VII
LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN
The Shakespeare of the realm of music, as he has been called, first saw
the light on December 16, 1770, in the little University town of Bonn, on
the Rhine. His father, Johann Beethoven, belonged to the court band of the
Elector of Cologne. The family were extremely poor. The little room, where
the future great master was born, was so low, that a good-sized man could
barely stand upright in it. Very small it was too, and not very light
either, as it was at the back of the building and looked out on a walled
garden.
The fame of young Mozart, who was acclaimed everywhere as a marvelous
prodigy, had naturally reached the father's ears. He decided to train the
little Ludwig as a pianist, so that he should also be hailed as a prodigy
and win fame and best of all money for the poverty-stricken family. So the
tiny child was made to practice scales and finger exercises for hours
together. He was a musically gifted child, but how he hated those
everlasting tasks of finger technic, when he longed to join his little
companions, who could run and play in the sunshine. If he stopped his
practice to rest and dream a bit, the stern face of his father would appear
at the doorway, and a harsh voice would call out, "Ludwig! what are you
doing? Go on with your exercises at once. There will be no soup for you till
they are finished."
The father, though harsh and stern, wished his boy to have as thorough a
knowledge of music as his means would permit. The boy was also sent to the
public school, where he picked up reading and writing, but did not make
friends very quickly with the other children. The fact was the child seemed
wholly absorbed in music; of music he dreamed constantly; in the
companionship of music he never could be lonely.
When Ludwig was nine his father, regarding him with satisfaction and some
pride, declared he could teach him no more—and another master must be found.
Those childhood years of hard toil had resulted in remarkable progress, even
with the sort of teaching he had received. The circumstances of the family
had not improved, for poverty had become acute, as the father became more
and more addicted to drink. Just at this time, a new lodger appeared, who
was something of a musician, and arranged to teach the boy in part payment
for his room. Ludwig wondered if he would turn out to be a more severe
taskmaster than his father had been. The times and seasons when his
instruction was given were at least unusual. Tobias Pfeiffer, as the new
lodger was called, soon discovered that father Beethoven generally spent his
evenings at the tavern. As an act of kindness, to keep his drunken landlord
out of the way of the police, Tobias used to go to the tavern late at night
and bring him safely home. Then he would go to the bedside of the sleeping
boy, and awake him by telling him it was time for practice. The two would go
to the living room, where they would play together for several hours,
improvising on original themes and playing duets. This went on for about a
year; meanwhile Ludwig studied Latin, French, Italian and logic. He also had
organ lessons.
Things were going from bad to worse in the Beethoven home, and in the
hope of bettering these unhappy conditions, Frau Beethoven undertook a trip
through Holland with her boy, hoping that his playing in the homes of the
wealthy might produce some money. The tour was successful in that it
relieved the pressing necessities of the moment, but the sturdy, independent
spirit of the boy showed itself even then. "The Dutch are very stingy, and I
shall take care not to trouble them again," he remarked to a friend.
The boy Ludwig could play the organ fairly well, as he had studied it
with Christian Neefe, who was organist at the Court church. He also could
play the piano with force and finish, read well at sight and knew nearly the
whole of Bach's "Well Tempered Clavichord." This was a pretty good record
for a boy of 11, who, if he went on as he had begun, it was said, would
become a second Mozart.
Neefe was ordered to proceed with the Elector and Court to Münster, which
meant to leave his organ in Bonn for a time. Before starting he called
Ludwig to him and told him of his intended absence. "I must have an
assistant to take my place at the organ here. Whom do you think I should
appoint?" Seeing the boy had no inkling of his meaning, he continued: "I
have thought of an assistant, one I am sure I can trust,—and that is you,
Ludwig."
The honor was great, for a boy of eleven and a half. To conduct the
service, and receive the respect and deference due the position, quite
overwhelmed the lad. Honors of this kind were very pleasant, but, alas,
there was no money attached to the position, and this was what the
straitened family needed most sorely. The responsibilities of the position
and the confidence of Neefe spurred Ludwig on to a passion of work which
nothing could check. He began to compose; three sonatas for the pianoforte
were written about this time. Before completing his thirteenth year, Ludwig
obtained his first official appointment from the Elector; he became what is
called cembalist in the orchestra, which meant that he had to play the piano
in the orchestra, and conduct the band at rehearsals. With this appointment
there was no salary attached either, and it was not until a year later when
he was made second organist to the Court, under the new Elector, Max Franz,
that he began to receive a small salary, equal to about sixty-five dollars a
year. We have seen that the straits of the family had not prevented Ludwig
from pursuing his musical studies with great ardor. With his present
attainments and his ambition for higher achievements, he longed to leave the
little town of Bonn, and see something of the great world. Vienna was the
center of the musical life of Germany; the boy dreamed of this magical city
by day as he went about his routine of work, and by night as he lay on his
poor narrow cot. Like Haydn, Vienna was the goal of his ambition. When a
kind friend, knowing his great longing, came forward with an offer to pay
the expenses of the journey, the lad knew his dream was to become a reality.
In Vienna he would see the first composers of the day; best of all he would
see and meet the divine Mozart, the greatest of them all.
Ludwig, now seventeen, set out for the city of his dreams with the
brightest anticipations. On his arrival in Vienna he went at once to
Mozart's house. He was received most kindly and asked to play, but Mozart
seemed preoccupied and paid but little attention. Ludwig, seeing this
stopped playing and asked for a theme on which to improvise. Mozart gave a
simple theme, and Beethoven, taking the slender thread, worked it up with so
much feeling and power, that Mozart, who was now all attention and
astonishment, stepped into the next room, where some friends were waiting
for him, and said, "Pay attention to this young man; he will make a noise in
the world some day."
Shortly after his return home he was saddened by the loss of his good,
kind, patient mother, and a few months later his little sister Margaretha
passed away. No doubt these sorrows were expressed in some of his most
beautiful compositions. But brighter days followed the dark ones. He became
acquainted with the Breuning family, a widow lady and four children, three
boys and a girl, all young people. The youngest boy and the girl became his
pupils, and all were very fond of him. He would stay at their house for days
at a time and was always treated as one of the family. They were cultured
people, and in their society Beethoven's whole nature expanded. He began to
take an interest in the literature of his own country and in English authors
as well. All his spare time was given to reading and composition. A valuable
acquaintance with the young Count Von Waldstein was made about this time.
The Count called one day and found the composer at his old worn out piano,
surrounded by signs of abject poverty. It went to his heart to see that the
young man, whose music he so greatly admired should have to struggle for the
bare necessities of life while he himself enjoyed every luxury. It seemed to
him terribly unjust. He feared to offend the composer's self-respect by
sending him money, but shortly after the call Beethoven was made happy by
the gift of a fine new piano, in place of his old one. He was very grateful
for this friendship and later dedicated to the Count one of his finest
sonatas, the Op. 53, known as the "Waldstein Sonata."
With a view of aiding the growth of the opera, and operatic art, the
Elector founded a national theater, and Beethoven was appointed viola player
in the orchestra besides still being assistant organist in the chapel. In
July, 1792, the band arranged a reception for Haydn, who was to pass through
Bonn on his way from London, where he had had a wonderful success, to his
home in Vienna. Beethoven seized the opportunity to show the master a
cantata he had just composed. Haydn praised the work and greatly encouraged
the young musician to go forward in his studies. The Elector, hearing of
Haydn's words of praise, felt that Beethoven should have the chance to
develop his talents that he might be able to produce greater works.
Therefore he decided to send the young composer, at his own expense, to
study strict counterpoint with Haydn. He was now twenty-two and his
compositions already published had brought him considerable fame and
appreciation in his vicinity. Now he was to have wider scope for his gifts.
He bade farewell to Bonn in November of this year and set out a second
time for the city of his dreams—Vienna. He was never to see Bonn again. He
arrived in Vienna comparatively unknown, but his fine piano playing and
wonderful gift for improvising greatly impressed all who heard him. He
constantly played in the homes of the wealthy aristocracy. Many who heard
him play, engaged lessons and he was well on the road to social success. Yet
his brusque manners often antagonized his patrons. He made no effort to
please or conciliate; he was obstinate and self-willed. In spite of all
this, the innate nobleness and truth of his character retained the regard of
men and women belonging to the highest ranks of society. With the Prince and
Princess Lichnowsky Beethoven shortly became very intimate, and was invited
to stay at the Palace. The Princess looked after his personal comfort with
as motherly an affection as Madame Breuning had done. The etiquette of the
Palace however, offended Ludwig's love of Bohemianism, especially the
dressing for dinner at a certain time. He took to dining at a tavern quite
frequently, and finally engaged lodgings. The Prince and his good lady, far
from taking offense at this unmannerly behavior, forgave it and always kept
for Beethoven a warm place in their hearts, while he, on his part was
sincere in his affection for his kind friends.
Beethoven began his lessons with Haydn, but they did not seem to get on
well together. The pupil thought the master did not give him enough time and
attention. When Haydn went to England, about a year after the lessons began,
Beethoven studied with several of the best musicians of the city, both in
playing and composition. Albrechtsberger, one of these, was a famous
contrapuntist of his time, and the student gained much from his teaching.
The young musician was irresistible when he seated himself at the piano to
extemporize. "His improvisating was most brilliant and striking," wrote Carl
Czerny, a pupil of Beethoven. "In whatever company he might be, he knew how
to produce such an effect upon the listeners that frequently all eyes would
be wet, and some listeners would sob; there was something wonderful in his
expressive style, the beauty and originality of his ideas and his spirited
way of playing." Strange to say the emotion he roused in his hearers seemed
to find no response in Beethoven himself. He would sometimes laugh at it, at
other times he would resent it, saying, "We artists don't want tears, we
want applause." These expressions however only concealed his inner
feelings—for he was very sympathetic with those friends he loved. His anger,
though sharp, was of short duration, but his suspicions of those whose
confidence he had won by his genius and force of character, were the cause
of much suffering to himself and others.
Beethoven in appearance was short and stockily built; his face was not at
all good looking. It is said he was generally meanly dressed and was homely,
but full of nobility, fine feeling and highly cultivated. The eyes were
black and bright, and they dilated, when the composer was lost in thought,
in a way that made him look inspired. A mass of dark hair surmounted a high
broad forehead. He often looked gloomy, but when he smiled it was with a
radiant brightness. His hands were strong and the fingers short and pressed
out with much practise. He was very particular about hand position when
playing. As a conductor he made many movements, and is said to have crouched
below the desk in soft passages; in Crescendos he would gradually lift
himself up until at the loudest parts he would rise to his full height with
arms extended, even springing into the air, as though he would float in
space.
Beethoven as a teacher, showed none of the impatience and carelessness
that were seen in his personal habits. He insisted on a pupil repeating the
passage carefully a number of times, until it could be played to his
satisfaction. He did not seem to mind a few wrong notes, but the pupil must
not fail to grasp the meaning or put in the right expression, or his anger
would be aroused. The first was an accident, the other would be a lack of
knowledge of feeling.
Beethoven loved nature as much or more than any musician ever did. How he
hailed the spring because he knew the time would soon come when he could
close the door of his lodgings in the hot city, and slip away to some quiet
spot and hold sweet communion with nature. A forest was a paradise, where he
could ramble among the trees and dream. Or he would select a tree where a
forking branch would form a seat near the ground. He would climb up and sit
in it for hours, lost in thought. Leaning against the trunk of a lime tree,
his eyes fixed upon the network of leaves and branches above him, he
sketched the plan of his oratorio "The Mount of Olives"; also that of his
one opera "Fidelio," and the third Symphony, known as the "Eroica." He wrote
to a friend, "No man loves the country more than I. Woods, trees and rocks
give the response which man requires. Every tree seems to say 'Holy, holy.'"
Already, as a young man, symptoms of deafness began to appear, and the
fear of becoming a victim of this malady made the composer more sensitive
than ever. He was not yet thirty when this happened, and believing his life
work at an end, he became deeply depressed. Various treatments were tried
for increasing deafness; at one time it seemed to be cured by the skill of
Dr. Schmidt, to whom out of gratitude he dedicated his Septet, arranged as a
Trio. By his advice the composer went for the summer of 1820 to the little
village of Heiligenstadt (which means Holy City) in the hope that the calm,
sweet environment would act as a balm to his troubled mind. During this
period of rest and quiet his health improved somewhat, but from now on he
had to give up conducting his works, on account of his deafness.
It may be thought that one so reticent and retiring, of such hasty temper
and brusque manners, would scarcely be attracted to women. But Beethoven, it
is said, was very susceptible to the charm of the opposite sex. He was
however, most careful and high-souled in all his relations with women. He
was frequently in love, but it was usually a Platonic affection. For the
Countess Julie Guicciardi he protested the most passionate love, which was
in a measure returned. She was doubtless his "immortal beloved," whose name
vibrates through the Adagio of the "Moonlight Sonata," which is dedicated to
her. He wrote her the most adoring letters; but the union, which he seemed
to desire so intensely, was never brought about, though the reason is not
known. For Bettina von Arnim, Goethe's little friend, he conceived a tender
affection. Another love of his was for the Countess Marie Erdödy, to whom he
dedicated the two fine Trios, Op. 70, but this was also a purely Platonic
affection. The composer was unfortunate in his attachments, for the objects
were always of a much higher social standing than himself. As he constantly
associated with people of rank and culture, it was natural that the young
girl nobly born, with all the fascinations of the high bred aristocrat,
should attract him far more than the ordinary woman of his own class. And
thus it happened that several times he staked his chances of happiness on a
love he knew could never be consummated. Yet no one needed a kind, helpful,
sympathetic wife more than did our poet-musician. She would have soothed his
sensitive soul when he suffered from fancied wrongs, shielded him from
intrusion, shared his sorrows and triumphs, and attended to his
house-keeping arrangements, which were always in a sad state of confusion.
This blissful state was seemingly not for him. It was best for the great
genius to devote himself wholly to his divine art, and to create those
masterpieces which will always endure.
In 1804 Beethoven completed one of his greatest symphonies, the "Eroica."
He made a sketch, as we have seen, two years before. He had intended it to
honor Napoleon, to whose character and career he was greatly attracted. But
when Napoleon entered Paris in triumph and was proclaimed Emperor,
Beethoven's worship was turned to contempt. He seized the symphony, tore the
little page to shreds and flung the work to the other end of the room. It
was a long time before he would look at the music again, but finally, he
consented to publish it under the title by which it is now known.
When we consider the number and greatness of Beethoven's compositions we
stand aghast at the amount of labor he accomplished. "I live only in my
music," he wrote, "and no sooner is one thing done than the next is begun. I
often work at two or three things at once." Music was his language of
expression, and through his music we can reach his heart and know the man as
he really was. At heart he was a man capable of loving deeply and most
worthy to be loved.
Of the composer's two brothers, one had passed away and had left his boy
Carl, named after himself, as a solemn charge, to be brought up by Uncle
Ludwig as his own son. The composer took up this task generously and
unselfishly. He was happy to have the little lad near him, one of his own
kin to love. But as Carl grew to young manhood he proved to be utterly
unworthy of all this affection. He treated his good uncle shamefully, stole
money from him, though he had been always generously supplied with it, and
became a disgrace to the family. There is no doubt that his nephew's
dissolute habits saddened the master's life, estranged him from his friends
and hastened his death.
How simple and modest was this great master, in face of his mighty
achievements! He wrote to a friend in 1824: "I feel as if I had scarcely
written more than a few notes." These later years had been more than full of
work and anxiety. Totally deaf, entirely thrown in upon himself, often weak
and ill, the master kept on creating work after work of the highest beauty
and grandeur.
Ludwig van Beethoven passed from this plane March 26, 1827, having
recently completed his fifty-sixth year, and was laid to rest in the Währing
Cemetery near Vienna. Unlike Mozart, he was buried with much honor. Twenty
thousand people followed him to his grave. Among them was Schubert, who had
visited him on his deathbed, and was one of the torch bearers. Several of
the Master's compositions were sung by a choir of male voices, accompanied
by trombones. At the grave Hummel laid three laurel wreaths on the casket.


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