CHICAGO:
JANSEN, McCLURG & COMPANY.
1881.

COPYRIGHT.
JANSEN, McCLURG & COMPANY.
A. D. 1880.
STEREOTYPED AND PRINTED
BY
THE CHICAGO LEGAL NEWS COMPANY.

INTRODUCTION.

Music is the most popular of the arts. It fills man’s breast with a melancholy joy. Even the brute creation is not insensible to its power. Yet, at its best, music is a haughty, exclusive being, and not without reason are training, practice, talent, and the development of that talent, required for the understanding of her secrets. “One wishes to be heard with the intellect, by one’s equals; emotion becomes only women, but music should strike fire from the mind of a man.” In some such strain as this, Beethoven himself once spoke, and we know how slowly the works of the great symphonist found a hearing and recognition from the general public.

Yet, who is there to-day who does not know the name of Beethoven? Who is there that, hearing one of his compositions, does not feel the presence of a sublime, all-ruling power—of a power that springs from the deepest sources of all life? His very name inspires us with a feeling of veneration, and we can readily believe the accounts that have come down to us; how even strangers drew back with a species of awe, before this man of imposing appearance, spite of his smallness of stature, with his rounded shoulders, erect head, wavy hair and piercing glance. Who has not heard of the two charcoal-burners who suddenly stopped their heavily laden vehicle when they met, in a narrow pass, this “crabbed musician,” so well known to all Vienna, and who was wont to stand and think, and then, humming, to go his way, moving about bee-like through nature from sunrise, with his memorandum book in his hand.

We are moved with the same feeling of respect that moved those common men, when we hear only Beethoven’s name, but how much more powerfully are we stirred when we hear his music! We feel in that music the presence of the spirit that animates and sustains the world, and which is continually calling new life into existence. Even the person who is not a musician himself may feel, in these mighty productions, the certainty of the presence of the Creator of all things. Their tones sound to him like the voice of man’s heart of hearts, the joys and sorrows of which Beethoven has laid bare to us. We feel convinced, when we hear them, that the person who in them speaks to us has, in very deed, something to tell us, something of our own life; because he lived and felt more deeply than we what we all live and feel, and loved and suffered what we all love and suffer, more deeply than any other child of dust. In Beethoven, we meet with a personage really great, both in mind and heart, one who was able to become a sublime model to us, because life and art were serious things with him, and one who made it his duty “to live not for himself, but for other men.” The high degree of self-denying power found in this phenomenon of art, it is that has such an elevating effect on us. The duties of life and the tasks of the artist he discharged with equal fidelity. His life was the foundation on which the superstructure of his works rose. His greatness as a man was the source of his greatness as an artist. The mere story of his life, given here in outline, reveals to us the internal springs of his artistic creations, and we must perforce admit, that the history of Beethoven’s life is a part of the history of the higher intellectual life of our time and of humanity.

CONTENTS.

CHAPTER I.
BEETHOVEN’S YOUTH AND EARLIEST EFFORTS.
Birth and Baptism—His Family—Young Beethoven’s Character—His
Brothers Karl and Johann—Early Talent for Music—Appears in
Public at the Age of Seven—Errors as to His Age—Travels in Holland—Studies
the Organ in Vienna—His Fame Foretold—His Personal
Appearance—Meets Mozart—Mozart’s Opinion of Him—Maximilian,
Elector of Cologne, and Mozart—Beethoven’s Intellectual
Training—Madame von Breuning—First Love—Beethoven and
Hayden—Compositions written in Vienna
[9]-[39]
CHAPTER II.
THE EROICA AND FIDELIO.
Music in Vienna—Society in Vienna—Beethoven’s Dedications—Lichnowsky—The
Eroica and Fidelio—Beethoven’s First Great Exploits—Plans
for Future Work—Decides to Remove to the North—New Compositions—His
Improvisations—Disappointments in North Germany—Prince
Louis Ferdinand—Makes His Home in Austria—Neglects His
Health—His Deafness—Origin of the Eroica—Napoleon I—Bernadotte—The
Symphony in C Minor—His Deafness Again—Thoughts
of Marriage—The Guicciardi Family—Meaning of His Music—His
“Will”—Disappointment—Meaning of the Eroica and Fidelio—The
Leonore Overture—Other Compositions
[40]-[81]
CHAPTER III.
THE SYMPHONY C MINOR.—THE PASTORALE, AND THE SEVENTH,
SYMPHONIES.
The Pastorale—Meaning of the Apassionata—Beethoven’s Letter to His
“Immortal Loved One”—His Own Opinion of the Apassionata—Thinks
of Writing Operas—Court Composer—Overture to Coriolanus—The
Mass in C, op. 86—His Sacred Music—The Fidelio In Prague—Music
for Goethe’s Faust—“Power, the Moral Code”—Character of
His Works about this Period—Intercourse with the Malfattis—The
Cello Sonata, op. 69—Improvement in His pecuniary Circumstances—Joseph
Bonaparte—Vienna fears to lose Him—Contemplated Journey
to England—The Seventh Symphony—His Heirathspartie—His
Letter to Bettina—His Estimate of Genius
[82]-[121]
CHAPTER IV.
THE MISSA SOLEMNIS AND THE NINTH SYMPHONY.
Resignation—Pecuniary Distress—Napoleon’s Decline—The Battle-Symphony—Its
Success—Wellington’s Victory—Strange Conduct—Intellectual
Exaltation—His Picture by Letronne—The Fidelio Before the
Assembled Monarchs—Beethoven the Object of Universal Attention—Presents
from Kings—The Liederkreis—Madame von Ertmann—Romulus
and the Oratorio—His “Own Style”—Symphony for
London—Opinion of the English People—His Missa Solemnis—His
Own Opinion of it—Its Completion—Characteristics—The Ninth Symphony
[122]-[162]
CHAPTER V.
THE LAST QUARTETS
Berlioz on the Lot of Artists—Beethoven Misunderstood—The Great
Concert of May, 1821—Preparation for It—Small Returns—Beethoven
Appreciated—The Quartets—An “Oratorio for Boston”—Overture
on B-A-C-H—Influence of His Personal Experience on His Works—His
Brother Johann—Presentiment of Death—The Restoration of
Metternich and Gentz—His “Son”—Troubles with the Young Man
Debility—Calls for Dr. Malfatti—Poverty—The “Magnanimous”
English—Calls a Clergyman—His Death
[163]-[201]

LIFE OF BEETHOVEN.