Beethoven eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 241 pages of information about Beethoven.

Beethoven eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 241 pages of information about Beethoven.

But the enthusiasm of the audience had the practical effect of leading the manager to make an offer to Beethoven for another concert, guaranteeing him five hundred florins ($250).  It was held on May 23, at noon.  On this occasion all of the Mass but the Kyrie was omitted, some Italian music being substituted.  The house was only half filled at the second concert and the management lost money.  Beethoven’s apprehensions as to the profits from the first concert were well founded.  He made less than two hundred dollars from the undertaking, and was so disappointed with this pitiful result after all the work of preparation, that he refused to eat any supper, and would not go to bed, but remained on a couch with his clothes on for the night.  When he learned that the management lost eight hundred florins on the occasion of the second concert, it was with difficulty that he could be prevailed on to accept the amount guaranteed him.  It is not likely that this reluctance was owing to any consideration for the manager, but rather to umbrage at the course of things in general.  His temper was not improved by these disappointments, and he even charged Schindler with having conspired with the manager to cheat him.  This led to a rupture between the two of several months’ duration.  Beethoven at length called on Schindler and apologized for the offence, begging him to forget it, upon which the old relations were restored.

Notwithstanding that Beethoven had personally solicited the attendance of the members of the Imperial family, and had promises from some of them, not one came, the Emperor’s box being the only empty space in the theatre.  The slight was no doubt intentional, and affords the last instance of which there is record, of the lifelong contest waged between Beethoven and the court.  He was usually the aggressor, making it impossible for the Imperial family to favor him, or even to show him much attention.  They could not have been insensible to the historical importance of having in their midst such a man; they must have had the prescience to know that Beethoven’s achievements, if furthered by them, would place them in the lime-light for the admiration of future ages; but they were thwarted by the man himself, who went out of his way more than once, most unjustifiably, to offend them.

There is a letter from Count Dietrichstein, court chamberlain, on the subject of a mass which Beethoven was invited to write for the Emperor, which is unintentionally humorous.  In it, all sorts of suggestions are made as to the style of the music, the length of the mass (it being enjoined on him that the Emperor did not like long church services) and other like stipulations.  Beethoven’s remarks in answer to this letter are not recorded, but the mass was not written.  Here was a case where kingly prerogative did not avail.

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Beethoven from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.