is +accounted great by such as we.</p> + +<p>"On our way home yesterday we met the whole imperial +family; we saw them coming in the distance, when Goethe +immediately dropped my arm to place himself on one side; +and say what I would, I could not get him to advance +another step. I pressed my hat down upon my head, +buttoned up my great-coat, and made my way with folded +arms through the thickest of the throng. Princes and +courtiers formed a line, Duke Rudolph took off his hat, +the Empress made the first salutation. The great ones of +the earth <i>know me</i>! To my infinite amusement, I saw the +procession file past Goethe, who stood by the side, hat in +hand, bending low. I took him to task for it pretty smartly, +gave him no quarter, and reproached him with all his sins, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>especially those against you, dearest friend, for we had just +been speaking about you. Heavens! had I been granted +a time with you such as <i>he</i> had, I should have produced +many more great works! A musician is also a poet, and +can feel himself transported by a pair of eyes into a more +beautiful world, where nobler spirits sport with him, and +impose great tasks upon him. What ideas rushed into my +mind when I first saw you in the little observatory during +that glorious May shower, which proved so fertilizing to +me also! The loveliest themes stole from your glances +into my heart,—themes which shall enchant the world when +Beethoven can no longer direct. If God grant me a few +years more, I must see you again, my dearest friend; the +voice which ever upholds the right within me demands it. +Spirits can also love one another; I shall ever woo yours; +your applause is dearer to me than aught else in the world. +I told Goethe my opinion of the effect of applause upon +men like us—we must be heard with intelligence by our +peers; emotion is very well for women (pardon me), but +music ought to strike fire from the souls of men. Ah! +dearest child, how long is it since we were both so perfectly +agreed upon all points! There is no real good but the +possession of a pure, good soul, which we perceive in +everything, and before which we have no need to dissemble. +<i>We must be something if we would appear something.</i> The +world must recognise us, it is not always unjust; but this +is a light matter to me, for I have a loftier aim.</p> + +<p>"In Vienna I hope for a letter from you; write soon, +soon and fully; in eight days I shall be there. The court +goes to-morrow; to-day they are to play once more. Goethe +has taught the Empress her <i>rôle</i>. His duke and he wished +me to play some of my own music, but I refused them +both, for they are both in love with Chinese porcelain. A +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span>little indulgence is necessary, for understanding seems to +have lost the upper hand; but I will not play for such +perverse tastes, neither do I choose to be a party to the +follies of princes who are for ever committing some such +absurdity. Adieu, adieu, dear love; your last letter lay for +a whole night next to my heart, and cheered me there. +Musicians allow themselves everything. Heavens! how +I love you!</p> + +<p> +"Your most faithful friend and deaf brother,<br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left:35em;" class="smcap">"Beethoven</span>."<br /> +</p></div> + +<p>These letters were first published in Bettina's +book, "Ilius Pamphilius und die Ambrosia," but the +style is so unlike Beethoven's simple mode of expression, +that it is difficult to discover what the composer +really wrote to Bettina, and what has been supplied +by the latter's rather too vivid imagination. The +reiterated <i>dear</i>, <i>dearest</i>, and the <i>write soon</i>, <i>soon</i>, <i>often</i>, +are very feminine and very <i>un-Beethovenish</i>. This +strange, inexplicable little being, who fascinated +not only Beethoven, but every one else with whom +she came in contact, has also published an account +of her interviews with Beethoven. This is so highly +coloured that we may be excused for doubting the +perfect truth of the recital, especially as we know +what a gloss—nay, what falseness—she contrived to +give to all that related to her intercourse with Goethe. +She herself tells us, naïvely enough, that when she +showed Beethoven one morning her account of what<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span> +he had said the previous day, he was quite surprised, +and exclaimed, "Did I really say that? I must +have had a <i>raptus</i>!"</p> + +<p>Bettina was, however, of some service to him, as it +was doubtless she who paved the way to his acquaintance +with Goethe, and their meeting in 1812 +at Toeplitz; and her family remained true, warm +friends of the composer long after the great minister +had forgotten his very existence.</p> + +<p>Beethoven was most unfortunate in his attachments, +the objects of which were always of much +higher social standing than himself. Constantly +associating with people of rank and culture, it was +natural that to the sensitive nature of our poet, the +young girl nobly born, with all the intuitive, nameless +fascinations of the high-bred aristocrat, should present +a great contrast to the plebeian, every-day graces +of the <i>bourgeoise</i>. Beethoven used to say that he had +found more real appreciation of his works amongst +the nobility than in any other circle, and we can +hardly wonder at the infatuation with which he stakes +all his chances of happiness on a love which he knows +can never be gratified.</p> + +<p>The following little scrap in his handwriting has +been preserved:—"Only love—yes, only that—has +power to give me a happier life. Oh, God! let me +at length find her—her who destined to be mine, who +shall strengthen me in virtue!" Schindler imagines +that these words have reference to a well-known +dilettante of great talent, Fräulein Marie Pachler, +whom Beethoven admired exceedingly. He never<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span> +summoned up courage enough to propose to her +however, and she afterwards married an advocate in +Gratz. This lady may also be the subject of the +allusion in a letter to Ries, 1816:—"Say all that is +kind from me to your wife; I, alas! have none. I +found only one with whom I could have been happy, +and she will probably never be mine. But I am not +on this account a woman-hater!"</p> + +<p>Another love of Beethoven's was the Countess +Marie Erdödy, to whom he dedicated the two splendid +Trios, Op. 70, but this seems to have been +entirely a Platonic affection.</p> + +<p>Who can exaggerate the immense benefit that a +loving, tender wife would have been to Beethoven—a +wife like Mozart's Constance? The consciousness +of one ever by his side to whom he might safely confide +all that wounded or annoyed him, would have +more than neutralized the chilling, exasperating +effects of the calamity that had overtaken him, +would have been a fresh impetus to great achievements. +But fate had willed it otherwise.</p> + +<p>In nothing was the want of a wife so apparent +as in Beethoven's domestic <i>ménage</i>, which certainly +was the <i>non plus ultra</i> of discomfort. One great +cause of this was his habit of frequently changing +his abode. He had long since left the Lichnowski +Palace, his infirmity rendering it desirable that he +should have a home of his own, but he was extremely +difficult to please in the choice of a residence. One +house he would leave because the sun did not shine +into his apartment; another because the supply of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span> +water was deficient (a serious drawback to him, as he +was accustomed to lave his head and face profusely +while composing), and for even less cogent reasons he +would pack up and leave at an hour's notice, so that +it soon became a difficult matter to find a suitable +abode for him. It may easily be imagined that this +constant removal was not effected without considerable +outlay, and so badly did he manage that at one +time he had no less than four houses on his hands. +When all other resources failed, he would take refuge +in the fourth story of his friend Baron Pasqualati's +house, which was constantly reserved for him. The +summer he always spent in the country, generally in +a hired lodging. On one occasion a suite of apartments +in the villa of Baron Pronay had been placed +at his disposal, and as the house stood in the midst +of a superb park, it was thought that Beethoven would +be fully satisfied. In a few days, however, the bird +had flown, alleging as his reason that he could not +endure to listen to the ceremonious salutation with +which his host accosted him every morning in his +ramble—much less to return it!</p> + +<p>Oulibischeff's amusing description of our composer's +surroundings is worth repeating:—</p> + +<p>"In his room reigned a confusion, an organized +chaos, such as can hardly be imagined. Books and +music lay on every article of furniture, or were heaped +up like pyramids in the four corners. A multitude +of letters which he had received during the week or +the month covered the floor like a white carpet with +red spots. On the window-sill were displayed the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span> +remains of a succulent breakfast, by the side or on +the top of proof sheets awaiting correction. There a +row of bottles, partly sealed, partly empty; further +on an <i>escritoire</i>, and on it the sketch of a quartet; on +the pianoforte a flying sheet of note-paper with the +embryo of a symphony; while to bring so many +directly opposite things into harmony, everything +was united by a thick layer of dust.</p> + +<p>"It may easily be imagined that amidst such a +<i>well-arranged whole</i>, the artist had often no small +trouble to find what he required. He used to complain +bitterly about this, and always put the blame on +other people's shoulders, for he fancied that he was +extremely systematic in the way in which he kept +his things, and used to declare that in the darkest +night he could find even a pin belonging to him, if +people 'would but put things back in their proper +places'!</p> + +<p>"On one occasion an important paper was missing—neither +a sketch nor a loose sheet, but a thick, +clearly copied score from the Mass in D. At last it +was found; but where, think you? In the kitchen, +where it had been used to wrap up eatables! More +than one <i>Donnerwetter</i>! and more than one bad egg +must have flown at the head of the devoted cook, +when this was discovered; for Beethoven liked +fresh eggs too well to use them as missiles.... +Once, when he had dismissed his housekeeper, a very +good orderly person (and soon received into favour +again), he resolved to make himself independent, +and to keep no more servants, since they only 'worked<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span> +mischief in the house.' And why should he not +wait upon himself, and look after the kitchen himself? +Could it be more difficult to prepare a dinner than to +compose a C minor symphony? Charmed with this +glorious idea, Beethoven hastens to put it into +execution. He invites some friends to dinner, buys +the necessary provisions in the market, and carries +them home himself; ties on the business-like white +apron; adjusts the indispensable nightcap on his head; +grasps the cook's knife, and sets to work. The guests +arrive, and find him before the fire, whose scorching +flame seems to act like the fire of inspiration upon +him. The patience of the Viennese appetites was put +to an unwonted trial. At length the dishes were +placed on the table, and the host proved that it was +worth while waiting for him. The soup might have +challenged the <i>soupe maigre</i> given in charity; the +boiled meat, scarcely cooked, presupposed in individuals +of the human race the digestion of an +ostrich; the vegetables swam in a sea of fat and +water; the roast meat, splendidly burned to a cinder, +looked as though it had found its way down the +chimney; in short, nothing was fit to eat. And +nobody did eat anything except the host, who by +word and example encouraged his guests to fall to. +In vain; Beethoven's <i>chefs-d'œuvre</i> of cookery were +not appreciated, and the guests made their dinner +on bread, fruit, and sweetmeats, adding plenty of +wine to prevent any bad effects from their enforced +abstinence. This remarkable feast convinced even +the great Maestro that composing and cooking are<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span> +two very different things, and the unjustly deposed +cook was speedily re-established in her rights."</p> + +<p>It was very fortunate for Beethoven that after some +years passed in this erratic way, a sensible lady-friend +at length came to the rescue, and by her +feminine tact and adroitness, succeeded in persuading +him to abandon his nomadic habits to some +extent, and to mingle a little more in society. This +was Frau Nanette Streicher, the amiable wife of the +celebrated instrument maker, and early friend of +Schiller. She began by putting the wardrobe of the +composer to rights (as might be imagined, it was +in a deplorable plight), and afterwards, in conjunction +with her husband, hired a respectable house for +Beethoven, furnished it suitably, and engaged a man +(a tailor by trade) and his wife to wait upon him. +In this quiet haven our tempest-tossed Beethoven +came to anchor for a while, and might have been +seen busy over his pianoforte, or among his papers, +while his cross-legged knight of the Goose stitched +away comfortably in the adjoining anteroom.</p> + +<p>When fairly domiciled, Beethoven's mode of life +was very regular. His habit was to rise every +morning, winter and summer, at daybreak, when he +at once proceeded to his desk, where he wrote till +about two o'clock without any interruption, except +the necessary interval for breakfast, and—if his +ideas did not flow rapidly enough—an occasional +run of half an hour or longer into the open air. +Between two and three he dined, after which it was +his invariable custom to make the circuit of the town<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span> +twice or three times; and no weather could keep him +within doors—summer heat or winter frost, thunder, +hail, rain, sleet,—nothing prevented this afternoon +ramble. It was, in fact, his time for composition; +he never ventured out without his note-book to +preserve any fugitive thoughts that might flit across +his mind, and used laughingly to apply to himself +Johanna's words, "I dare not come without my +banner!" Necessarily, therefore, he was a very +silent companion, but in <i>one</i> sense only, as the whole +way he continued humming (or rather growling) in +a manner peculiar to himself any thema on which +he was mentally at work. Ries relates that on one +occasion when they were walking together, Beethoven +suddenly exclaimed, "A theme has occurred +to me!" They hurried onwards in silence, and on +arriving at home the master went at once to the +pianoforte (without even removing his hat), where +he thundered like an inspired giant for more than +an hour, during which the beautiful finale to the +Sonata Op. 54 (in F major) struggled into existence.</p> + +<p>Beethoven generally returned from his promenade +only when warned by the shadows that evening was +coming on; then alone in the darkening twilight +he loved to breathe to his best, his only friend, his +<i>Clavier</i>,<a name="FNanchor_31_31" id="FNanchor_31_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a> the thoughts which met with no response +in human sympathy. During the evening he very +seldom worked, but would smoke his pipe, and play +occasionally on his viola or violin, both of which +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>must always be placed ready for him on the pianoforte.</p> + +<p>Our poor deaf Beethoven had, too, his little coterie +of sincere and attached friends, among whom his +real nature could show itself without restraint or +distrust, and who clung to him through life in spite +of the unceasing efforts of the two brothers to dislodge +them. These were—naturally Prince Lichnowski +and his brother Count Moritz, who cherished +a love and admiration for Beethoven which the latter +warmly reciprocated, dedicating to the Count his +Variations, Op. 35, and the beautiful Idyl, Op. 90. +To these must be added the worthy Baron von +Zmeskall, a Hungarian State Secretary, to whom the +composer addressed many a humorous epistle; his +old friend Stephan Breuning; the Baron von Gleichenstein; +his secretary Schindler; and last, but not +least, Franz, Count von Brunswick, to whom he dedicated +the Sonata Appassionata, and who had more +influence over him than anybody else.</p> + +<p>One proceeding Beethoven never omitted, viz., +the reading of the evening paper. In these stirring +times the newspaper was an absolute necessity, and +our musician would never retire to rest without previously +ascertaining the state of the political horizon. +He used to frequent a coffee-house which boasted +another means of exit besides the general one, and +taking up his position in the background, he would +steadily peruse the <i>Gazette</i> (not a very long task in +those days, when "our own" correspondents were as +yet undreamt of), and as soon as the last word of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span> +the last page had been scanned, beat a hasty retreat +through the private door, and wend his solitary way +homewards. Ten o'clock rarely found him out of +bed. Such was his simple, innocent day! It was +no mere phrase, that declaration of his, "<i>I live only +in my art</i>,"—it was indeed the one connecting link +between him and others.</p> + +<p>What he produced in suffering and loneliness +stirred, like a mighty wind among the forest branches, +the noblest feelings of a thousand hearts, bidding +them grapple with Destiny as he had done, and prove +themselves <i>men</i> and heroes!</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span></p> + +<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_30_30" id="Footnote_30_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> In translating these letters we have thought it best to keep to the +original pronoun,—the simple <i>thou</i> being more suited to Beethoven's +ideal love than the coarser <i>you</i>.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_31_31" id="Footnote_31_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31_31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a> Beethoven could not endure the foreign word <i>pianoforte</i>.</p></div> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" ><br /><br /> +<img src="images/b_page_057.jpg" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" ><br /><br /> +<img src="images/b_page_039a.jpg" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<h3>CHAPTER VIII</h3> + +<p class="center">VICTORY AND SHADOW.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>Period of Greatest Intellectual Activity—Hummel—The Battle of +Vittoria—Congress of Vienna—Maelzel—Pecuniary Difficulties—Adoption +of Nephew—The Philharmonic Society—The Classical +and Romantic Schools—The Ninth Symphony—His Nephew's +Conduct—Last Illness.</p></div> + +<div class="figleft" style="margin-left: 0em; margin-right: 0em; margin-bottom: 0em; margin-top: 0em;"> +<img src="images/t.jpg" alt="" title="" /> +</div> +<p>he period between the years 1805 and 1814 +may be considered that of Beethoven's greatest +creative energy. It is almost impossible to +keep pace with the stream of colossal works which +flowed without intermission from his pen. To this +period belong the G major and E flat pianoforte +concertos, without exception the most poetical and +the noblest compositions of the kind which we +possess; the fantasia for pianoforte, orchestra, and +chorus; the fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, and eighth +symphonies; the "Calm Sea and Prosperous Voyage" +on Goethe's short but suggestive poem, "<i>Tiefe Stille +herrscht im Wasser</i>; <i>ohne Regung ruht das Meer</i>;" +the First Mass; the music to "Egmont;" the over<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>tures +to Collin's tragedy of "Coriolanus," and to +"King Stephen," and the "Ruins of Athens,"—each of +which, from its intellectual grasp of subject, wonderful +ideality, and highly finished detail, would merit a +volume to itself. Nor do these Titanic orchestral +productions occupy the whole of his attention. They +are accompanied by a mass of works for the pianoforte, +which, if in one sense slighter than those we +have named, yet, in another, stand equally high; the +soliloquies and dialogues (if we may be allowed the +expression) contained in the pianoforte sonatas +breathe thoughts as noble and as deep as those +expressed by the more varied <i>dramatis personæ</i> of +the orchestra or the quartets. Truly, a perfect +acquaintance with Beethoven would claim the devotion +of the highest powers, and the study of a lifetime. +Any attempt, however, to depict these great +works briefly in words would be futile, and we therefore +pass on to the consideration of the poet's outer +life. This was almost monotonous—certainly not +varied. Beethoven, as we have seen, lived wholly +in his art, and the changes which occurred, most +momentous to him, were not those of outward circumstance, +but of inner, intellectual development.</p> + +<p>In the year 1809 he was offered the post of +Kapellmeister to the King of Westphalia, with a +salary of six hundred ducats; and this, his great +desire of possessing a fixed income made him ready +to accept; although he would certainly have been +miserable in such a position, as Jerome was not the +man to understand either him or his works. Happily,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span> +this ordeal was spared him. It was thought derogatory +to the dignity of Austria that her greatest composer, +the one of whom she had most reason to be +proud, should be allowed through pecuniary considerations +to quit her bounds; and as the Emperor +would do nothing for Beethoven (his abhorrence of +etiquette and well-known republican sentiments +having prevented his ever getting into favour at +Court), an agreement was ultimately entered into by +the Archduke Rudolph (Beethoven's pupil, afterwards +Archbishop of Olmütz) and the Princes Lobkowitz +and Kinsky, to pay the composer annually +the sum of four thousand guldens, on condition +of his continuing to reside in Vienna. In two years' +time this was reduced one-fifth, owing to changes in +the Austrian Finance, and subsequently it dwindled +down to a mere nothing, from the death and bankruptcy +of two of the contracting parties—but Beethoven +could get no redress, although he religiously +fulfilled his part of the compact.</p> + +<p>In drawing the money from the executors of +Prince Kinsky he was obliged always to send in +a proof that he was still in existence. This annoyed +him excessively, and he generally had the affair +transacted for him by a friend, which on one occasion +produced the following laconic voucher to +Schindler:—</p> + +<p>"<span class="smcap">Certificate of Life.</span>—The Fish lives! <i>vidi</i> +Pastor Romualdus,"—an allusion to his eccentric use +of water when composing.</p> + +<p>In this year also occurred the bombardment of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span> +Vienna, out of which Ries has contrived to bring +forward an implied accusation of cowardice against +the composer, in his statement that Beethoven hid +himself in a cellar, burying his head among cushions +that he might not hear the firing.</p> + +<p>The explanation of this lies on the surface; if he +did take refuge underground it was only what every +other inhabitant of the city, whose duty did not call +him elsewhere, was doing; and as for the cushions—the +vibration of the cannonade heard in that vault +must have been agony to his diseased nerve. Had +Beethoven really been alarmed he might easily have +quitted Vienna. Cowardice in any form is the last +vice that could be attributed to him; resolute and +firm, he feared no danger.</p> + +<p>In 1810 the Mass in C was performed for the first +time at Eisenstadt, the residence of Prince Esterhazy, +the grandson of Haydn's patron, in whose service +Hummel was at the time as Kapellmeister. Esterhazy, +accustomed only to the simple services and +masses of the Haydn-Mozart school, did not know +what to make of a production so totally different. +Accordingly, at the <i>déjeuner</i> afterwards given in the +palace to the artists and dilettanti who had assembled +for the occasion, he said, with a smile, to our composer, +"Now, dear Beethoven, what is this that you +have been about again?" The susceptible musician, +not a little irritated at hearing his work so lightly +spoken of, glanced towards Hummel, who happened +to be standing by the Prince's side, wearing a peculiar +smile, which seemed to Beethoven full of mali<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span>cious pleasure. This was too much—the opinion of +a fashionable worldling like Esterhazy was nothing +to Beethoven, but that a brother in art should so +misunderstand him—should rejoice at an apparent +failure!—he rose abruptly, and quitted the palace.</p> + +<p>Such is the correct account of the rupture between +Beethoven and Hummel, which lasted until a few +days before the death of the former, when Hummel, +hearing of his precarious state, hastened to Vienna to +effect a reconciliation before it was too late.<a name="FNanchor_32_32" id="FNanchor_32_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> Another +version of the story is that the two composers were +rivals for the hand of the same lady, and that +Hummel, owing to Beethoven's deafness and his own +better position as Kapellmeister, was the favoured +suitor! The practice of tracing every event in our +composer's life to a love affair is just as ridiculous as +the opposite extreme of denying his capability for the +tender passion.</p> + +<p>A more interesting incident in connection with the +First Mass is that related by Schindler of the effect +produced upon Beethoven by the reading of the +German text composed for it by some poet, who, +though unknown to fame, seems to have translated +the master's thoughts from the language of Tones +into that of Words, with power and truth. When<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span> +Beethoven came to the "<i>Qui tollis</i>" his eyes overflowed +with tears (the first and last time that he was +ever seen so affected) as he exclaimed, "Thus I felt +while composing this!"</p> + +<p>The tide of Beethoven's earthly renown and glory, +which had been slowly rising for years, reached its +height in 1813-14.</p> + +<p>In the former year took place the two celebrated +concerts on behalf of the Austrian and Bavarian +soldiers wounded in the battle of Hanau, when the +Seventh Symphony, and "Wellington's Victory, or +the Battle of Vittoria," were performed for the first +time. We can easily imagine, from the sensation excited +even now by the latter work, how intense must +have been the enthusiasm which greeted its performance +at a time when popular feeling was strung up to +the highest pitch. Beethoven himself directed, regulating +the movements of his bâton by those of Schuppanzigh's +bow. In a notice of the concert written by +himself he says: "It was an unprecedented assembly +of distinguished artists, every one of whom was inspired +by the desire of accomplishing something by +his art for the benefit of the Fatherland; and all +worked together unanimously, accepting of subordinate +places without regard to precedence, that a +splendid <i>ensemble</i> might be attained.... My +part was the direction of the whole, but only because +the music happened to be of my composition. Had +it been otherwise, I would have stationed myself as +readily at the great drum, like Herr Hummel; for +our only motives were Love to the Fatherland, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span> +the joyful devotion of our powers to serve those who +had sacrificed so much for us."</p> + +<p>In 1814 occurred the great Congress, when Vienna +was for a season the abode of kings, princes, and +delegates from every Court in Europe, and the glittering +capital was well-nigh intoxicated by its own +magnificence. The magistrates of the city invited +Beethoven to compose a Cantata for the occasion, +which produced the "Glorreiche Augenblick," perhaps +the composer's most neglected work, and deservedly +so, as it is not worthy of him. It won for +him, however, the presentation of the freedom of the +city, the only distinction which Beethoven valued. +Nor was this his only triumph. His genius began to +be universally recognised; he was created an honorary +member of Academies and Societies in London, +Paris, Stockholm, and Amsterdam; and the Philharmonic +Society in London presented him with a +superb grand pianoforte of Broadwood's manufacture. +In short, from every nation in Europe, and even from +America, he received striking proofs of the love and +admiration in which he was held. Stimulated by +these manifestations, excited by the splendour around +him, and the stirring, momentous events which were +taking place, Beethoven was induced to depart +for the time from his usual solitary habits, and to +mingle for a few weeks in society. In the apartments +of Prince Rasoumowski, the well-known Russian +dilettante, he was introduced to many of the illustrious +visitors, and long retained a lively recollection, +half comical, half gratified, of the manner in which<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span> +he had been idolized;—how the grand seigneurs had +paid court to him, and how admirably he had played +his part in receiving their homage! He was most +deeply affected by his interview with the gentle +Empress Elizabeth of Russia, with whom he conversed +in his customary frank, open way, completely +setting aside all etiquette; while she, on her part, +expressed the highest veneration for the composer, +and at her departure left him a gift of two hundred +ducats, which he acknowledged after his own fashion +by dedicating to her his brilliant Polonaise, Op. 89. +This was the only substantial result to our poverty-stricken +Beethoven of the attachment professed by +the whole of the gay throng!</p> + +<p>The bright episode of the Congress, with its fêtes +and triumphs, soon flitted past, bringing out in sterner +and darker contrast the days which followed.</p> + +<p>Beethoven had dedicated his "Battle of Vittoria" +to the Prince Regent of England (George IV.), but +to his great chagrin, no notice was taken of it. He +alludes to this in a letter to Ries, and referring to +the Prince's well-known character of <i>gourmand</i>, says, +"He might at least have sent me a butcher's knife or +a turtle!"</p> + +<p>Another vexation in connection with the symphony, +causing him infinite annoyance, arose out of the despicable +conduct of Maelzel, afterwards the inventor +of the metronome. In the year 1812 he had made +the acquaintance of the latter, who had promised to +construct for him a sound-conductor, in return for +which Beethoven composed a kind of warlike piece<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span> +for the mechanician's new instrument, the panharmonica, +which he was on the point of taking to England +for exhibition. The effect of Beethoven's work +was so marvellous, that Maelzel urged him to arrange +it for the orchestra, and the result was—the "Battle +of Vittoria." Maelzel meanwhile went on constructing +four machines, only one of which was found +available, and Beethoven, without the slightest suspicion +of any underhand dealing, allowed him to +take the entire management of the concerts for the +relief of the wounded. In his hermit life he did not +hear much of what was going on around him, and his +consternation may therefore be imagined when informed +that his false friend was announcing the +symphony everywhere as his own property, stating +that it had been given to him by Beethoven in return +for his machine, and the sum of four hundred guldens +which he professed to have lent him! He had +actually contrived to have many of the orchestral +parts copied out, and those that were wanting supplied +by some low musician, and with this mutilated +work he was on his way to England. The matter was +at once placed in the hands of the law; but it was long +before Beethoven recovered from the effects of this +fraud; it made him, in fact, suspicious ever after +towards copyists. The loan of four hundred guldens +proved to have been <i>fifty</i>, which Beethoven accepted +from him at a time when, as he states in his instructions +to his lawyers, he was "in dire necessity; +<i>deserted by every one in Vienna</i>."</p> + +<p>This Maelzel had the impudence subsequently to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span> +write to Beethoven, requesting his patronage for the +metronome, and pretending that he was busily engaged +in preparing a sound-conductor which would enable +the master to direct in the orchestra. The latter +never made its appearance, but Beethoven, who at +first approved of the metronome, did all in his power +to have it introduced. Afterwards, when he saw the +confusion of <i>tempo</i> which it had occasioned, he used +to say, "Don't let us have any metronome! He +that has true feeling will not require it, and for him +who has none, it will not be of any use."</p> + +<p>This affair with Maelzel gives us a glimpse into +the pecuniary difficulties which harassed Beethoven +throughout his life, assuming greater prominence +towards the end. He was always in want of money, +and yet (according to the notions of the times) he was +handsomely paid for his compositions. What, then, +was the cause of it? Were his means swallowed up +by his frequent removals? Did the perplexity arise +simply from his unbusiness-like habits? To these +questions we must add a third, which may, perhaps, +afford a clue to the mystery,—What became of the +valuable presents, the watches, rings, breast-pins, +snuff-boxes, &c., &c., of which Beethoven had received +so many? When asked where such a gift was, he +would look bewildered, and say after a moment's reflection, +"I really don't know!" The matter would +then pass entirely from his thoughts; but there were +those about him who were not equally indifferent!</p> + +<p>In 1815 the cloud which for two years had been +threatening, burst upon him in those troubles and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span> +sorrows which encompassed him until the end. He +lost his old friend and staunch supporter, Prince Lichnowski, +and, a few months after, his brother Carl, who +in dying bequeathed to him as a legacy the care +of his only child. It seemed as if the annoyance +which this man had caused our Beethoven in his life +were to be perpetuated and continually renewed in +the person of his son. Not so, however, did the +master regard the fresh call upon him. After having +done all that kindness could suggest, or money procure, +to relieve his brother's sufferings and cheer his +last days, he took home the orphan child to his heart +with a love and tenderness that could not have been +greater had the boy been his own.</p> + +<p>His first step was to remove him from the care of +his mother, a woman of lax morals and low habits. +In this Beethoven was actuated by the purest and +best motives; but, unfortunately, his zeal went too +far. He forgot that the fact of his sister-in-law's +having been a bad wife did not necessarily imply +that she had lost a mother's heart; and in insisting +upon the total separation between the two, he roused +all the bitterest feelings of a woman's nature, and +prepared much sorrow for himself. The "Queen of +Night," as he nicknamed her, sought redress through +the law, and for four years a suit for the possession +of the lad was pending. In his appeal Beethoven +thus nobly expresses the sentiments which dictated +his conduct:—"My wishes and efforts have no other +aim than that of giving the best possible education +to the boy, his talents justifying the greatest expec<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>tations; +and of fulfilling the trust reposed in my +brotherly love by his father. The stem is now pliable; +but if it be for a time neglected, it will become +crooked, and outgrow the gardener's training hand; +and upright bearing, knowledge, and character will +be irretrievably lost. I know of no duty more sacred +than that of the training and education of a child. +The duty of a guardian can only consist in the appreciation +of what is good, and the adoption of a right +course; and only then does he consult the welfare of +his ward; whereas in obstructing the good he neglects +his duty."</p> + +<p>Misled by the prefix <i>van</i>, his advocate unfortunately +carried the case to the Aristocratic Court; and, as it +went on, Beethoven was called upon to show his right +to this proceeding. Pointing with eloquent emphasis +to his head and heart, the composer declared that in +these lay his nobility; but, however true in the +abstract, the law could not admit this plea, and after +a decision had been given in his favour, the case had +to be re-tried before the ordinary Civil Court. This +occurrence wounded Beethoven more than can be +described; he felt his honour tarnished as a man and +as an artist, and for several months no persuasion +could induce him to show himself in public. In +addition to this, the evidence necessarily brought +forward to strengthen his plea revealed only too +plainly the loose life of his sister-in-law, and such an +<i>exposé</i> of one so nearly related to himself was, for his +pure and reserved nature, the height of misery.</p> + +<p>The Civil Court reversed the decision of the Aris<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span>tocratic, +and the boy was given over to his mother; +while Beethoven, determined to gain his end, brought +the case before the High Court of Appeal, where he +was finally successful. Let the reader imagine the +effect of all this painful publicity, following upon the +annoyances with Maelzel, to a mind constituted like +Beethoven's. No Stylites on his pillar could have +suffered more than did our composer in his loneliness +until the cause was gained. And what return did he +meet with from the object of his solicitude?—The +basest ingratitude.</p> + +<p>About this time he began seriously to think of +visiting London; the Philharmonic Society made +him the most handsome offers; and his own inclinations +prompted him to quit Vienna. He had at all +times cherished the greatest love and admiration for +England and the English nation, our free institutions +harmonizing with his political views; and a commission +coming from this quarter was always welcome +to him, not only on account of the unwonted <i>honoraire</i> +which usually accompanied it, but also because +of the high esteem in which he held the English as +artists and appreciators of art. During the latter +years of his life, therefore, this visit to London was +his favourite scheme, and he intended <i>en route</i> to +pass through the Rhine provinces, that he might +once more see the home and the friends of his boyhood;—but +it was destined never to take place.</p> + +<p>The four years of the lawsuit were almost barren +of creative result, but in the winter of 1819-20 he +began his Mass in D. This colossal work, written<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span> +more for future generations than for us, was originally +intended for the installation of the Archduke Rudolph +as Archbishop of Olmütz; but as the work went on, +our composer grew more and more in love with his +task, which gradually assumed such proportions that +it was not completed till 1823—two years after the +event it was meant to celebrate! A copy of the +Mass, which Beethoven regarded as his most successful +effort, was offered to every court in Europe for the +sum of fifty ducats. It was, however, accepted only +by France, Prussia, Saxony, Russia, and by Prince +Radziwill, Governor of Posen, and a musical society +in Frankfort. The King of Prussia sent to inquire, +through his Ambassador, if the master would not +prefer a decoration to the fifty ducats. Beethoven's +answer was prompt—"Fifty ducats!" If his work +were worthy of a decoration, why not have given it in +addition to the paltry sum asked for it? Louis XVIII. +acted differently; he sent the composer a valuable gold +medal, on one side of which was his bust, and on the +reverse the inscription, "<i>Donné, par le roi, à M. +Beethoven</i>." An application of Beethoven's to Goethe +requesting him to draw the attention of Karl August +to the Mass met with no answer, although Goethe +might have been able, at very trifling inconvenience +to himself, to render material assistance to the master. +His self-love had probably not recovered from the +shock it had received during a walk with Beethoven +on the Bastei at Vienna, when, struck by the profound +respect and deference manifested by every one whom +they encountered, Goethe exclaimed, "I really had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span> +no idea that I was so well known here!" "Oh!" +replies our brusque composer, "the people are bowing +to me, not to you!" This was in reality the case, for +the circumstance occurred in Beethoven's palmy +days, when he was, as Marx observes, a "universally +beloved and popular character, a part of Vienna +itself."</p> + +<p>The circumstance which more than any other casts +a gloom over the master's last days is, that he was +doomed (apparently) to outlive his fame, and to have +the inexpressible mortification of witnessing that +rupture in the musical world which has lasted down +to our days, and will probably never be healed, viz., +the separation of the classical from the so-called +romantic school. Hitherto, the followers of Art had +been united; naturally, individual tastes and predilections +had occasionally predominated—some admiring +one master and some another,—but on the +whole, the lovers of music had been unanimous in +their adherence to the pure and good. With the +appearance of Rossini (that clever scene-painter, as +Beethoven called him), this state of affairs underwent +a complete revolution. His gay, light-hearted melodies, +extravagant roulades, and inexhaustible vivacity +took the public by storm—Beethoven and his immortal +masterpieces were forgotten. And yet, perhaps, +this is only what might have been expected,—the +divine in Art is not for all, nor are all for the +divine. Beethoven might have known, like Goethe, +that he was too profound ever to be popular in a +wide sense. The mass of mankind look upon Art<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span> +simply as a means of relaxation. So, indeed, it +ought to be to all; but never should it stop +there. Art, in its highest and best forms, has power +not only to provide the weary and careworn with +temporary self-forgetfulness, and to dissipate grief, +but—and herein lies its true, its God-given strength—to +renew the energies and brace the mind for +higher and nobler efforts in the future. Whenever +it stops short of this, satisfied with fulfilling its first +and lower function, there is developed a tendency to +abdicate its real position, and to degenerate into the +mere panderer to man's follies, to his vices. Who +could have felt this more keenly than Beethoven? +Not the mere loss of his own popularity was it that +made him turn away so deeply wounded from +grand displays in which snatches of his own works +were performed, along with meaningless arias, and +shallow, noisy overtures of the new Italian school. +So deeply did he take the change to heart, that he +resolved to have his Mass in D and the Ninth Symphony +performed for the first time in Berlin. The +announcement of this intention produced a warm +remonstrance (in the form of an Address) from his +attached little circle of friends; and the master, +touched by the feeling which called out this manifestation, +was induced to forego his determination, +and to consent to the two works being brought out +in Vienna, provided a hall suitable for the purpose +could be obtained.</p> + +<p>This was no easy matter, and the difficulties in +connection with it gave rise to a half-comical little<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span> +incident. His enemies were in power, and demanded +an absurd sum for the use of the building, to which +Beethoven could not be induced to agree. As +neither party would yield, the project seemed on +the point of shipwreck, when the faithful Schindler, +alarmed for the success of the enterprise on which +he had set his heart, persuaded Count Moritz Lichnowski +and the violinist Schuppanzigh to meet him +as if by accident at Beethoven's house, and press +the latter to yield to what was inevitable. The plan +succeeded, and the necessary papers were signed; +but the composer's suspicions were roused, and the +three devoted friends received for their pains the +following autocratic mandates:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p class="center"> +"<span class="smcap">To Count Moritz Lichnowski</span>,— +</p> + +<p>"Duplicity I despise. Visit me no more. There will +be no concert.</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left:23em;" class="smcap">"Beethoven.</span>"<br /> +</p></div> + +<hr style="width: 15%;" /> + +<div class="blockquot"><p class="center"> +"<span class="smcap">To Herr Schuppanzigh</span>,— +</p> + +<p>"Come no more to see me. I shall give no concert.</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left:23em;" class="smcap">"Beethoven.</span>"<br /> +</p></div> + +<hr style="width: 15%;" /> + +<div class="blockquot"><p class="center"> +"<span class="smcap">To Herr Schindler</span>,— +</p> + +<p>"Do not come to me until I send for you. No concert.</p> + +<p> +<span style="margin-left:23em;" class="smcap">"Beethoven.</span>"<br /> +</p></div> + +<p>This did not in the least deter them, however, +from doing what they believed necessary for his +benefit: the concert took place, and was the scene +of a triumph such as few have experienced. The +glorious Jupiter Symphony seemed to act upon the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span> +immense mass of human beings that thronged the +building in every part, like ambrosial nectar; they +became intoxicated with delight, and when the refrain +was caught up by the choir, "<i>Seid umschlungen +Millionen!</i>" a shout of exuberant joy rent the air, +completely drowning the singers and instruments. +But there stood the master in the midst, his face +turned towards the orchestra, absorbed and sunk +within himself as usual,—he heard nothing, saw +nothing. Fräulein Unger, the soprano, turned him +gently round, and then what a sight met his astonished +gaze,—a multitude transported with joy! Almost +all were standing, and the greater number +melted to tears, now for the first time realizing +fully the extent of Beethoven's calamity.—Probably +in all that great assembly the master himself was +the most unmoved. Simply bowing in response to +the ovation, he left the theatre gloomy and despondent, +and took his homeward way in silence.</p> + +<p>Verily, he, like a Greater, knew what was in man. +In eight days from this eventful epoch he was completely +forgotten; a second concert proved an utter +failure, and Rossini's star was again in the ascendant. +Nor did the flighty Viennese public cast another +thought upon our Beethoven until the news of his +death came upon them like the shock of an earthquake, +and they hastened, when it was too late, to +repair the past.</p> + +<p>But if it was painful to meet with ingratitude from +the public, how much harder must it have been for +the master to endure the same from one nearly related +to him! We have said that he adopted his brother's<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span> +orphan child. This nephew, also a Carl Beethoven, +was at his father's death about eight years of age, and +a boy of great talent and promise. The four succeeding +years, during which the lawsuit dragged its weary +length, were extremely detrimental to him, as he +seems to have been tossed about from one person to +another—now with his mother, and again with his +uncle—in a manner very prejudicial to any good +moral development. Events showed him only too +plainly the character of his mother, but nature—stronger +still—urged him to take her part in the +contest so far as he dared; and, incited by her evil +counsels, he soon began secretly to despise his uncle's +authority, and openly to follow a path he had laid +down for himself,—the path of self-will and sensual +indulgence. Expelled from the University where he +was attending the Philosophical Course, his more +than father received the repentant prodigal with open +arms, and placed him in the Polytechnic School to +study for a mercantile career, that he might be under +the supervision of Herr Reisser, Vice-President of the +Institute, and co-guardian with himself over Carl. +In the summer of 1825 the composer wrote no fewer +than twenty-nine letters to his erring nephew, every +one of which exhibits his character in the most beautiful +light. They breathe the cry of a David, "Oh! +Absalom! my son! my son!"—but it is a living +Absalom who has to be lamented, and the most +energetic appeals, the most loving remonstrances are +invoked to move that stony heart. In vain,—Carl +went from bad to worse, and in 1826 the master was +compelled to give up the habit which had been his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span> +only solace for years—that of spending the summer +in the country—and to remain in Vienna to watch +over the young man. Matters soon came to a crisis,—Carl, +urged to pass an examination which he had +long neglected, attempted, in a fit of despair, to put +an end to his own life. Here the law stepped in, and +after he had been treated in an asylum where his +spiritual as well as his bodily condition was cared for, +the miserable youth was restored to his no less +wretched uncle, with orders to quit Vienna within +four-and-twenty hours. Beethoven's old friend, Stephan +Breuning, exerted himself to procure a cadetship +for the lad, and he was at length permitted to join +the regiment of the Baron von Stutterheim, to whom +the composer gratefully dedicated one of his last +quartets. Pending this arrangement the unhappy +uncle and nephew took refuge at Gneixendorf, the +estate of Johann v. Beethoven, who had offered +them a temporary asylum. A few days here, however, +were enough for the composer; irritated by the +unjust reproaches and low taunts of his brother, he +determined at once to return to Vienna, taking his +nephew with him. It was a raw, cold, miserable day +in December; Johann refused to lend his close carriage +to him to whom he owed all his prosperity, and +Beethoven was obliged to perform a long journey in +an open conveyance, with no shelter from the keen +wind and pitiless rain. His health, which had long +been failing, sank under this exposure, and he arrived +in Vienna with a severe attack of inflammation of the +lungs, which ultimately caused his death.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span></p> + +<p>As soon as they arrived at home, Carl was charged +instantly to procure a physician for his uncle, one +Dr. Wawruch; but this loving nephew's whole +thoughts were for his old companions and his old +haunts. He went to play billiards, entrusting his +commission to the tender mercies of a servant of the +establishment, who, in his turn, let the affair pass +entirely from his memory until two days after, when +he happened to be taken ill himself, and to be +carried <i>by chance</i> to the same hospital in which the +doctor practised. At the sight of the physician his +instructions flashed upon his memory, and he besought +him to go at once to the great Beethoven. +Horror-struck, Dr. Wawruch, who was an enthusiastic +admirer of the composer, hastened to his house and +found him lying in the most precarious state, completely +alone and neglected. His unwearied efforts +so far succeeded that Beethoven rallied for a time, +when his first care was—to appoint his worthless +nephew sole heir to all his effects! Soon symptoms of +dropsy showed themselves, he had to be tapped four +times, and it became evident that the master spirit +would soon leave its earthly tabernacle for a better +and more enduring habitation. He was always +resigned and patient, remarking, with a smile, when +a painful operation was being performed, "Better +water from my body than from my pen!"</p> + +<p>The Philharmonic Society sent him a magnificent +edition of Handel, and the greatest pleasure of his +last days consisted in going through the works of his +favourite composer.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span></p> + +<p>His illness, however, lasted some time; in the +meanwhile he was making nothing, and his small +resources began to fail him. The money he had +recently made by his works he had added to the +fund which he sacredly kept for his nephew, and +which no persuasion could induce him to touch; he +had been disappointed in a sum owing to him by the +Russian dilettante, Prince Galitzin; and in great +distress the question arose, what was he to do? to +whom could he turn? He bethought him of the +offer made by the Philharmonic Society in London +to give a concert for his benefit, and after much +hesitation, finally applied to them, through Moscheles +and Sir George Smart, for the fulfilment of the +promise. His countrymen have never been able to +forgive Beethoven for this step, especially as it was +found after his death that he had left about £1,200; +but this, as we said before, he looked upon as his +nephew's property, and would not appropriate any +of it to his own use—therefore, what was he to do? +<i>Forsaken by the whole world in Vienna</i>, was he to +starve? The society rejoiced in the opportunity of +showing the gratitude of England to him who has +placed the whole human race under an eternal obligation, +and immediately despatched £100 to Vienna, +with the intimation that if this were not sufficient +more would be forthcoming.</p> + +<p>Alas! more was not required; a few days after +the gift arrived the great musician breathed his last. +We leave the description of the closing scene to +Schindler:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>—</p> + +<p>"When I went to him on the morning of the 24th +of March, 1827, I found him with distorted face, and +so weak that only by the greatest effort could he +utter a few words. In a short time the physician +entered, and, after looking at him in silence, whispered +to me that Beethoven was advancing with rapid +steps towards dissolution. As we had fortunately +provided for the signing of the will some days previously, +there remained to us but <i>one</i> ardent wish—that +of proving to the world that he died as a true +Christian. The physician, therefore, wrote a few +lines, begging him in the name of all his friends to +allow the holy sacrament to be administered to +him, upon which he answered calmly and collectedly, +'I will.' The physician then left, that I might +arrange for this; and Beethoven said to me, 'I beg +you to write to Schott, and send him the document, +he will require it; write to him in my name, I am too +weak; and tell him that I beg him earnestly to send +the wine he promised. If you have time to-day, +write also to England.' The pastor came about +twelve o'clock, and the holy office was performed +with the greatest solemnity.</p> + +<p>"Beethoven himself now began to believe in his +approaching end; for hardly had the clergyman +gone than he exclaimed, '<i>Plaudite amici, comedia +finita est</i>; have I not always said that it would come +thus?' He then begged me again not to forget +Schott, and to thank the Philharmonic Society once +more for their gift, adding that the society had +cheered his last days, and that even on the verge of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span> +the grave he thanked them and the whole English +nation. At this moment the servant of Herr von +Breuning entered with the little case of wine sent by +Schott. I placed two bottles of Rudesheimer on the +table by his side; he looked at them and said, 'What +a pity!—too late!' These were his last words. In a +few moments he fell into an agony so intense that he +could no longer articulate. Towards evening he lost +consciousness, and became delirious. This lasted till +the evening of the 25th, when visible signs of death +already showed themselves. Notwithstanding, he +lingered till the evening of the 26th, when his spirit +took flight, while without a violent storm of thunder +and lightning seemed to reflect his death struggle in +Nature herself—his best friend."</p> + +<p>The last agonies of the master were soothed by but +<i>one</i> friendly touch, that of Anselm Hüttenbrenner +from Gratz, who had hurried into Vienna to press the +loved hand once more. He was borne to his last +resting-place by an immense concourse, exceeding +twenty thousand; composers, poets, authors, artists, +surrounded his coffin with lighted torches, while the +choristers sang to one of his own melodies the words +of Grillparzer:—</p> + +<p style="margin-left:15em;" > +"Du, dem nie im Leben,<br /> +Ruhestätt ward, und Heerd und Haus,<br /> +Ruhe nun im stillen<br /> +Grabe, nun im Tode aus,"—<br /> +</p> + +<p>Thou, who ne'er in life hadst resting-place, nor hearth, +nor home—rest thee now in the quiet grave—in +death. Amen.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span></p> + +<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_32_32" id="Footnote_32_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32_32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a> Of those last interviews between the two great composers, Dr. +Ferdinand Hiller, the veteran composer and probably the last link +between the "classical" period and our own, has published an interesting +account. He was at the time a pupil of Hummel, whom +he accompanied to Beethoven's residence. His description of the +Master in his helplessness is most touching.</p></div> +</div> + + +<div class="figcenter" ><br /><br /> +<img src="images/b_page_198.jpg" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<h2>THE PIANOFORTE SONATAS +<a name="FNanchor_33_33" id="FNanchor_33_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33_33" class="fnanchor"><span style="font-size:.8em;">[33]</span></a> +</h2> + + +<p>From Domenico Scarlatti down to Frederic Chopin a +succession of cembalists, clavecinists, and pianists rich in +talent, art, and genius, have created a series of select +works, the counterpart of which, in number, variety, and +lasting fame, can probably be displayed by no other branch +of musical literature. Two collections, however, take +precedence of all this wealth of tone-poetry; these are the +Fugues and Preludes (the "Wohl-temperirte Clavier") of +Johann Sebastian Bach, and the Sonatas of Ludwig van +Beethoven. Both works have been so much discussed, +have been analyzed in so many different ways, have had +such multifarious constructions put upon them, have been +praised and extolled from so many different standpoints, +that the conviction must be impressed upon every observer—<i>they +are inexhaustible</i>. This is really the case—they are +an ever-flowing spring of study for the composer and the +pianist, and of enjoyment for the educated hearer. At +present, however, we have only to do with the Sonatas of +Beethoven, and must therefore direct our attention to them.</p> + +<p>Most of the German composers have become great at +the pianoforte. They learned to command the technicalities<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span> +of this compendium of sound, song, harmony, and polyphony, +and it became to them a voice, a second tongue, +a part of themselves. Upon it they could express every +whispering musical emotion, and lend words, we may even +say, to every passing mood which stirred their sensitive +souls; the utterances which Bach, Mozart, and Beethoven +confided to their pianoforte in lonely hours may have +surpassed in beauty (if not in perfection of form) what +they committed to writing. In no other master, however, +does this familiar intercourse between the tone-poet and +his instrument present itself to our minds with such wondrous +clearness as in Beethoven. In his mighty symphonies +he speaks to the crowd like an ideal world's orator, raising +them to the highest emotions of purified humanity; in his +quartets he strives to impart to each instrument an almost +dramatic individuality; but in his Pianoforte Sonatas he +speaks to himself; or, if you will, to the instrument, as to +his dearest friend. He relates his most secret joys and +sorrows, his longing and his love, his hope and his despair. +An entire, full, real, inner human life is revealed to us—sound, +energetic (<i>kernig</i>), manly. Whether he gives himself +up to passionate outpourings or to melancholy laments, +whether he jests, plays, dreams, laughs, or weeps; he continues +always simple and true. We find no straining after +effect, no oddity, no coquettishness, no sentimentality; +the greatest depth of thought appears unadorned and +unpretentious. There are a few great men who can express +the noblest sentiments without a wish that they should be +heard, and who yet have no cause to dread listeners for +the most trifling thing that they have uttered; and such is +Beethoven in his Pianoforte Sonatas.</p> + +<p>We frequently encounter the impression that Beethoven, +in contradistinction to the other loftiest tone-poets, is<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span> +specially the singer of melancholy and sorrow—of the most +intense, passionate soul-suffering. Nothing can be less +true. Certainly he depicted the night side of the human +mind as no one had done before him. But when we view +his compositions as a whole, there speaks to us out of them +all—even the last, so deeply furrowed—a predominating +vigorous cheerfulness, a sympathetic joy, a loving meditativeness, +an earnest, resolute, fresh life. How often he +sinks into blissful dreams, or gives himself up to childlike +merriment! A mature man, yet seized at times by the +extravagance of youth, while the battle of life makes him +earnest, sometimes gloomy, but never faint-hearted or +misanthropic (<i>weltschmerzlich</i>). "He was a <i>man</i>, take him +for all in all;" we have not looked upon his like.</p> + +<p>The special application of what has been said to the +separate Sonatas would lead to nothing. Although it is +indisputable that the emotions and frames of mind portrayed +in them are almost infinite in compass, yet it would +be proportionally difficult to express the same with regard +to each single piece in words, the very definiteness of +which would conclusively prove their inadequacy to the +task. It is no empty phrase, however often it may have +been repeated, that Music begins where Language ends,—of +course with the proviso that the former content herself +with the sovereignty in the domain assigned to her. How +many tone-poems should we be compelled to characterize +by words not only analogous to each other, but having the +very same purport, even though a Goethe's wealth of +language were at our command! and what a dissimilarity +in the tone-forms would notwithstanding be apparent even +to the most uninitiated listener!</p> + +<p>Far more important than the invention of characteristic +expressions is it, for those who would devote themselves to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span> +the study of Beethoven's pianoforte sonatas, to get a clear +idea of them in <i>outline</i> as well as in <i>detail</i>. The comprehension +of them is facilitated by this, with the natural result of +a higher intellectual enjoyment. Is it not elevating to see +how the most daring fancy, after having been nourished by +deep thought, becomes the willing, submissive subject of +the all-regulating mind? Beethoven never lost the reins, +even in what seem the wildest flights of his genius: his +Pegasus may spring up into highest space—he is able to +direct and guide it.</p> + +<p>No earnest, conscientious teacher should neglect to explain +to those entrusted to him the essential nature of the +laws which for centuries, by a kind of natural necessity, +have developed themselves in the forms of instrumental +music. They are so simple that their principal features may +be made clear to the most childish comprehension, and +every step in advance will bring with it a deeper insight. +That Beethoven, in the closest relation to his great predecessors, +submitted to these laws, makes his appearance +doubly great: he did not come to destroy, but to fulfil +the law.</p> + +<p>O that our art, the most spiritual of all, were not bound +by so many and such rigorous ties to matter! O that +Beethoven's sonatas were within the reach of all educated +minds, like the lyrics of our great poets! But not this +alone does Nature deny to our art; she withholds from the +greater number of those even who are striving as musicians +and as pianists the full enjoyment of these lofty works, at +least in their totality. They make demands upon the +executants which are not easily met. Here and there we +find the necessary talent. Were it but accompanied by the +indispensable earnestness and diligence!</p> + +<p>Beethoven's pianoforte music demands (apart from the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span> +consideration of the extraordinarily difficult works) sound +and solid execution. The first conditions of this are also +the rarest, viz., a powerful and yet gentle touch, with the +greatest possible independence of finger. Beethoven never +writes difficulties merely to win laurels for those executants +who shall overcome them, but neither is he deterred by any +technical inconvenience, if it be necessary to give firm and +clear expression to an idea. Thus we meet, in works +reckoned amongst the easiest, with passages which presuppose +a pretty high degree of technical skill; and since a +pure style properly demands that there shall be at least the +<i>appearance</i> of ease on the part of the performer,—with +compositions of the intellectual depth of Beethoven's this +is an indispensable qualification. Therefore it is not +advisable to take or place the sonatas of our master in hands +which are not educated for their reception. When that +degree of progress has been attained which will insure the +mastery of the technical difficulties, the enjoyment and +advantage to be derived from their thorough study will be +doubled, and the effort to grasp them intellectually unhindered.</p> + +<p>The most essential figures which Beethoven employs are +built upon the scale and the arpeggio. They belong, therefore, +to that style which is specially designated the Clementi-Cramer +school. The studies of these noble representatives +of pure pianoforte playing will always be the best foundation +for the performance of Beethoven's works, and the practice +of them ought to accompany without intermission the study +of the master. Happily, the rich productions of Beethoven's +imagination offer fruits for every epoch of life and of—pianoforte-playing. +We can reward the diligence of the +studious child by allowing him to play the two sonatinas +published after the master's death, which sound to us rather<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span> +as if they had been written <i>for</i> than <i>by</i> a beginner. But we +should carefully guard against giving to immature young +minds pieces which, though easy in a technical point of +view (and this, after all, is sometimes only <i>apparent</i>), require +a power of conception and of performance far beyond the +demands made upon the fingers. Who, for example, with +any experience in musical life, does not remember having +heard the Sonata Pathétique played with a <i>naïveté</i> of style +which might prove the narrowness of the boundary line +between the sublime and the ridiculous? And similar misconceptions +are met with every day.</p> + +<p>We give below a list of the sonatas in the order in which +they ought to be studied, arranged with a view to the +demands made upon the heart and mind, as well as upon +the hand and finger of the performer. It is evident, however, +that this cannot be done with mathematical precision, +and that individual views and capability must, after all, +decide; since <i>difficulty</i> and <i>ease</i> are but relative terms, and +depend in each case upon other and pre-existing conditions. +If, however, our attempt succeed so far as to render the +selection easier to the student, and prevent his making any +great mistakes, we shall not consider our trouble thrown +away.</p> + +<p><i>May Beethoven speedily find a home in every house—in +every heart!</i></p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span></p> + +<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_33_33" id="Footnote_33_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33_33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a> From an edition of the Sonatas published in Breslau.</p></div> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" ><br /><br /> +<img src="images/b_page_203.jpg" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>CLASSIFICATION OF BEETHOVEN'S PIANOFORTE SONATAS</h2> + +<p style="margin-left:15em;"> +1. Op. 49, No. 2, in G major.<br /> +2. Op. 49, No. 1, in G minor.<br /> +3. Op. 14, No. 2, in G major.<br /> +4. Op. 14, No. 1, in E major.<br /> +5. Op. 79, in G major.<br /> +6. Op. 2, No. 1, in F minor.<br /> +7. Op. 10, No. 1, in C minor.<br /> +8. Op. 10, No. 2, in F major.<br /> +9. Op. 10, No. 3, in D major.<br /> +10. Op. 13, in C minor (<i>Pathétique</i>).<br /> +11. Op. 22, in B flat major.<br /> +12. Op. 28, in D major (<i>Pastorale</i>).<br /> +13. Op. 2, No. 2, in A major.<br /> +14. Op. 2, No. 3, in C major.<br /> +15. Op. 78, in F sharp major.<br /> +16. Op. 7, in E flat major.<br /> +17. Op. 26, in A flat major.<br /> +18. Op. 31, No. 3, in E flat major.<br /> +19. Op. 31, No. 1, in G major.<br /> +20. Op. 90, in E minor.<br /> +21. Op. 54, in F major.<br /> +22. Op. 27, No. 2, in C sharp minor (<i>Moonlight</i>).<br /> +23. Op. 31, No. 2, in D minor.<br /> +24. Op. 53, in C major.<br /> +25. Op. 27, No. 1, in E flat major.<br /> +26. Op. 81, in E flat major (<i>Les Adieux</i>).<br /> +27. Op. 57, in F minor (<i>Appassionata</i>).<br /> +28. Op. 110, in A flat major.<br /> +29, Op. 109, in E major.<br /> +30. Op. 101, in A major.<br /> +31. Op. 111, in C minor.<br /> +32. Op. 106, in B flat major (<i>The Giant</i>).<br /> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span></p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>LIST OF BEETHOVEN'S WORKS</h2> + +<h4><i>Compiled from</i> <span class="smcap">Marx</span> <i>and</i> <span class="smcap">Thayer</span>.</h4> + + +<h3>I.—<span class="smcap">Compositions designated as</span> <i>Opus</i>.</h3> + +<p>1. <i>Three Trios</i> for pianoforte, violin, and violoncello, in E +flat, G major, and C minor; ded. to Prince Lichnowski; +composed 1791-92.</p> + +<p>2. <i>Three Sonatas</i> for piano, in F minor, A major, and C +major; ded. to Joseph Haydn; pub. 1796.</p> + +<p>3. <i>Trio</i> for violin, viola, and violoncello, in E flat; composed +in Bonn in 1792.</p> + +<p>4. <i>Quintet</i> for two violins, two violas, and violoncello, in +E flat (from the octet for wind instruments, Op. 103); pub. +1797.</p> + +<p>5. <i>Two Sonatas</i> for piano and violoncello, in F major and +G minor; ded. to Frederic William II. of Prussia; composed +in Berlin in 1796.</p> + +<p>6. <i>Sonata</i> for piano, for four hands, in D major; pub. +1796-97.</p> + +<p>7. <i>Sonata</i> for piano, in E flat; ded. to the Countess Babette +von Keglevics; pub. 1797.</p> + +<p>8. <i>Serenade</i> for violin, viola, and violoncello, in D major; +pub. 1797.</p> + +<p>9. <i>Three Trios</i> for violin, viola, and violoncello, in G +Major, D major, and C minor; ded. to the Count von +Browne; pub. 1798.</p> + +<p>10. <i>Three Sonatas</i> for piano, in C minor, F major, and D +major; ded. to the Countess von Browne; pub. 1798.</p> + +<p>11. <i>Trio</i> for piano, clarionet (or V.), and violoncello, in +B flat; ded. to the Countess von Thun; pub. 1798.</p> + +<p>12. <i>Three Sonatas</i> for piano and violin, in D major, A +major, and E flat major; ded. to F.A. Salieri; pub. +1798-99.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span></p> + +<p>13. <i>Sonata Pathétique</i> for piano, in C minor; ded. to +Prince Lichnowski; pub. 1799.</p> + +<p>14. <i>Two Sonatas</i> for piano, in E major and G major; +ded. to the Baroness Braun; pub. 1799.</p> + +<p>15. <i>First Concerto</i> for piano and orchestra, in C major; +ded. to the Princess Odescalchi, <i>née</i> Countess von Keglevics; +composed 1795.</p> + +<p>16. <i>Quintet</i> for piano, clarionet, oboe, bassoon, and horn, +in E flat major; ded. to the Prince von Schwarzenberg; +performed 1798.</p> + +<p>17. <i>Sonata</i> for piano and horn in F major; ded. to the +Baroness Braun; composed 1800.</p> + +<p>18. <i>Six Quartets</i> for two violins, viola, and violoncello, in +F major, G major, D major, C minor, A major, and B flat +major; ded. to Prince Lobkowitz; pub. 1800-1801.</p> + +<p>19. <i>Second Concerto</i> for piano and orchestra, in B flat +major; ded. to M. von Nickelsberg; composed 1798.</p> + +<p>20. <i>Grand Septet</i> for violin, viola, violoncello, horn, +clarionet, bassoon, and double-bass, in E flat; performed 1800.</p> + +<p>21. <i>First Symphony</i> for orchestra, in C major; ded. to +the Baron van Swieten; performed 1800.</p> + +<p>22. <i>Grand Sonata</i> for piano, in B flat; ded. to the Count +von Browne; composed 1800.</p> + +<p>23. <i>Sonata</i> for piano and violin, in A minor; ded. to +Count Moritz von Fries; pub. 1801.</p> + +<p>24. <i>Sonata</i> for piano and violin, in F major; ded. to +Count Moritz von Fries; pub. 1801 (originally together +with Op. 23).</p> + +<p>25. <i>Serenade</i> for flute, violin, and viola, in D major; pub. +1802.</p> + +<p>26. <i>Sonata</i> for piano, in A flat; ded. to Prince Lichnowski; +composed 1801.</p> + +<p>27. <i>Two Sonatas</i>, quasi Fantasia, for piano, No. 1 in E +flat major; ded. to the Princess Liechtenstein; No. 2 in +C sharp minor; ded. to the Countess Julia Guicciardi; +composed 1801 (?).</p> + +<p>28. <i>Sonata</i> for piano, in D major; ded. to M. von Sonnenfels; +composed 1801.</p> + +<p>29. <i>Quintet</i> for two violins, two violas, and violoncello, in +C major; ded. to Count von Fries; composed 1801.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span></p> + +<p>30. <i>Three Sonatas</i> for piano and violin, in A major, C +minor, and G major; ded. to the Emperor Alexander I. of +Russia; composed 1802.</p> + +<p>31. <i>Three Sonatas</i> for piano, in G major, D minor, and E +flat major; composed 1802 (?).</p> + +<p>32. "<i>To Hope</i>," words from the "<i>Urania</i>" of Tiedge; +pub. 1805 (first setting, <i>see</i> Op. 94).</p> + +<p>33. <i>Bagatelles</i> for piano; composed 1782.</p> + +<p>34. <i>Six Variations</i> for piano, in F major, on an original +theme; ded. to the Princess Odescalchi; composed in +1802 (?).</p> + +<p>35. <i>Fifteen Variations</i>, with a <i>Fugue</i>; for piano, on a +theme from "<i>Prometheus</i>," ded. to Count Moritz Lichnowski; +composed 1802.</p> + +<p>36. <i>Second Symphony</i> for orchestra, in D major; ded. to +Prince Lichnowski; composed 1802.</p> + +<p>37. <i>Third Concerto</i> for piano and orchestra, in C minor; +ded. to Prince Louis Ferdinand of Prussia; composed +1800.</p> + +<p>38. <i>Trio</i> for piano, clarionet (or V.), and violoncello (from +the Septet, Op. 20); published 1805.</p> + +<p>39. <i>Two Preludes</i> through all the major and minor keys, +for piano or organ; composed 1789.</p> + +<p>40. <i>Romance</i> for violin and orchestra, in G major; composed +1802 (?).</p> + +<p>41. <i>Serenade</i> for piano and flute (or V.), in D major (from +Op. 25); pub. 1803.</p> + +<p>42. <i>Notturno</i> for piano and violoncello, in D major (from +Op. 8); pub. 1804.</p> + +<p>43. <i>Ballet</i>: "<i>The Men of Prometheus</i>;" composed +1800.</p> + +<p>44. <i>Fourteen Variations</i> for piano, violin, and violoncello, +on an original theme; composed 1802 (?).</p> + +<p>45. <i>Three Marches</i> for piano, for four hands, in C major, +E flat major, and D major; ded. to the Princess Esterhazy; +composed 1802 (? 1801).</p> + +<p>46. <i>Adelaïde</i>: words by Matthison; composed 1796.</p> + +<p>47. <i>Sonata</i> for piano and violin, in A major; ded. to the +violinist Rudolph Kreutzer; composed 1803.</p> + +<p>48. <i>Six Spiritual Songs</i>, by Gellert; pub. 1803.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span></p> + +<p>49. <i>Two Easy Sonatas</i> for piano, in G minor and G +major; composed 1802 (?).</p> + +<p>50. <i>Romance</i> for violin and orchestra, in F major; composed +in 1802 (?).</p> + +<p>51. <i>Two Rondos</i> for piano: No. 1 in C major; pub. +1798 (?); No. 2 in G major: ded. to the Countess Henriette +von Lichnowski; pub. 1802.</p> + +<p>52. <i>Eight Songs</i>: words by Claudius, Sophie von Mereau, +Bürger, Goethe, and Lessing; partly composed in Bonn before +1792.</p> + +<p>53. <i>Grand Sonata</i> for piano, in C major; ded. to Count +Waldstein; composed in 1803 (?).</p> + +<p>54. <i>Sonata</i> for piano, in F major; composed 1803 (?).</p> + +<p>55. <i>Third Symphony</i> (Eroica) for orchestra, in E flat; +ded. to Prince Lobkowitz; composed 1803-4.</p> + +<p>56. <i>Triple Concerto</i> for piano, violin, and violoncello, with +orchestra, in C major; composed 1804-5.</p> + +<p>57. <i>Grand Sonata</i> for piano, in F minor; ded. to the +Count von Brunswick; composed 1804.</p> + +<p>58. <i>Fourth Concerto</i> for piano and orchestra, in G major; +ded. to the Archduke Rudolph; composed 1806 (?).</p> + +<p>59. <i>Three Quartets</i> for two violins, viola, and violoncello, +in F major, E minor, and C major; ded. to Prince Rasoumowski; +composed 1806.</p> + +<p>60. <i>Fourth Symphony</i> for orchestra, in B flat; ded. to +Count Oppersdorf; composed 1806.</p> + +<p>61. <i>Concerto</i> for violin and orchestra, in D major; ded. +to Stephan von Breuning; composed 1806.</p> + +<p>62. <i>Overture</i>: "<i>Coriolanus</i>," in C minor; ded. to the +dramatist Heinrich von Collin; composed 1807.</p> + +<p>63. <i>Sonata</i> for piano, violin, and violoncello (from the +Octet, Op. 103); pub. 1807.</p> + +<p>64. <i>Sonata</i> for piano, violin, and violoncello (from the +Trio, Op. 3); pub. 1807.</p> + +<p>65. <i>Scena and Aria</i>: "<i>Ah, perfido!</i>" for soprano voice +and orchestra; ded. to the Countess Clari; composed +1796.</p> + +<p>66. <i>Twelve Variations</i> for piano and violoncello, in F +major, on the theme, "<i>Ein Mädchen oder Weibchen</i>," from +Mozart's "<i>Zauberflöte</i>;" pub. 1798.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span></p> + +<p>67. <i>Fifth Symphony</i> for orchestra, in C minor; ded. to +Prince Lobkowitz and Count Rasoumowski; composed +1808 (?).</p> + +<p>68. <i>Sixth Symphony</i> (<i>Pastorale</i>) for orchestra, in F major; +ded. to Prince Lobkowitz and Count Rasoumowski; composed +1808 (?).</p> + +<p>69. <i>Sonata</i> for piano and violoncello, in A major; ded. +to Baron von Gleichenstein; pub. 1809.</p> + +<p>70. <i>Two Trios</i> for piano, violin, and violoncello, in D +major and E flat major; ded. to the Countess Marie Erdödy; +composed 1808.</p> + +<p>71. <i>Sextet</i> for two clarionets, two flutes, and two bassoons; +performed 1804-5.</p> + +<p>72. "<i>Fidelio</i>" ("<i>Leonora</i>"), opera in two acts; composed +1804-5.</p> + +<p>73. <i>Fifth Concerto</i> for piano and orchestra, in E flat; ded. +to the Archduke Rudolph; composed 1809.</p> + +<p>74. <i>Quartet</i> (tenth) for two violins, viola, and violoncello, +in E flat; ded. to Prince Lobkowitz; composed 1809.</p> + +<p>75. <i>Six Songs</i>: words by Goethe and Reissig; ded. to +the Princess Kinsky; composed 1810.</p> + +<p>76. <i>Variations</i> for piano, in D major, on an original (?) +theme, afterwards employed as the "<i>Turkish March</i>" in +the "<i>Ruins of Athens</i>;" ded. to his friend Oliva; pub. +1810.</p> + +<p>77. <i>Fantasia</i> for piano, in G minor; ded. to the Count +von Brunswick; composed 1809.</p> + +<p>78. <i>Sonata</i> for piano, in F sharp major; ded. to the +Countess von Brunswick; composed 1809.</p> + +<p>79. <i>Sonatina</i> for piano, in G major; pub. 1810.</p> + +<p>80. <i>Fantasia</i> for piano, orchestra, and chorus, in C minor; +words—"<i>Schmeichelnd hold und lieblich klingen</i>"—by Kuffner; +ded. to Maximilian Joseph of Bavaria; performed 1808.</p> + +<p>81<i>a</i>. <i>Sonata</i> for piano—"<i>Les Adieux</i>,"—in E flat; ded. +to the Archduke Rudolph; composed 1809.</p> + +<p>81<i>b</i>. <i>Sextet</i> for two violins, viola, violoncello, and two +horns (<i>obbligato</i>), in E flat; pub. 1810.</p> + +<p>82. <i>Four Ariettas</i> and a <i>Duet</i>, with pianoforte accompaniment; +words of Nos. 2, 3, and 5 by Metastasio; pub. +1811.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span></p> + +<p>83. <i>Three Songs</i>; words by Goethe; ded. to the Princess +Kinsky; composed 1810.</p> + +<p>84. <i>Overture and incidental Music to "Egmont;"</i> composed +1809-10.</p> + +<p>85. "<i>The Mount of Olives</i>," an oratorio; text by Franz +Xaver Huber; composed 1800 (?).</p> + +<p>86. <i>First Mass</i>, for four voices and orchestra, in C major; +ded. to Prince Esterhazy; composed 1807.</p> + +<p>87. <i>Trio</i> for wind instruments, in C major; performed +1797.</p> + +<p>88. "<i>Das Glück der Freundschaft</i>," for voice and piano; +pub. 1803.</p> + +<p>89. <i>Polonaise</i> for piano, in C major; ded. to the Empress +Elisabetha Alexiewna, of Russia; composed 1814.</p> + +<p>90. <i>Sonata</i> for piano, in E minor; ded. to Count Moritz +Lichnowski; composed 1814.</p> + +<p>91. "<i>The Battle of Vittoria</i>," for orchestra; ded. to the +Prince Regent of England; composed 1813.</p> + +<p>92. <i>Seventh Symphony</i> for orchestra, in A major; ded. to +Count Fries; composed 1812.</p> + +<p>93. <i>Eighth Symphony</i> for orchestra, in F major; composed +1812.</p> + +<p>94. "<i>To Hope</i>;" words from the "<i>Urania</i>" of Tiegde +(second setting, <i>see</i> Op. 32); composed 1816.</p> + +<p>95. <i>Quartet</i> for two violins, viola, and violoncello, in F +minor; ded. to Secretary Zmeskall; composed 1810.</p> + +<p>96. <i>Sonata</i> for piano and violin, in G major; ded. to the +Archduke Rudolph; composed 1810.</p> + +<p>97. <i>Trio</i> for piano, violin, and violoncello, in B flat; ded. +to the Archduke Rudolph; composed 1811.</p> + +<p>98. "<i>An die ferne Geliebte</i>," a <i>Liederkreis</i>; words by +Jeitteles; ded. to Prince Lobkowitz; composed 1816.</p> + +<p>99. "<i>Der Mann von Wort</i>," for voice and piano; words +by Kleinschmid; pub. 1815.</p> + +<p>100. "<i>Merkenstein</i>," for one or two voices and piano; +words by Rupprecht; composed 1814.</p> + +<p>101. <i>Sonata</i> for piano, in A major; ded. to the Baroness +Erdmann; composed 1815.</p> + +<p>101. <i>Two Sonatas</i> for piano and violoncello, in C major +and D major; ded. to the Countess Erdödy; composed 1815.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span></p> + +<p>103. <i>Octet</i> for wind instruments, in E flat major; composed +in Bonn before 1792.</p> + +<p>104. <i>Quintet</i> for two violins, two violas, and violoncello, +in C minor (from the Trio No. 3 of Op. 1); pub. 1819.</p> + +<p>105. <i>Six Thèmes variés</i> for piano, with violin <i>ad libitum</i>; +composed for George Thomson, 1818-19.</p> + +<p>106. <i>Sonata</i> for piano, in B flat; ded. to the Archduke +Rudolph; composed 1818.</p> + +<p>107. <i>Ten Thèmes variés russes, écossais, tyroliens</i>, for piano, +with violin <i>ad libitum</i>; composed for George Thomson, +1818-20.</p> + +<p>108. <i>Twenty-five Scotch Melodies</i> for one or two voices and +chorus (<i>obbligato</i>), violin, viola, and 'cello.</p> + +<p>109. <i>Sonata</i> for piano, in E major; ded. to Fräulein +Brentano; composed 1821 (?).</p> + +<p>110. <i>Sonata</i> for piano, in A flat major; composed 1821.</p> + +<p>111. <i>Sonata</i> for piano, in C minor; ded. to the Archduke +Rudolph; composed 1822.</p> + +<p>112. "<i>Meeresstille und glückliche Fahrt</i>," for four voices +and orchestra; ded. to "the Author of the Poem, the immortal +Goethe;" composed 1815.</p> + +<p>113. <i>Overture</i>: "<i>The Ruins of Athens</i>," composed +1811-12.</p> + +<p>114. <i>Marches and Choruses</i> from "<i>The Ruins of +Athens</i>."</p> + +<p>115. <i>Overture</i>: "<i>Namensfeier</i>," in C major; ded. to +Prince Radziwill; composed 1814.</p> + +<p>116. <i>Terzetto</i> for soprano, tenor, and bass, with orchestral +accompaniment; composed 1801.</p> + +<p>117. <i>Overture and Choruses</i>: "<i>King Stephen</i>;" performed +1812.</p> + +<p>118. <i>Elegy in memory of the Baroness Pasqualati</i>: "<i>Sanft +wie du lebtest hast du vollendet</i>;" ded. to the Baron Pasqualati; +composed 1814.</p> + +<p>119. <i>Twelve Bagatelles</i> for piano; composed 1820-22.</p> + +<p>120. <i>Thirty-three Variations</i> on a waltz by Diabelli; ded. +to Madame Brentano; composed 1823.</p> + +<p>121<i>a</i>. <i>Adagio, Variations, and Rondo</i>, for piano, violin, and +violoncello, in G major; theme, "<i>Ich bin der Schneider +Kakadu</i>;" pub. 1824.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span></p> + +<p>121<i>b</i>. "<i>Opferlied</i>" for solo, chorus, and orchestra; words +by Matthison; composed 1822.</p> + +<p>122. "<i>In allen guten Stunden</i>," for solo and chorus, with +two clarionets, two horns, and two bassoons, words by +Goethe; composed 1822.</p> + +<p>123. <i>Missa Solemnis</i> for four voices, chorus, and orchestra, +in D major; ded. to the Archduke Rudolph; composed +1818-1822.</p> + +<p>124. <i>Overture</i>: "<i>Weihe des Hauses</i>," in C major; ded. +to Prince Galitzin; composed 1822.</p> + +<p>125. <i>Ninth Symphony</i> (<i>Jupiter</i>), with final chorus on +Schiller's "<i>Ode to Joy</i>," for orchestra, four voices, and +chorus, in D minor; ded. to Frederick William III. of +Prussia; composed 1822-3.</p> + +<p>126 <i>Six Bagatelles</i> for piano; composed about 1821.</p> + +<p>127. <i>Quartet</i> for two violins, viola, and violoncello, in +E flat; ded. to Prince Galitzin; composed 1824.</p> + +<p>128. "<i>The Kiss</i>;" Arietta for voice and piano; composed +1822.</p> + +<p>129. <i>Rondo capriccioso</i> in G major.</p> + +<p>130. <i>Quartet</i> for two violins, viola, and violoncello, in +B flat; ded. to Prince Galitzin; composed 1825.</p> + +<p>131. <i>Quartet</i> fr two violins, viola, and violoncello, in C +sharp minor; ded. to the Baron von Stutterheim; composed +1826.</p> + +<p>132. <i>Quartet</i> for two violins, viola, and violoncello, in A +minor; ded. to Prince Galitzin; composed 1825.</p> + +<p>133. <i>Grand Fugue</i> for two violins, viola, and violoncello, +in B flat; ded. to the Cardinal Archduke Rudolph; composed +1825.</p> + +<p>134. <i>Grand Fugue</i> (Op. 133 arranged for piano for +four hands).</p> + +<p>135. <i>Quartet</i> (the sixteenth) for two violins, viola, and +'cello, in F major; ded. to Herrn Wolfmeier; composed +1826.</p> + +<p>136. "<i>Der Glorreiche Augenblick</i>," cantata for four voices +and orchestra; text by Dr. Weissenbach; ded. to Franz I., +Emperor of Austria, Nicholas I., Emperor of Russia, and +Frederick William III., King of Prussia; composed +1814.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span></p> + +<p>137. <i>Fugue</i> for two violins, two violas, and 'cello, in D +major; composed 1817.</p> + +<p>138. <i>Ouverture caractérisstique</i>; "<i>Leonora</i>" No. 1, in C +major.</p> + + +<h3>II. <span class="smcap">Compositions designated simply by</span> <i>Numbers</i>.</h3> + +<p>No. 1<i>a</i>. <i>Twelve Variations</i> for piano and violin, in F major; +Theme: "<i>Se vuol ballare</i>," from Mozart's "<i>Figaro</i>;" ded. +to Eleanore von Breuning; pub. 1793.</p> + +<p>1<i>b</i>. <i>Thirteen Variations</i> for piano, in A major; Theme: +"<i>Es war einmal ein alter Mann</i>;" pub. 1794.</p> + +<p>2. <i>Nine Variations</i> for piano, in A major; Theme: +"<i>Quant è più bello</i>;" pub. 1796.</p> + +<p>3<i>a</i>. <i>Six Variations</i> for piano; Theme: "<i>Nel cor più non +mi sento</i>;" composed 1795.</p> + +<p>3<i>b</i>. <i>Two Minuets</i> for piano, for four hands.</p> + +<p>4. <i>Twelve Variations</i> for piano, in C major; Theme: +"<i>Menuet à la Vigano</i>;" pub. 1796.</p> + +<p>5<i>a</i>. <i>Twelve Variations</i> for piano, in A major; Theme +from the ballet of the "<i>Waldmädchen</i>;" pub. 1797.</p> + +<p>5<i>b</i>. <i>Twelve Variations</i> for piano and violoncello, in G +major; Theme: "<i>See, the Conquering Hero comes!</i>" pub. 1804.</p> + +<p>6. <i>Twelve Variations</i> for piano and violoncello, in F +major. (<i>See</i> Op. 66.)</p> + +<p>7. <i>Eight Variations</i> for piano in C major; Theme from +Grétry's "<i>Richard Cœur de Lion</i>;" pub. 1798.</p> + +<p>8. <i>Ten Variations</i> for piano in B flat major; Theme: +"<i>La stessa, la stessissima</i>;" pub. 1799.</p> + +<p>9. <i>Seven Variations</i> for piano, in F major; Theme: +"<i>Kind willst du ruhig schlafen</i>;" pub. 1799.</p> + +<p>10<i>a</i>. <i>Eight Variations</i> for piano, in F major; Theme: +"<i>Tändeln and Scherzen</i>;" composed 1799.</p> + +<p>10<i>b</i>. <i>Seven Variations</i> for piano and violoncello, in E +flat; Theme from the "<i>Magic Flute</i>;" composed 1801 (?).</p> + +<p>11. <i>Six very easy Variations</i> on an original Theme; +composed 1801.</p> + +<p>12. <i>Six easy Variations</i> for piano or harp, in F major; +Theme: "<i>Air suisse</i>;" pub. 1799 (?).</p> + +<p>13. <i>Twenty-four Variations</i> for piano, in D major, on a +Theme by Righini; composed about 1790.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span></p> + +<p>14-23. <i>Wanting.</i></p> + +<p>24. "<i>Der Wachtelschlag</i>," for voice and piano; words by +Sauter; pub. 1804.</p> + +<p>25. <i>Seven Variations</i> for piano, in C major; Theme: +"<i>God save the King</i>;" pub. 1804.</p> + +<p>26. <i>Five Variations</i> (favourite) for piano, in D major; +Theme: "<i>Rule, Britannia</i>;" pub. 1804.</p> + +<p>27. <i>Six Variations</i> for piano, for four hands, in D major, +on an original Theme; composed 1800.</p> + +<p>28. <i>Minuet</i> for piano.</p> + +<p>29. <i>Prelude</i> for piano, in F minor; pub. 1805.</p> + +<p>30, 31. <i>Wanting.</i></p> + +<p>32. "<i>To Hope</i>," by Tiedge (<i>see</i> Op. 94).</p> + +<p>33, 34. <i>Wanting.</i></p> + +<p>35. <i>Andante</i> for piano in F major (originally in the Sonata, +Op. 53), composed 1803 (?).</p> + +<p>36. <i>Thirty-two Variations</i> for piano, in C minor, on an +original Theme; pub. 1807.</p> + +<p>37. <i>Wanting.</i></p> + +<p>38. "<i>Die Sehnsucht</i>:" four Melodies for voice and piano; +text by Goethe; pub. 1810.</p> + + +<h3>III. <span class="smcap">Compositions designated by</span> <i>Letters</i>.</h3> + +<h4>A. INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC</h4> + +<p><i>a.</i> <i>Trio</i> for piano, violin, and violoncello (in one movement), +in B flat; ded. to "my little friend, Maximiliana +Brentano, for her encouragement in pianoforte playing;" +composed 1812.</p> + +<p><i>b.</i> <i>Rondo</i> for piano and violin, in G major; pub. 1800.</p> + +<p><i>c.</i> <i>Andante</i> for piano, in G.</p> + +<p><i>d.</i> <i>Sonata</i> for piano, in C major (<i>incomplete</i>); composed +1796.</p> + +<p><i>e.</i> <i>Two easy Sonatinas</i> for piano, in G major and F major; +composed in Bonn.</p> + +<p><i>f.</i> <i>Three Sonatas</i> for piano, in E flat major, F minor, and +D major; ded. to the Elector Max. Friedrich; composed +at the age of eleven.</p> + +<p><i>g.</i> <i>Rondo</i> for piano, in A major; pub. 1784.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span></p> + +<p><i>h.</i> <i>Andante</i> on the text: "<i>Oh Hoffnung, du stählst die +Herzen</i>" (Ex. for the Archduke Rudolph).</p> + +<p><i>i.</i> <i>Favourite March</i> of the Emperor Alexander.</p> + +<p><i>k.</i> <i>Eight Variations</i> for piano in B flat; Theme: "<i>Ich +habe ein kleines Hüttchen nur</i>."</p> + +<p><i>l.</i> <i>Variations</i> for piano, on a March by Dressler; composed +at the age of ten.</p> + +<p><i>m.</i> <i>Variations</i> for piano, for four hands, on an original +theme.</p> + +<p><i>n.</i> <i>Variations</i> for piano, for four hands, in A major.</p> + +<p><i>o.</i> <i>Triumphal March for orchestra</i>, in C major; performed +1813.</p> + +<p><i>p.</i> <i>Second and Third Overtures to "Leonora"</i> ("<i>Fidelio</i>"), +in C major.</p> + +<p><i>q.</i> <i>Overture to "Fidelio"</i> ("<i>Leonora</i>" No. 4), in E major.</p> + +<p><i>r.</i> <i>Triumphal March</i> for orchestra, in G major.</p> + +<p><i>s.</i> <i>Three Duos</i> for clarionet and bassoon, in C major, +F major, and B flat; composed about 1800.</p> + +<p><i>t.</i> <i>Minuet</i> for piano (from the Septet, Op. 20).</p> + +<p><i>u.</i> <i>Quintet</i> (MS.), for two violins, two violas, and violoncello, +in F major.</p> + + +<h4>B. DANCE MUSIC</h4> + +<p> +Twelve Contre danses.<br /> +Twelve Minuets for orchestra.<br /> +Six Minuets for piano.<br /> +Twelve <i>Danses Allemandes</i> for two violins and bass.<br /> +Seven Country Dances for piano.<br /> +Six Country Dances for piano.<br /> +Twelve <i>Ecossaises</i> for piano.<br /> +Six <i>Allemandes</i> for piano and violin.<br /> +Twelve Waltzes with Trios for orchestra.<br /> +Six Waltzes for two violins and bass.<br /> +Two Minuets for piano, for four hands.<br /> +Six Country Dances for piano.<br /> +Two Favourite Waltzes for piano, in B flat major and E minor.<br /> +</p> + + +<h4>C. VOCAL MUSIC</h4> + +<div class="center"><p><i>a.</i> <i>Six Songs</i> from Reissig's "<i>Blümchen der Einsamkeit</i>:"—</p> + +<p style="margin-left:2em;"> +1. "<i>Sehnsucht</i>," in E major.<br /> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>2. "<i>Krieger's Abschied</i>," in E flat.<br /> +3. "<i>Der Jüngling in der Fremde</i>," in B flat.<br /> +4. "<i>An den fernen Geliebten</i>," in G major.<br /> +5. "<i>Der Zufriedene</i>," in A major.<br /> +6. "<i>Der Liebende</i>," in D major.<br /> +</p> + +<p><i>b.</i> <i>Three Songs:</i>—</p> + +<p style="margin-left:2em;"> +1. "<i>An die Geliebte</i>," in B flat.<br /> +2. "<i>Das Geheimniss</i>," in G major.<br /> +3. "<i>So oder so! Nord oder Süd.</i>"<br /> +</p> + +<p><i>c.</i> <i>Italian and German Songs:</i>—</p> + +<p style="margin-left:2em;"> +1. "<i>La Partenza</i>" ("<i>ecco quel fiore</i>").<br /> +2. "<i>Trinklied.</i>"<br /> +3. "<i>Liedchen von der Ruhe.</i>"<br /> +4. "<i>An die Hoffnung.</i>"<br /> +5. "<i>Ich Liebe dich, so wie du nich.</i>"<br /> +6. "<i>Molly's Abschied.</i>"<br /> +7. "<i>Ohne Liebe.</i>"<br /> +8. "<i>Wachtelgesang.</i>"<br /> +9. "<i>Marmotte.</i>"<br /> +10. "<i>Maigesang.</i>"<br /> +11. "<i>Feuerfarbe.</i>"<br /> +12. "<i>Ecco quel fiori istanti.</i>"<br /> +</p> + +<p> +<i>d.</i> <i>Songs</i>, for one or more voices, from Shakspere, Byron, and Moore.<br /> +<i>e.</i> "<i>Der Glorreiche Augenblick</i>," for four voices and orchestra.<br /> +<i>f.</i> "<i>Lied aus der Ferne.</i>"<br /> +<i>g.</i> <i>Three Songs</i> from Tiedge.<br /> +<i>h.</i> <i>Three Songs.</i><br /> +<i>i.</i> <i>Three Songs.</i><br /> +<i>k.</i> "<i>Oh! dass ich dir vom stillen Auge.</i>"<br /> +<i>l.</i> "<i>Sehnsucht nach dem Rhein.</i>"<br /> +<i>m.</i> "<i>Die Klage.</i>"<br /> +<i>n.</i> <i>Three Andantes.</i><br /> +<i>o.</i> "<i>Ruf vom Berge.</i>"<br /> +<i>p.</i> "<i>Der Bardengeist</i>."<br /> +<i>q.</i> "<i>Als die Geliebte sich trennen wollte.</i>"<br /> +<i>r.</i> <i>Elegy</i> on the death of a Poodle.<br /> +<i>s.</i> <i>Arietta</i> in A flat major.<br /> +<i>t.</i> <i>Canon</i> in E flat major.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span><br /> +<i>u.</i> "<i>Zärtliche Liebe.</i>"<br /> +<i>v.</i> "<i>Resignation</i>," "<i>Lisch' aus</i>," in E major.<br /> +<i>w.</i> <i>Canon</i> for six voices.<br /> +<i>x.</i> <i>Canon</i> for four voices.<br /> +<i>y.</i> <i>Canon</i> for three voices.<br /> +<i>z.</i> <i>Canon</i> written in the album of Director Neide.<br /> +<i>tz.</i> <i>Song of the Monks</i>, from Schiller's "<i>Wilhelm Tell</i>."<br /> +<i>a<sup>2</sup>.</i> "<i>Song of the Nightingale.</i>"<br /> +<i>b<sup>2</sup>.</i> "<i>Germania's Wiedergeburt</i>," for four voices and orchestra.<br /> +<i>c<sup>2</sup>.</i> "<i>Abschiedsgesang an Wien's Bürger.</i>"<br /> +<i>e<sup>2</sup>.</i> Final songs from (1) "<i>Die Ehrenpforte</i>," in D major; (2) "<i>Die gute Nachricht</i>."<br /> +<i>f<sup>2</sup>.</i> "<i>Andenken von Matthison</i>"—allegretto.<br /> +<i>g<sup>2</sup>.</i> Three-part <i>Song</i>.</p> +</div> + + +<h3>IV. <span class="smcap">Compositions which appeared after Beethoven's +Death, without being designated as</span> <i>Op.</i> <span class="smcap">or</span> <i>No.</i></h3> + +<p><i>a.</i> "<i>Beethoven's Heimgang</i>," for voice and piano.</p> + +<p><i>b.</i> "<i>An Sie</i>," Song, in A flat major.</p> + +<p><i>c.</i> <i>Two Songs</i>:—</p> + +<p style="margin-left:2em;"> +1. "<i>Seufzer eines Ungeliebten.</i>"<br /> +2. "<i>Die laute Klage.</i>"<br /> +</p> + +<p><i>d.</i> "<i>Die Ehre Gottes in der Natur</i>," for four voices and orchestra, in C major.</p> + +<p><i>e.</i> <i>Cantata: "Europa steht."</i></p> + +<p><i>f.</i> <i>Song, "Gedenke mein."</i></p> + +<p><i>g.</i> "<i>Empfindungen bei Lydia's Untreu</i>," in E flat.</p> + +<p><i>h.</i> "<i>Equali</i>," two pieces for four trombones.</p> + +<p><i>i.</i> <i>Allegretto</i> for orchestra.</p> + +<p><i>k.</i> <i>Three Quartets.</i></p> + +<p><i>l.</i> <i>Rondo</i> for piano and orchestra.</p> + +<p><i>m.</i> <i>Octet</i> for wind instruments (now Op. 103.)</p> + +<p><i>n.</i> <i>Rondino</i> for eight-part harmony.</p> + +<p><i>o.</i> <i>Two Trios</i> for piano, violin, and 'cello.</p> + +<p><i>p.</i> <i>Military March</i> for piano.</p> + +<p><i>q.</i> "<i>Lament at Beethoven's Grave.</i>"</p> + +<p><i>r.</i> "<i>The Last Musical Thought.</i>"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span></p> + +<h5>J. AND W. RIDER, PRINTERS, LONDON</h5> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2>A NOVEL WITH TWO HEROES</h2> + +<h3>BY ELLIOTT GRAEME</h3> + +<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Author of "Beethoven; a Memoir," &c.</span></p> + +<p class="center"><i>In Two Vols. Post 8vo.</i></p> + +<h3>OPINIONS OF THE PRESS</h3> + +<p>"We can sincerely congratulate Mr. Graeme on having achieved a +decided literary success.... The story is written in a lively and +agreeable style ... the simple life of the worthy Director is +charmingly told.... Several of the portraits are evidently taken +from life.... The interest of the story centres in Mala, the +beautiful girl, who inherits her father's genius.... The characters +of Mr. Chesney, the stately and somewhat pompous rector, and of his +anti-type, a parson of quite another school, are drawn with singular +truthfulness and freedom from exaggeration."—<i>Athenæum.</i></p> + +<p>"Above the average even of good novels ... clever and +amusing ... free from sensationalism, though full of interest, +and of interest which touches many of the deeper chords of life. Mr. +Graeme's delineation of character is remarkably good.... After +all, the English rector is the gem of the book; the crust of his +character so hard, but the ring of the metal itself, though harsh, so +true.... Mr. Graeme's canvas is so crowded, that it is really +difficult to select figures for illustration. When we have given the +notice their prominence demands to some of the leading characters, +we find our heartiest admiration and our keenest dislike really reserved +for the subordinate actors, who yet are very real in the byplay on which +so much of the story turns, as it would turn in actual life."—<i>Spectator.</i></p> + +<p>"In 'A Novel with Two Heroes,' Mr. Graeme has produced a story +of deep interest, and something more,—he has given us a love-story, or +rather, two or three love-stories, without the least frivolity of the kind +that most of the novel-writers of the day seem to think is the necessary +accompaniment of love-making. He has shown intimate knowledge of +the springs of human nature, and a power of description which is not +the less admirable that it is quiet and unpretentious. There are some +domestic scenes which, for their simplicity and their obvious reproduction +from real life, have not often been excelled; while, again, there are +dramatic scenes powerful almost to painfulness in their intensity, without +being in the least disfigured by big or strong words. Womanly beauty +and natural scenery Mr. Graeme touches with a light hand, contriving +to tell more about them in a few words or lines than most people could +do in as many pages.... Sir Robert Chesney is a good, plucky +English lad, without a serious flaw in him, but not fond of learning, +though full of humour. His experiences with his uncle are delightful.... +It would be easy to go through the novel and pick out +passages of high excellence.... Abundant merit of a high order +is shown throughout, alike in construction, plot, and treatment."—<i>Scotsman.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span></p> + +<p>"We can only point out some of the beauties of this fresh and +interesting production.... One of its great charms is its singular +purity.... In drawing his characters Mr. Graeme brings out +strongly, yet without the least effort, the pathetic side of most lives; +and he brightens them up at the same time with many a touch of +genuine humour.... Mr. Graeme is no surface painter.... +'A Novel with Two Heroes' may safely be recommended to all who +can appreciate delicacy of sentiment, combined with clever portraiture +and thorough knowledge of life."—<i>Morning Post.</i></p> + +<p>"One of the most promising works of fiction which it has been our +lot to encounter of late years. Not for a long time have we read a +more pleasant and enjoyable story, full of poetry and life and music, rich +in subtle delineation of character, vigorous word-painting, and graphic +portraitures, all steeped in that delightful dreaminess and mystic +beauty with which German tales are so often and so richly flavoured.... +We have been led to dwell at length on the defects of Mr. +Graeme's work because it is one of those productions which can stand, +and, we shall add, deserve severe criticism. Were the faults a hundred +times more numerous and grave than we have indicated, the novel +would still be a remarkable production. The pictures of German life—the +St. Cecilian festival, the <i>Fastnacht</i>, or annual Saturnalia at Lent, +the Procession of St. Agnes, the sails on the river, &c., &c., are all +painted with a fidelity and power not often met with but in Scott. +Even more remarkable are the humour and pathos, as well as the variety +and originality of the portraitures. Every character is full of life and +individuality."—<i>Glasgow Herald.</i></p> + +<p>"This work has sterling merits."—<i>Saturday Review.</i></p> + +<p>"Better worth reading than five out of six of the novels of the +day."—<i>Examiner.</i></p> + +<p>"Will be heartily welcomed by all lovers of a good story."—<i>Graphic.</i></p> + +<p>"Uncommon scenes and characters uncommonly well described."—<i>Illustrated +London News.</i></p> + +<p>"Mr. Graeme has an eye for colours. He seizes upon the telling +points of a story, and paints in the picturesque details of a passing +scene."—<i>Westminster Review.</i></p> + +<p>"Very lifelike; displays depth and originality of thought."—<i>John +Bull.</i></p> + +<p>"Superior in all respects to the common run of novels."—<i>Daily +News.</i></p> + +<p>"A novel with some delightfully fresh characters; ... not +a page but is attractive."—<i>Daily Telegraph.</i></p> + +<p>"This eminently readable novel ... displays an acquaintance +with human nature, and a power of description of the happiest kind."—<i>Leeds +Mercury.</i></p> + +<h5>LONDON: CHARLES GRIFFIN AND COMPANY</h5> + + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Beethoven: A Memoir (2nd Ed.), by Elliott Graeme + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BEETHOVEN: A MEMOIR (2ND ED.) *** + +***** This file should be named 37996-h.htm or 37996-h.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/3/7/9/9/37996/ + +Produced by David E. 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