A casual genius: Beethoven's pointed pen

"I'd rather write 10,000 notes than one letter," Beethoven once confessed. Nevertheless, the Bonn composer has left a great treasure of notes. And they show: Beethoven had not only a sense of humor, but also a sense for well-placed punch lines.

Heiligenstadt Testament, copy (1827) by Ludwig van BeethovenBeethoven-House Bonn

"How wrong you do me!"

"Oh you people who think me hostile, stubborn or misanthropic - how wrong you do me!" 

Thus Beethoven begins his "Heiligenstadt Testament". Although he could be quite a grouch, he was usually sociable – and quick-witted.

Ferdinand Ries (1784-1838) (1820) by AnonymousBeethoven-House Bonn

Respect, please!

"I'm not playing for those bastards!" 

Beethoven's confidant Ferdinand Ries reports: Beethoven is said to have shouted this sentence at a concert for a young count. For Herr Graf was talking loudly to a woman in the next room. How can he, the philistine?!

Billet to Karl Holz (1825) by Ludwig van BeethovenBeethoven-House Bonn

Everyday worries

"Cleaning takes all day – and it's high time!" 

Even a genius has household worries. In this short message, Beethoven asks his friend, the violinist Karl Holz, to come not for lunch but for dinner. Cleaning takes longer than expected.

Letter to Franz Brentano in Frankfurt (1816-03-04) by Ludwig van BeethovenBeethoven-House Bonn

Letter to Frankfurt

Beethoven demands a lot from his friends - especially in his letters he wants to return the favour. In gratitude for his support, Beethoven recommends a vineyard in Mainz to his friend Franz Brentano. On the other hand: Beethoven could also have sent a bottle 🤷

Receipt for Breitkopf & Härtel in Leipzig (1808-09-14) by Gottfried Christoph HärtelBeethoven-House Bonn

Word games with the dear money

Beethoven was also not at a loss for ironic puns. He reports to his friend Franz Salzmann: 

"All the notes I play will not get me out of trouble!" 

Writing great art was apparently not enough - it also had to sell.

Napoleon at the Great St. Bernard (1801) by Jaques-Louis DavidBelvedere

War and sound art

Even with famous contemporaries, Beethoven was not squeamish. When he learned that Napoleon had defeated the Prussians, he allegedly exclaimed indignantly: "It's a pity that I don't understand the art of war as well as the art of music, I would have defeated him after all!"

Goethe in the Roman Campagna (1787) by Johann Heinrich Wilhelm TischbeinStädel Museum

Unsuccessful summit meeting

Beethoven also had little respect for Goethe. During their walk together in 1812, they met the French Empress. While Goethe allegedly bowed deeply, Beethoven stubbornly continued his walk. Beethoven:

"Goethe likes the court air too much - more than befits a poet."

Nikolaus Simrock (1751-1832) (1820) by Joseph Karl Stieler (?)Beethoven-House Bonn

Beer & Sausages

In general, Beethoven likes to be rebellious in questions of the state. When a republican uprising failed in Vienna, he writes to his friend Nikolaus Simrock:

"As long as the Austrian still has beer and sausages, he will not revolt."

Beethoven's Death Mask Beethoven's Death Mask (1890) by Josef DanhauserBeethoven-House Bonn

Last words with irony

Even on his deathbed, Beethoven was still available for situation comedy. Allegedly, he had asked for wine shortly before his death. But when his servant finally arrived with the bottles, the composer was only capable of these last words:

"A pity! - A pity! - too late!!"

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