That in spite of this he was unsociable to the end, and often alienated his nearest friends, is easily explained by the nature of his ailment, which made conversation extremely difficult. It was due to this also that Beethoven, always good-hearted and generous to the suffering, experienced the ingratitude of his own brothers in various ways. He had suffered them to come to Vienna, supported them in every way, and sacrificed a considerable part of his income in their maintenance for a year. They treated him with shameful ingratitude, and broke open his chest and stole all the jewels, snuff-boxes, watches, rings, and other souvenirs which had been given to Beethoven by high personages, in recognition of his performances. Beethoven, that great, noble heart, made no allusion to the theft; but the knowledge that those who were nearest to him, who owed their very existence to him, upon whom he had absolutely heaped benefactions, had lied to him, cheated him, and robbed him,—such knowledge could not contribute to his happiness, cheerfulness, and affability.
And yet, notwithstanding all this, with all his misfortune, was Beethoven actually unhappy? Was he alone in his gloomy solitude? He may have been at first, but in his later life certainly not.
The happiness of knowing he could create sublime masterpieces was greater than the unhappiness of being deaf and misunderstood. He was not solitary, for the divine genius of art always was his companion. Beethoven was really happy because he was greater than his misfortunes. Upon his heroic brow rests a more splendid ornament than the crown of any king,—the laurel-wreath of everlasting fame, the radiant diadem of immortality.
Footnotes
[1]Johann or Jean van Beethoven, father of the composer, was a tenor singer in the chapel of the Elector of Cologne at Bonn.
[2]Max Franz was brother of the Emperor Joseph II.
[3]The Graus Haus, where Beethoven was born, is No. 515 in the Bonn Gasse (Bonn Street), and is now marked by a tablet, placed there in 1870.
[4]Beethoven’s mother, Marie Magdelena Laym, was the daughter of the chief cook at Ehrenbreitstein.
[5]There is a question whether Beethoven was born on the 16th or 17th of December, 1770. Probably he was born on the 16th.
[6]Beethoven’s grandfather was Ludwig van Beethoven, chapelmaster for the Elector of Cologne. He died in 1773, when his grandson was three years of age.