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 24. (February 12, 1823 – February 21/22, 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. This conversation book seemingly continues a conversation begun in Heft 23.
[Blatt 1r]
SCHINDLER [at Beethoven's apartment in suburban Windmühle; Ash Wednesday, February 12]: Today, I have no [duties in the] theater. // Until 8 o’clock. //
Possibly you hold back only as it concerns Steiner, because your opponents win significantly by it. // The 3 works. // Only the Overture. // In the statement. //
H[err] Bauer, private secretary of Prince Esterházy. [//] [Blatt 1v]
Your brother is sleeping. // Doubtless good. // You mean the Overture. //
I don't go into any art dealership without having something to do; and even then, I know to behave like an intelligent man; you will always satisfy yourself of that in the future. [//] [Blatt 2r]
Gallenberg said that he would be happy if you came to dinner at his place often. // He would have paid you from his own pocket today, purely out of respect. // He told me that you had both socialized together and played a great deal. // with Fortepiano … // Otherwise he could not hope that you would come to see him. // [Blatt 2v] You are risking absolutely nothing if you keep it for yourself. We shall already arrange more with it. //
You shouldn't drink right away yet. //
They took Herr Kanne apart about his newest creation in yesterday's Theaterzeitung. You should read it; it really is worth the trouble. [//] [Blatt 3r] I’ve known these gentlemen for quite a long time, but don't know their names. [//]
BEETHOVEN [at his apartment; probably the morning of Thursday, February 13]: Büel or Bühl, surgical physician. // Skillful. [//] Has lived entirely differently from me. [//] [Blatt 3v] But belongs more among the inferior ones. //
[By mid-to-late morning of Thursday, February 23, Beethoven may have walked from his apartment in the Windmühle to Blöchlinger's Institute in the Josephstadt (about a 30-minute walk north) to visit nephew Karl on visitation day. If they met, it was brief, with Karl's seeming promise to visit Beethoven later. On his way into the walled City, Beethoven may have stopped at Anton Schindler's apartment, Josephigasse No. 15, to invite him for refreshments.]
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Beethoven's Conversation BooksVolume 3: Nos. 17 to 31 (May 1822 to May 1823), pp. 139 - 168Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2020