Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- General Introduction to the English Edition
- Acknowledgements
- Reader’s Guide
- Directionality in Vienna (True and Perceived)
- Heft 17. (ca. May 27, 1822 – ca. June 13, 1822)
- Heft 18. (ca. October 31/November 1, 1822 – November 4, 1822)
- Heft 19. (January 19, 1823 – January 26, 1823)
- Heft 20. (January 21, 1823 – January 26, 1823)
- Heft 21. (January 27, 1823 – January 30, 1823)
- Heft 22. (January 30, 1823 – February 6, 1823)
- Heft 23. (ca. February 6/7, 1823 – February 12, 1823)
- Heft 24. (February 12, 1823 – February 21/22, 1823)
- Heft 25. (February 22, 1823 – March 2, 1823)
- Heft 26. (March 4, 1823)
- Heft 27. (ca. March 20, 1823 – March 26, 1823)
- Heft 28. (March 31, 1823 – April 8, 1823)
- Heft 29. (April 11, 1823 – April 17, 1823)
- Heft 30. (ca. April 20, 1823 – April 26, 1823)
- Heft 31. (April 27, 1823 – May 4, 1823)
- Appendix: Descriptions of the Conversation Books in Volume 3
- Bibliography
- Index of Writers of Conversational Entries
- Index of Beethoven’s Compositions
- General Index
Heft 26. (March 4, 1823)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 October 2020
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- General Introduction to the English Edition
- Acknowledgements
- Reader’s Guide
- Directionality in Vienna (True and Perceived)
- Heft 17. (ca. May 27, 1822 – ca. June 13, 1822)
- Heft 18. (ca. October 31/November 1, 1822 – November 4, 1822)
- Heft 19. (January 19, 1823 – January 26, 1823)
- Heft 20. (January 21, 1823 – January 26, 1823)
- Heft 21. (January 27, 1823 – January 30, 1823)
- Heft 22. (January 30, 1823 – February 6, 1823)
- Heft 23. (ca. February 6/7, 1823 – February 12, 1823)
- Heft 24. (February 12, 1823 – February 21/22, 1823)
- Heft 25. (February 22, 1823 – March 2, 1823)
- Heft 26. (March 4, 1823)
- Heft 27. (ca. March 20, 1823 – March 26, 1823)
- Heft 28. (March 31, 1823 – April 8, 1823)
- Heft 29. (April 11, 1823 – April 17, 1823)
- Heft 30. (ca. April 20, 1823 – April 26, 1823)
- Heft 31. (April 27, 1823 – May 4, 1823)
- Appendix: Descriptions of the Conversation Books in Volume 3
- Bibliography
- Index of Writers of Conversational Entries
- Index of Beethoven’s Compositions
- General Index
Summary
N.B. Although Heft 26 appears to represent a single day's conversations, Blätter 6r–14r seem to have been filled from the early morning through a long midday dinner beginning at ca. 2 p.m., with Blätter 1r–5v seemingly filled later in the afternoon, including Beethoven's customary visit to a coffee house to read the newspapers. The entries appear here in that chronological order.
[Blatt 6r]
SCHINDLER [presumably at Beethoven's apartment in the Windmühle; ca. 9 a.m. on Tuesday, March 4]: So, this is Herrmann. [//]
HERMANN VON HERMANNSTHAL [continuing from Schindler's introduction]:I’ll make those changes that you deem necessary. //
Please give me something of an idea for the Duet; then I’ll add my thoughts <gladly> with yours concerning what is to be sung. // Perhaps this Duet doesn't need to contain anything other [Blatt 6v] than Minerva's joy, in contrast to Mercury's gloomy warning. //
I know that the invention of a new plot is necessary, but that work will not take place overnight. Here the execution is much quicker than the invention, so I must naturally ask for time to be able to take it home and [Blatt 7r] consider it there. //
Shall I leave the libretto and my lines here for you? Then, I ask that, as soon as you no longer need them, you send them [to me] through Herr Schindler. What do you think about making reference to today's times in Greece? Then censorship would impose its word of command upon it [//]
[possibly interrupted by Schindler:]
[Blatt 7v]
SCHINDLER [still at Beethoven's apartment; no later than ca. 9:30 a.m. on Tuesday, March 4]: <I have come only to excuse myself, that it is impossible for me to go into the City with you in the morning [presumably Wednesday, March 5] because I have a rehearsal at the Theater [in der Josephstadt] at 10 o’clock. Perhaps you would like to go to the tailor's in the afternoon.> //
[Schindler departs.]
[Blatt 8r]
HERMANN VON HERMANNSTHAL [continuing]: I believe that [we] should present in public only something that is very certain, if not, at the same time, sending something great into the world. I may not be dissuaded from this conviction.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Beethoven's Conversation BooksVolume 3: Nos. 17 to 31 (May 1822 to May 1823), pp. 201 - 210Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2020