<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1><i>Wolfgang Amadeus <br/>Mozart</i></h1>
<p class="center">By HERBERT F. PEYSER</p>
<hr>
<p class="tb">Mozart’s earthly career was so poignantly short yet so
filled with incalculable achievement that the author of this
booklet finds himself confronted with an impossible task.
He has, consequently, preferred to outline as best he could
in the space at his disposal a few successive details of a life
that was amazingly crowded with incident, early triumphs,
and subsequent crushing tragedies, rather than to consider
(let alone evaluate) the staggering creative abundances the
master bequeathed mankind.</p>
<p>It is scarcely necessary to disclaim for this thumbnail
sketch any new slant or original illumination. If it moves any
reader to renew his acquaintance with the standard biographies
of the composer or, better still, to deepen his artistic
enrichment by a study of modern interpretations of contemporary
Mozart scholars like Alfred Einstein, and Bernhard
Paumgartner, its object will be more than achieved.</p>
<p class="tbcenter">Printed in the United States of America</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_1">1</div>
<h1 title=""><i>Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart</i></h1>
<p>If the Mozartean family tree was nothing like the prodigious
trunk of the Bachs it was still not without striking features.
There were Mozarts in South Germany as far back
as the end of the sixteenth century; and as remotely as the
thirteenth the name stood on a document in Cologne. To be
sure, various spellings of Mozart existed in those distant
times. It appeared as “Mosshard,” “Motzhart,” “Mozert,”
and in still other variants. Bernhard Paumgartner, Director
of the Salzburg Mozarteum, thinks it derived from the old
German root <i>mod</i>, or <i>muot</i>, from which came the word <i>Mut</i>
(courage). Be this as it may, German “Mozarts” were anything
but exceptional a couple of hundred years before
Leopold Mozart or his son, Wolfgang, came into the picture.
In Augsburg there was an Anton Mozart who painted landscapes
“in the manner of Breughel.” Another Mozart from
the same town, one Johann Michael, was a sculptor, who in
1687 moved to Vienna and became an Austrian citizen.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_2">2</div>
<p>But of all these “Mossherts,” “Motards,” and the rest, only
one, the mason apprentice David Motzert, born in the village
of Pfersee, close to Augsburg, really belongs to our story.
The <i>Augsburger Bürgerbuch</i> of 1643 mentions him and sets
his fortune at 100 florins. By his marriage with the <i>Jungfer</i>
Maria Negeler he was to become the great-great-grandfather
of the creator of <i>Don Giovanni</i>. In the fullness of time
David’s grandson, Johann Georg, abandoned the occupation
of his forebears for that of a bookbinder. His second wife
blessed him with two daughters and six sons. One of these
sons, Franz Aloys, gained a kind of immortality as the father
of Maria Anna Thekla, Wolfgang’s cousin, the “Bäsle,” to
whom he wrote that series of notoriously smutty letters with
which this lively young lady’s name is eternally linked.</p>
<p>Johann Georg’s first-born, Johann Georg Leopold, became
for posterity simply Leopold Mozart, composer of arid music,
author of a celebrated violin method, and father of Wolfgang
and of Maria Anna Walburga Ignatia, whom the world
remembers almost solely as “Nannerl.” It is a Nannerl, incidentally,
that we have to look for a sort of continuation of
the Mozart line down almost to our own time. On January
9, 1919, there died in the Feldhof Insane Asylum, near Graz,
the seventy-seven-year-old Bertha Forschter, a great-granddaughter
of Nannerl, who had lived on in Salzburg til 1829,
highly revered because of her exalted kinship.</p>
<h3 class="generic"><span class="sc">Early Life in Salzburg</span></h3>
<p>What brought Leopold Mozart to Salzburg in the first
place? A choirsinger in the Augsburg Church of St. Ulrich
and a graduate of the Augsburger Jesuit Lyceum, he seemed
to be shaping for a priestly career. He did not, at all events,
<span class="pb" id="Page_3">3</span>
follow the bookbinder’s trade like his brothers. Alfred Einstein
finds it difficult to grasp why he should have preferred
Salzburg to Munich or Ingolstadt for an orthodox theological
education. Possibly a suggestion of the canons of St. Ulrich
had something to do with it. Whatever the reason, he enrolled
at the University in the town on the Salzach, July 22,
1738. There he studied philosophy, logic, and music, understood
Latin, composed Passion cantatas and instrumental
works, acquired some proficiency on the violin, and obtained
a smattering of legal knowledge. Five years later he became
fourth violinist in the court orchestra of the archbishop,
but he maintained his close family connections with Augsburg
and later encouraged his son not to relax these ties.</p>
<p>It is not quite certain exactly when he met Anna Maria
Pertl, whose father was superintendent of a clerical institution
at St. Gilgen on the nearby Wolfgang See. In the fall
of 1772 he wrote her from Milan: “It was 25 years ago, I
think, that we had the sensible idea of getting married, one
which we had cherished for many years. All good things
take time!” Anna Maria was her husband’s junior by a year.
Jahn questions if she rose in any way above the average
woman of her type. A good provincial, she had not the
suspicious, mistrustful qualities of Leopold. She lacked intellectual
depth, but she was a good wife and affectionate
mother, a genuinely lovable creature, a receptacle of all the
community gossip and local tittle-tattle. “She judged with
an eye just as friendly as her husband’s was critical and sarcastic.”
And from his mother Wolfgang inherited his gayety
and some of his more incorrigible <i>Hanswurst</i> characteristics.</p>
<p>Though the Mozart couple had seven children, only two
of these survived infancy—Nannerl, the fourth, and her great
<span class="pb" id="Page_4">4</span>
brother, who came last. Wolfgang was born on January 27,
1756, at eight o’clock in the evening in the house belonging
to Lorenz Hagenauer, on the narrow Getreide Gasse, Salzburg.
The very next morning the newcomer (whose birth
came near costing the mother’s life) was carried to church
and baptized with the name Johannes Chrysostomus Wolfgangus
Theophilus, the last in honor of his godfather, Johann
Theophilus Pergmayr. Subsequently the Greek Theophilus
was changed to its more euphonious Latin equivalent Amadeus.
Wolfgang, like the other Mozart children, was at first
nourished with water instead of milk, according to a preposterous
superstition of the time. We have to thank the good
health of the infant that he did not succumb, as did most of
the other Mozart offspring, and even withstood later illnesses.</p>
<p>A sensitive and affectionate lad, Wolfgang was extraordinarily
devoted to his parents, especially to his father, despite
Leopold’s humorless and obstinate nature. “Next to God
comes papa!” was a childhood expression of the boy. To be
sure, the inflexible martinet commanded a certain respect by
reason of his very genuine love for his family and his determination
to rear his children according to what he considered
their best interests. But he seemed unable to rise
above his middle-class prejudices and, when all is said, his
attitude toward his son was like that of a conventional Victorian
father, who guided the footsteps of his son according
to his lights, yet refused to permit him any freedom whatever
for explorations of his own. All the same, Leopold could
be self-sacrificing in the interest of his children and therein
lay one of the saving features of an unlovable character.</p>
<div class="fig"> id="fig2"> <ANTIMG src="images/img004.jpg" alt="" width-obs="500" height-obs="592" /> <p class="caption">The boy Mozart (1767-8) <br/><i>Oil painting by Thaddeus Helbling</i></p> </div>
<div class="fig"> id="fig3"> <ANTIMG src="images/img005.jpg" alt="" width-obs="800" height-obs="301" /> <p class="caption">View of Salzburg at the end of the eighteenth century <br/><i>Engraving by Anton Amon after Franz Naumann</i></p> </div>
<div class="pb" id="Page_5">5</div>
<p>It was one of his merits to have perceived at once the
musical predispositions of his children, to have cultivated
them, even to have grasped early the most advantageous
ways of exploiting them. Nannerl was by no means slow in
showing uncommon aptitude for music, and Leopold lost
no time in embarking upon her training. Wolfgang in his
cradle listened to his sister’s lessons in the adjoining room
and we can only surmise what mystical instincts vibrated in
the childish consciousness. He was hardly more than three
when these impelled him to the keyboard, there to search
for consonant intervals and to shout with delight when he
discovered and sounded thirds. He had an abnormally refined
and sensitive hearing, was distressed by impurities of
pitch, and perturbed by any violence of sound (who does
not remember the story of the child Mozart fainting on hearing
the tone of a trumpet?). We are told that he was very
soon able to play light piano pieces without any signs of
effort and to memorize and perform them without notes,
“cleanly and in perfect time,” in less than half an hour. Nor
was the violin unfamiliar to him and, though he is not supposed
to have started his studies on that instrument till his
sixth year, Nissen tells that a certain Herr von Murr heard
Wolfgang play the violin at four!</p>
<p>Leopold Mozart’s chief trouble lay not in making his son
practice but in getting him away from the piano. Music occupied
his waking hours almost exclusively, and for the customary
games and amusements of childhood the boy showed
little interest; or, if it was a question of fun, it had to be in
some way associated with music. Before putting him to bed
in the evening his father would stand him on a chair to give
him a good-night kiss, whereupon the child would declaim
Italian nonsense syllables, like “oragnia figatafa” and such,
to some scrap of folk tune, as if imitating an opera singer.
<span class="pb" id="Page_6">6</span>
Then he would return his father’s caresses, kissing him on
the tip of his nose and promising when he grew up “to enclose
him in a capsule and carry him about at all times!”
In after years Leopold reminisced in a letter to his son:
“When you sat at the piano or otherwise occupied yourself
with music nobody was allowed to joke with you in any
way. Indeed, the expression on your face would become so
serious that many, struck by what they considered your prematurely
ripened talent, feared that your life might be short”—fears
that were to be only too well founded. And, when
barely six, he stubbornly refused to play before any audience
that did not include at least one musically cultured listener.</p>
<p>Abraham Mendelssohn used to say that, whereas he had
once been famous as the son of his father, he was now celebrated
as the father of his son. Leopold Mozart was most
indisputably the father of his son. His juiceless compositions,
his violin method, and the rest of his dreary talents and
moral virtues have a kind of museum value only as they
contributed to Wolfgang’s artistic upbringing and guidance.
Alfred Einstein observes that “the first signs of musical talent
in Wolfgang completely changed the direction of Leopold’s
life and thought.” Unquestionably it was better so,
and in the long run he was far more richly rewarded for cultivating
the fruitful soil committed to his tillage.</p>
<p>Systematic piano instruction was the first thing on which
he seems to have concentrated. Composition was a by-product.
Wolfgang improvised unceasingly, which meant that
numberless minuets and simple pieces of various types took
shape under his fingers, the father writing down industriously
what his son’s fancy dictated. Nannerl extemporized
no less actively. Leopold spurred his children by acquainting
<span class="pb" id="Page_7">7</span>
them with short works by himself and recognized musicians
to divert them after dry technical exercises. Each had a little
study book of pieces. The one that Wolfgang received
from his father on October 31, 1762, has come down to us
complete and contains 135 examples for study. Among them
Wolfgang tried his hand at brief works of his own. In the
father’s writing we can read the following: “Di Wolfgango
Mozart, May 11, 1762 und July 16, 1762.” Some of the masters
given the boy to study were Wagenseil, Telemann,
Hasse, and Philipp Emanuel Bach. Wolfgang’s compositions
include an innocent minuet and trio with very simple basses
and a little Allegro in three-part song form. In these and
other childish efforts the improving hand of Leopold can be
repeatedly detected. It was to be so for some time to come
and when the father did not have a correcting finger in the
pie we become aware of it. It is evident in a sketch book
Wolfgang was given in London a year or two later when
Leopold fell ill and, in order not to be disturbed by the
sounds of practicing, asked the boy to write something and
refrain from noise. The book is filled with a great variety of
minuets, contradances, rondos, gigues, sicilianos, preludes,
and even an unfinished sketch for a fugue. Here one sees
indisputable genius in conflict with technical lapses and
other evidences of inexperience that somewhat modify the
notion that Wolfgang had acquired all his skill by instinct
rather than by carefully disciplined study.</p>
<h3 class="generic"><span class="sc">First Visit to Vienna</span></h3>
<p>The five-year-older Nannerl being a remarkable clavier
performer and Wolfgang absorbing his father’s instructions
with the utmost facility, Leopold was not long in deciding
<span class="pb" id="Page_8">8</span>
that he might profitably bring his pair of prodigies before
the public and make them known in aristocratic circles,
where he had a good chance of capitalizing on their talents.
Besides, there were new artistic currents astir in the world
to which the boy, in particular, might be exposed to his advantage.
“If ever I knew how priceless time is for youth I
know it now and you know that my children are used to
work,” he wrote to H. Hagenauer, insisting he had no idea
of permitting the youngsters to fall into habits of idleness.
He seems to have given little thought to the strain of travel,
especially since the children were healthy and Wolfgang,
though small, appears to have been of wiry physique. So in
January 1762, he took them on a three-weeks’ excursion to
Munich, where they appeared before the Elector Maximilian
of Bavaria with success.</p>
<p>The following September, however, the family began their
travels in earnest. With a small clavier strapped to their
vehicle the little band of wanderers set out along the Danube
by way of Linz and several smaller localities to Vienna.
By October 6 they had reached the capital and they drank
in its wonders with the astonished eyes of small-town folk.
A week later they stood in the presence of the music-loving
empress, Maria Theresia, and her family and court at the
Palace of Schönbrunn. The children played and were admired
and duly rewarded. There have come down to us a
quantity of pretty anecdotes about the pair—how Wolfgang
climbed up in the lap of the Empress and was kissed by her;
how he insisted on having the composer Georg Christian
Wagenseil in the room when he was to play (“because he
understands such things”); how, when he slipped on the
polished floor and was helped to his feet by the princess,
<span class="pb" id="Page_9">9</span>
Marie Antoinette, he thanked her and then added “I shall
marry you for this when I grow up!” Unquestionably the
motherly tenderness of Maria Theresia went out to the child
from Salzburg. Yet it is a question whether she actually saw
in Wolfgang and his sister more than a pair of precocious
little people in spite of Leopold’s extravagant claims. Certainly
she was less agreeable several years later when she
wrote her son, the archduke Ferdinand, governor-general of
Lombardy, who contemplated taking Wolfgang into his service:
“I do not know why you need saddle yourself with a
composer or useless people.... It discredits your service
when such individuals run about the world like beggars.”</p>
<p>At all events Leopold was voluble in the letters he wrote
to his Salzburg landlord, Hagenauer, about the wonders of
the Vienna visit and the impression exercised everywhere by
Wolfgang’s talents and his lively intelligence and unaffected
manner. Leopold built towering air castles. Two weeks later
Wolfgang came down with what was said to be scarlet fever
but which was actually (according to Bernhard Paumgartner)
diagnosed by a German doctor, Felix Huch, as “erythema
nodosum,” which could have had serious consequences
and may have planted the seeds of Mozart’s last
illness. Before returning to Salzburg, Leopold accepted the
invitation of a Hungarian magnate to make a flying trip to
neighboring Pressburg after Wolfgang had recovered. Finally,
on January 5, 1763, the Mozarts came home to Salzburg.
It is uncertain how much musical stimulation Wolfgang
obtained from this first Viennese visit. The one important
event in Vienna at this period—the première of Gluck’s
<i>Orfeo</i>—went unmentioned by either Wolfgang or his father.</p>
<p>However, the success of the trip whetted Leopold’s appetite
<span class="pb" id="Page_10">10</span>
for more of the same thing. After a brief period for
recuperation, plans were laid for a much more elaborate
odyssey to include nothing less than Paris and London. On
June 9, 1763, consequently, the family carriage set out for the
Bavarian frontier—“the same road by which Leopold Mozart,
then a hopeful student, had wandered into Salzburg.” This
trip was to keep the Mozarts away from home for three years.</p>
<h3 class="generic"><span class="sc">Success in Paris and London</span></h3>
<p>The “celebrity tour” began, strictly speaking, in Munich
where the pair of prodigies performed with sensational success
before the Bavarian Elector Maximilian III, who wished
to hear the young people “soon and often.” But Leopold was
out for bigger game and wanted, incidentally, to exhibit his
wonder children to his relatives in Augsburg before proceeding
to world conquests. Besides old acquaintances the “Herr
Kapellmeister” had the good luck to present his “gifts of
God” to the noted Italian violinist, Pietro Nardini, then concertmaster
of the court orchestra of Stuttgart, and to the
Italian composer, worthy Niccolo Jommelli, who was struck
by Wolfgang’s abilities but against whom the mistrustful
Leopold harbored various unjust suspicions. In Schwetzingen
the Mozarts had the first opportunity to hear the then
unrivaled Mannheim orchestra, which was to play a significant
part in Wolfgang’s development. He and his sister were
put through all their paces as the weeks went by; besides
playing and improvising they were made to perform all
manner of showy stunts. Wolfgang had to name tones and
chords sounded on keyboards covered with a cloth, as well
as guess the exact pitch of bells, glasses, and clocks.</p>
<p>The travelers went on to Bonn, Cologne, and Aachen,
<span class="pb" id="Page_11">11</span>
where lived the Princess Amalia, sister of Frederick the
Great, whose pressing invitations to Berlin left Leopold cold
as soon as he realized she had no money; he reflected that
the kisses without number which she gave the children
would have pleased him better if they had had cash value!
Finally, after further progress through the Low Countries
the little band reached Paris, where the father discovered
that most of his letters of recommendation and introduction
amounted to little. Only when they were taken in charge by
the Bavarian-born Baron Melchior Grimm, a literary figure
of some distinction, did results begin to shape themselves. A
first-rate publicity man, Grimm launched a campaign for
the youngsters in his <i>Correspondance littéraire</i>, with the result
that doors promptly opened and invitations began to
pour in. On New Year’s Eve, 1764, the Mozarts were asked
to a <i>grand couvert</i> at the court in Versailles. Wolfgang stood
next to the Queen who fed him dainties and translated for
the King—Louis XV—what the boy said to her in German.</p>
<p>The great Madame Pompadour was on hand and the elder
Mozart noted that she must once have been a great beauty
for all her present stoutness. Later, when Wolfgang offered
to give her a kiss, she drew back; whereupon the boy indignantly
asked, “Who does she think she is, anyhow? Our Empress
herself did not refuse to kiss me!” Leopold was careful
to note the countless features of the Parisian scene. For one
thing, the abundance of make-up on the faces of the Frenchwomen
was something to revolt “an honest German.” He
saw eye to eye with Baron Grimm in his preference for
Italian over French music, declaring that the latter was “not
worth a farthing.” Wolfgang was eventually to share his distaste
for French customs, French art, even the French language.
<span class="pb" id="Page_12">12</span>
Leopold brought his son to the attention of several
prominent German musicians who happened to be in Paris,
such as Johann Schobert, Gottfried Eckhart, and Leontzi
Honnauer, all of whom registered appropriate astonishment
and presented the children with some of their own compositions,
suitably inscribed. Four sonatas for clavier with <i>ad
libitum</i> violin parts by Wolfgang were printed, and on the
title page it was duly noted that their author was “only
seven years old.” For all their charm and freshness these
works clearly betray the improving touch of Leopold.</p>
<p>On April 23, 1764, after an easy Channel crossing, the
Mozarts arrived in London, where the children were announced
as “Miss Mozart of Eleven and Master Mozart of
Seven years of age, Prodigies of Nature.” The Hon. Daines
Barrington subjected the boy to “scientific tests,” which
demonstrated that his talents were, indeed, “out of the ordinary.”
The musical George III and Queen Charlotte received
them at St. James’s Palace on April 27. A few weeks
later there was another concert before the royal couple,
when the King asked Wolfgang to play at sight pieces by
Wagenseil, Johann Christian Bach, Handel, and Carl Friedrich
Abel. The monarch praised the lad’s performances on
the organ even more than on the clavier, and had him accompany
the Queen in a song and improvise a melody on a
figured bass of Handel’s. Leopold wrote home that what his
son knew now completely overshadowed his earlier abilities.
At a charity concert in Ranelagh Gardens they made over a
hundred guineas. Yet these successes did not last: several
concerts had to be postponed because of Leopold’s sudden
indisposition; a mental illness of George III increased alarmingly;
the political situation was unfavorable; and the public
began to lose interest in the wonder children.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_13">13</div>
<p>But apart from the sympathy Wolfgang was always to feel
with the English people, one experience of his London sojourn
really outweighed all others. This was the friendship
he and Johann Christian Bach, the son of Johann Sebastian,
formed for each other and the influence the older musician
exercised on the creative genius beginning to blossom in the
child. As Hermann Abert has written, “Christian Bach signified
for Mozart a blithe, elegant counterpart to Schobert
by virtue of the modernized Italianism that came to pervade
his style.” The “gallant” manner, the fresh, playful rhythms
of his finales, and the relaxation modifying the dry composition
technique of Leopold’s are elements for which
Mozart is deeply indebted to the “London Bach.” Wolfgang’s
early symphonies and piano music make it plain how
much he looked upon Johann Christian as his model and
how fully this master was the chief inspiration of that “singing
allegro” that became a hallmark of the mature Mozart.</p>
<p>Not only for his boyhood symphonies and sonatas but for
his piano concertos was Wolfgang obliged to his great London
friend. His earliest clavier concertos are largely copies or
rearrangements of the concertos and sonatas of Johann Christian,
as of Schobert, Honnauer, and similar masters. From
these seeds came those glorious fruits of concerto literature
that stand among his grandest and most original achievements.</p>
<p>Leopold had overstayed his leave from his Salzburg post
but he seemed in no hurry about returning to it. He had
originally planned to go home by way of Italy, since an
Italian trip was regarded as an indispensable finishing touch
to an artistic education. At the beginning of August 1765,
the Mozarts landed once more on the Continent. Both father
and son fell ill, and then Nannerl came down with pneumonia
and was actually given the last rites. Wolfgang,
<span class="pb" id="Page_14">14</span>
scarcely convalescent from a siege of fever, composed a
medley for piano and orchestra—a <i>quodlibet</i> of popular
tunes—the <i>galimathias musicum</i>, a thing of rough humors
revealing in its contrapuntal workmanship the tastes and
teachings of his father. Variations on a Dutch patriotic song,
six sonatas for violin and piano, a mellifluous symphony in
B flat, and various other “trifles” indicate that sickness was
not regarded as a valid excuse for idling.</p>
<p>Paris, to which they returned in May 1766, seemed less
stirred by the prodigies than it had been on the earlier visit,
though Prince Karl Wilhelm of Brunswick, on hearing Wolfgang,
exclaimed in amazement, “Many a kapellmeister dies
without ever having learned anything like what this child
knows!” In July they left the French capital and arrived in
Salzburg the last day of November 1766, laden with gifts
and rich in glowing memories. A considerable quantity of
new music from Wolfgang’s pen filled their luggage. The artist
was supplanting the prodigy. Wolfgang had seen something
of the world and had made many valuable contacts.
The Archbishop, Sigismund von Schrattenbach, skeptical of
the brilliant reports he had heard, asked him to compose a
cantata—<i>Die Schuldigkeit des ersten Gebotes</i>—and isolated
him for a week to see how much truth there was in all the talk.</p>
<h3 class="generic"><span class="sc">Vienna and</span> <i>La Finta semplice</i></h3>
<p>Not quite a year later the Mozarts were off again, this time
to Vienna, for the betrothal festivities of the Archduchess
Maria Josepha and King Ferdinand of Naples. But their
great expectations were hardly realized. A smallpox epidemic
in the capital carried off the royal bride, and Leopold
fled with his family to Olmütz, where both the children
<span class="pb" id="Page_15">15</span>
contracted the disease. Wolfgang lay blind for nine days
and for some time had to be careful of his eyes. Only on
Christmas Eve were they well enough to set out again. On
their return to Vienna, Maria Theresia received them kindly,
but things had changed. Economy was the order of the day:
the aristocracy followed the example set by the imperial
household, musical activities were reduced, and the Mozarts
felt the pinch. Interest in the prodigies diminished.</p>
<p>Joseph II, who had succeeded his mother on the throne,
expressed a desire to hear in Vienna an opera of the twelve-year-old
boy’s composition and suggested such a work to
the lessee of the court theater, Giuseppe Afflisio. The result
was <i>La Finta semplice</i>, its libretto based on a Goldoni farce,
and it was arranged that the composer should lead it from
the harpsichord. Nothing came of the scheme, however,
presumably because of intrigues.</p>
<p>The youth was partly consoled for this check by a noted
physician, the celebrated Dr. Anton Mesmer (an early practitioner
of mesmerism), at whose suburban home the one-act
German <i>Singspiel</i>, <i>Bastien und Bastienne</i>, based on a
parody of Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s famous pastoral <i>Le Devin
du village</i>, was performed. The little piece for all its simplicity
lives on. Perhaps the most striking thing about the
score is the fact that the prelude, or <i>intrada</i>, begins with the
theme that was to be the main subject of Beethoven’s <i>Eroica</i>.</p>
<p>The travelers came back to Salzburg early in 1769. The
trip had not been a financial profit, but Wolfgang was undoubtedly
richer in experience and had added to his creative
store. The Archbishop delighted them by ordering a performance
of <i>La Finta semplice</i>, though he had no genuine
<i>opera buffa</i> personnel at his disposal. The leading soprano
<span class="pb" id="Page_16">16</span>
part of Rosina was sung by Maria Anna Haydn, Michael
Haydn’s wife. The year was largely devoted to further study
and composition—chiefly of masses and other church music
written at the command of the friendly Archbishop and, in
addition, of symphonies and other forms of “entertainment”
music for garden parties, festivities, and social functions
of the high-placed and well-to-do. And Wolfgang was appointed
concertmaster in the archiepiscopal orchestra.</p>
<h3 class="generic"><span class="sc">Italy and Mozart’s Early Operas</span></h3>
<p>Leopold realized that the hour had now struck for that
long-projected trip to Italy which he wished to take “before
Wolfgangerl reached the age and stature which would deprive
his accomplishments of all that was marvelous.”
Plainly, it would not do to let the boy outgrow his precocity.
And so on December 13, 1769, father and son set out on an
adventure that was to resolve itself into three separate
journeys to what was, rightly or wrongly, esteemed as the
home of music and of art in general.</p>
<p>The youth was now ripe for Italy. The language he absorbed
by second nature, as it were. Everywhere he made
valuable new friendships and came across old acquaintances.
In Milan he was commissioned to write an <i>opera seria</i> and
the following October he composed <i>Mitridate Re di Ponto</i>,
which, produced on December 26, 1770, amid cries of “Viva
il Maestrino,” had twenty performances. In Bologna he
greatly impressed the aged <i>castrato</i> Farinelli and the great
Padre Martini, dean of Italian musicians. At Naples he had
to remove a ring from his finger upon playing to convince
the superstitious that it was not the real explanation of his
“magic” skill. In Rome, after a single hearing of the Papal
<span class="pb" id="Page_17">17</span>
choir singing Allegri’s celebrated <i>Miserere</i>, which nobody
was allowed to copy under penalty of excommunication, he
wrote it down from memory and then listened to it a second
time to make a few minor corrections. The Pope bestowed on
Wolfgang the Order of the Golden Spur, which enabled him
to sign his letters with the whimsical “Chevalier de Mozart.”
He was invited to undergo a difficult examination for membership
in the Philharmonic Academy of Bologna and passed
it by working out in an hour a problem that consisted of producing
in the “strict” church style an antiphon <i>Quaerite
primum</i>. The real truth, however, is that the authorities accepted
him only <i>after</i> they had charitably “corrected” what
he submitted. It was not long before the Philharmonic Society
of Verona likewise conferred membership upon him—this
time presumably without the preliminary of a test. Now
“Maestro di Cappella,” he was ordered to provide a serenata—<i>Ascanio
in Alba</i> (Wolfgang completed its fairly voluminous
score in twelve days)—for the impending marriage of Archduke
Rudolf and the Princess Maria of Modena.</p>
<p>Leopold imagined his son “made” for life. But the boy’s
music, for all its charm and fluency, still wanted the unmistakably
creative touch. The tireless traveler, Dr. Burney,
wrote a little later: “If I may judge of the music which I
have heard of his composition, in the orchestra, he is one
further instance of the early fruit being more extraordinary
than excellent.” And the composer Hasse believed that
“young Mozart is certainly a prodigy for his age. The father
adores his son overmuch and does all he can to spoil him;
but I have so good an opinion of the innate goodness of the
boy that I hope that, despite his father’s adulation, he will
not allow himself to be spoiled.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_18">18</div>
<p>The pair went briefly to Salzburg in 1771 and started south
again for Milan, where <i>Ascanio in Alba</i> was to be given in
October. The work was duly presented for the princely
nuptials along with Hasse’s opera <i>Ruggiero</i>, likewise commissioned
for the festivities. According to the father’s report,
the youth’s <i>festa teatrale</i> completely eclipsed the work of
the venerable master who, far from being jealous, is said to
have remarked, “This boy will throw us all into the shade.”</p>
<p>Scarcely were the travelers home once more than the
kindly Archbishop died. His successor was the former Bishop
of Gurk, Hieronymus, Count of Colloredo. Like many others,
the Mozarts scented trouble, for Colloredo was a hard-boiled
bigot and in every respect the reverse of his predecessor.
He lives on in history principally as Mozart’s evil
genius and as the man who, in the end, was to fan Wolfgang’s
detestation of Salzburg to white heat and to drive
him to open mutiny. Hieronymus knew by a kind of intuition
that his new subjects were not well disposed to him so,
in the words of a contemporary chronicler, “he despised
them and held himself aloof.” His rule, says Paumgartner,
was something other than the “ancient regime” of his forerunner,
the musical highlights of which had been Leopold
Mozart, Ernst Eberlin, and Cajetan Adlgasser. Colloredo
was a revolutionary and a deadly foe of routine and sought to
put his ideas into force by sharpest disciplinary measures.
His taste, however, ran to the easy grace of Italian music; yet
he did in his chilly way at first look upon Wolfgang as a
talent he might use for the greater glory of his court. For his
new master’s festive installation in 1772 the composer wrote
a one-act serenata along the lines of his <i>Ascanio</i>, entitled <i>Il
Sogno di Scipione</i>, to a text by Metastasio, adapted from
<span class="pb" id="Page_19">19</span>
Cicero. The score was a typical “occasional work” of allegorical
character. Far more important in the creative sense are
at least eight symphonies and four <i>divertimenti</i>, in all of
which are traces of the ripening genius shortly to emerge.</p>
<p>The third Italian visit differed in some ways from the
earlier ones. <i>Lucio Silla</i>, produced in Milan on December
26, 1772, was not acclaimed as <i>Mitridate</i> had been. Outwardly
it was successful and enjoyed more than twenty performances
but did not hold the stage. To begin with, the
opera had an inferior libretto and Wolfgang, absorbing
other musical influences, was less concerned about catering
meticulously to Italian tastes. Moreover, he was no longer
the child prodigy whose every action was to be considered
phenomenal. But the real reasons lay deeper. A prophetic
ear might have detected the vibrations of a “storm and
stress” period beginning to ferment in the spirit of the artist.
Leopold made a vain effort to secure his son a post at the
Grand Ducal Court of Tuscany, but Wolfgang received no
more operatic commissions for Italy. So early in March 1773,
taking a last leave of that land, they returned to Salzburg,
where Leopold was angered to see Colloredo appoint an
Italian rather than a German to the position of conductor.</p>
<p>The elder Mozart now determined to try his luck in
Vienna. After the death in 1774 of Florian Gassmann, the
court composer, Leopold hoped to secure the appointment
for Wolfgang and the two obtained an audience with Maria
Theresia, who, for all her graciousness, merely replaced Gassmann
by one Giuseppe Bonno. At the moment there was no
opportunity to earn anything in the capital; but the young
man became acquainted with something that, in the long
run, was to prove even more rewarding. This was the music
<span class="pb" id="Page_20">20</span>
of Joseph Haydn, whom he was not to meet personally until
later. The influence of Haydn on Mozart as of Mozart on
Haydn was to be incalculable from every standpoint.</p>
<p>On December 9, 1774, father and son were on a journey
once more, this time to Munich where the Bavarian Elector,
Maximilian III, had commissioned Wolfgang to write an
opera for the following Carnival. It was a <i>buffa</i>, <i>La Finta
giardiniera</i>, and on January 14, 1775, the composer wrote
to his mother: “My opera went so well yesterday that I find
it impossible to describe the applause. In the first place the
theatre was so packed that many had to be turned away;
after every aria there was a wild tumult, with handclappings
and shouts of ‘Viva Maestro,’ which began again as soon as
it ended!” And Christian Daniel Schubart wrote in the
<i>Teutsche Chronik</i>: “I heard an opera buffa by the marvelous
Mozart. The fires of genius lurk and dart in it. Yet this is
still not the sacred fire which rises to the gods in clouds of
incense. If Mozart does not become a hot-house plant he
should be the greatest composer who ever lived.”</p>
<h3 class="generic"><i>Il Re pastore</i></h3>
<p>However, Archbishop Colloredo was growing irritable
over these continual absences of his servants. He had not
been able to refuse the request of the Elector to permit the
Mozarts to go to Munich but he at last wanted his Vice-Kapellmeister
and son back. Henceforth it was not going to
be so easy to obtain the great cleric’s leave to go wandering,
whatever the reason. So for the immediate future the impatient
young genius settled down to compose and to perform.
A stream of works were put on paper in 1775 and
1776. Five violin concertos were written the first year. They
<span class="pb" id="Page_21">21</span>
are the best known of Mozart’s concertos for that instrument
and were conceived, in the main, for the violinist
Brunetti of the court orchestra. With all their charm they
still stand below the great clavier concertos in grandeur and
epoch-making qualities. Wolfgang did not particularly enjoy
the violin although his father exhorted him to practice and
told him that he could be the greatest violinist in Europe.</p>
<p>Another work in 1775 was <i>Il Re pastore</i>, a cross between
opera and cantata, to a poem by Metastasio composed for a
visit to the Archbishop of Archduke Maximilian. A score of
sensitive loveliness, it is known today chiefly for its tender
soprano aria with violin solo, “L’amero, saro costante.” Of the
many other creations of this period we can only mention in
passing the six clavier sonatas for the Baron Dürnitz, the innumerable
variations, the serenades, <i>notturni</i>, <i>divertimenti</i>,
masses, offertories, organ sonatas, litanies, <i>graduales</i>; the
stunning clavier concertos for his own use, for the French
pianist Mlle. Jeunehomme, the Countess Lützow, and other
high-placed local amateurs. Last, but far from least, he composed
the <i>Serenade</i> (later transformed into a symphony by
the elimination of a movement or two) for the wealthy
Haffner family, of whom Sigmund Haffner, a merchant
prince, was Burgomaster of Salzburg.</p>
<h3 class="generic"><span class="sc">Mannheim and Paris</span></h3>
<p>Despite all this work, the young man chafed at the narrow
provincialism of his native town, at the absence of true
artistic interest, at the company he was obliged to keep at
the Archbishop’s table, and, most of all, at that cleric’s attitude.
Leopold, seeing the dangerous way in which the situation
was shaping itself between the young man and his master,
<span class="pb" id="Page_22">22</span>
made an effort to stave off a catastrophe by planning another
trip. Wolfgang applied to the Archbishop for his discharge,
whereupon Colloredo, who was not really anxious
to lose the composer’s services, told the pair to “seek their
fortunes where they pleased”—but at the same time would
not permit Leopold to leave. The father thereupon decided
that his son should go to Paris, perhaps to find some lucrative
position at the French court, unless he should be lucky
enough to discover one somewhere else. But since he was
forbidden to go along he deputed his wife to go in his place
and keep a careful eye on the impulsive young man.</p>
<h3 class="generic"><span class="sc">The Webers and Paris</span></h3>
<p>Early on September 23, 1777, Wolfgang and his mother
(who would much rather have remained in Salzburg) drove
off in a newly purchased carriage. The departure was a bitter
event for Leopold, whose trouble was such that he forgot
to give his son his blessing before the vehicle was out of
sight! Nannerl, equally distraught, was sick and had to take
to her bed. To add to the melancholy of the occasion Father
Mozart darkened the house and fell asleep till roused hours
later by Bimperl, the dog. The woeful day finally dragged
itself to an end; it would have been far more terrible had
they known that poor Maria Anna was never to return!</p>
<p>They went first to Munich, where Wolfgang made an ineffectual
appeal to the Elector and received that answer
with which he was in the course of his life to become so
tragically familiar: “Yes, my dear child, but there is no position
free! Now if only there were...,” etc., etc. At Augsburg,
the next stop, he divided his time between Andreas
Stein, the pianomaker whose instruments stirred his interest,
<span class="pb" id="Page_23">23</span>
and his cousin, the “Bäsle,” with whom he freely indulged
in those ribaldries that so shocked the puritanical generations
of the next century. From that ancestral seat they
turned to Mannheim, which was a very different story. For
here Mozart found all manner of musical interests and important
personalities. And here he fell devastatingly in love!</p>
<p>He had made the acquaintance of the family of Fridolin
and Maria Cäcilie Weber. A streak of bohemianism ran
through the lot of them. The father, in straitened circumstances,
eked out an existence in Mannheim as singer, musician,
copyist, prompter—in short, a kind of man-of-all-work
in the theater and orchestra. The mother was a sinister creature—an
out-and-out adventuress. The couple had four
daughters, Josefa, Aloysia, Constanze, and Sophie. Constanze
was, in the fullness of time, to become Mozart’s wife.
But his feelings were at first kindled by Aloysia, who was
then only fifteen and with whom Maria Cäcilie at this stage
set about to tempt the young man, who was quickly bowled
over by the girl’s feminine charms, her lovely voice, and her
musicianship. In the years to come each of these women
was to play some part in the composer’s life. (A few years
later there was born in a closely related branch of the Weber
family that figure who made the name immortal—Carl Maria
von Weber; so that through marriage the creators of <i>Der
Freischütz</i> and of <i>Die Zauberflöte</i> became cousins!)</p>
<p>Love caused Wolfgang to build castles in the air and
to concoct extravagant schemes. He composed abundantly
in Mannheim, planned operas and what-not for his idolized
Aloysia, and before long was writing to his father proposing
to give up the Paris venture altogether and set out on a trip
to Italy with the Webers. Leopold was horrified, the more
<span class="pb" id="Page_24">24</span>
so as his wife wrote telling him exactly how things stood.
Father Mozart sternly laid down the law to his son and
ended with the words: “Off with you to Paris! And that soon!
Find your place among great people. <i>Aut Caesar aut nihil.</i>
The mere thought of seeing Paris ought to have preserved
you from all these flighty ideas!” Wolfgang did not, it is
true, rebel and in the end he went to Paris. But he answered
his father with some heat. He declared that he was no longer
a child and had no intention of tolerating aspersions on his
conduct with Aloysia. “There are some people,” he added,
“who think it impossible to love a girl without evil designs
and this pretty word mistress is indeed a fine one!”</p>
<p>But Leopold had, for the moment, won his point and in
March 1778, Wolfgang and his mother were off. The Paris
adventure turned out a dismal fiasco. Even Melchior Grimm,
once so helpful, was not interested this time. He was willing
to promote a sensation who gave promise of being a money-maker.
But, as Alfred Einstein has noted,</p>
<p>“<i>It was Wolfgang’s character that made Leopold wrong in his
estimate of Paris and the Parisian nobility. For Wolfgang was
no conqueror and he could not have conquered Paris even if he
had wanted to.... How carefully Gluck’s conquest of Paris had
been prepared! Not only ambassadors and queens but the entire
public took part in these preparations.... Mozart slipped into
Paris quietly and unobserved, accompanied by his mother, who
had come along to keep an eye on him.</i>”</p>
<p>He detested Paris, thought continually of Aloysia, had no
use for the now-surly Grimm, turned down the offer of an
organist post in Versailles (feeling that the place was no
more than a suburb), had some unsatisfactory dealings with
Le Gros, director of the Concert Spirituel, composed for
<span class="pb" id="Page_25">25</span>
the Parisian stage no more than the ballet <i>Les Petits Riens</i>,
easily succumbed to some of Le Gros’ intrigues, and was
demoralized generally. Only one work of his—the D major
Symphony (K. 297)—was outspokenly successful. To climax
his woes his mother fell ill and died on July 3, 1778. He had
to ask the old Salzburg family friend, Abbé Bullinger, to
break the news to his father and sister. And he wrote, “You
have no idea what a dreadful time I have been having here
... until one is well known nothing can be done in the matter
of composition.... From my description of the music here
you may have gathered that I am not very happy and that
I am trying to get away as quickly as possible.”</p>
<p>“As quickly as possible” was not till September 1778. He
decided reluctantly to return to Salzburg, to the Archbishop’s
service, where he would conduct and accompany,
but not play violin. Even so, he was momentarily tempted
to stay on in Paris and might even have done so if Grimm
had not been obviously eager to be rid of him. He did not
hurry back to the hated Salzburg but stopped off in Strassburg,
Mannheim, and Munich, where he found the flighty
Aloysia already the wife of Joseph Lange (the itinerant
actor to whom posterity owes the familiar unfinished portrait
of Mozart). When he finally did submit to the inevitable
trip home he lacked the courage to meet his bereaved
father alone and so took his “dear little Bäsle” with him.</p>
<h3 class="generic"><span class="sc">Idomeneo</span></h3>
<p>At the Archbishop’s table he sat between the <i>castrato</i>
Ceccarelli and the violinist Brunetti. If he felt revolted by his
present circumstances he seems, however, to have taken
refuge in the inner sanctuary of his spirit. He created quantities
<span class="pb" id="Page_26">26</span>
of priceless works and, in so doing, could forget situations
in themselves repugnant. There were church compositions,
serenades, <i>divertimenti</i>; the gorgeous <i>Symphonie
Concertante</i> for violin and viola (K. 364); a triple concerto
for violin, viola, and cello; the adorable E flat concerto for
two pianos (K. 365); three symphonies in G, B flat, and C;
some music for Gebler’s drama, <i>Thamos, König in Aegypten</i>,
which he had begun five years earlier and was a foretaste of
<i>The Magic Flute</i>; and lastly, an operatic fragment, entitled
<i>Zaide</i> after Mozart’s death and destined to remain a torso.</p>
<p>By 1780, however, Wolfgang was to some degree compensated
for his disillusionments. While laboring on <i>Zaide</i>
he was commissioned by the Bavarian Elector, Carl Theodor,
to write an <i>opera seria</i> for the Munich Carnival of 1781. The
Munich authorities picked a libretto <i>Idomeneo, re di Creta;
ossia Ilia ed Idamante</i>, which was based on a book by Antoine
Danchet and which, as composed by André Campra
as far back as 1712, had enjoyed a day of fame in Paris. It
dealt with the tale of the Cretan king who had made a rash
Jephtha vow to Neptune on returning from the Trojan war
and was saved from sacrificing his son only by a <i>deus ex
machina</i>. The libretto was put in shape by the Salzburg
cleric, Giambattista Varesco, and called for, in accordance
with French models, massive crowd scenes, ballets, choruses,
and all the effects of a large-scale spectacle as well as vocal
virtuosity and elaborate instrumental tone painting.</p>
<p>For a change Mozart had things more or less his own way.
The Weber family had moved to Vienna, much to Leopold’s
relief, and for the moment the composer had no time to
worry about Aloysia but went ahead putting his new opera
into shape and helping to prepare the production. On the
<span class="pb" id="Page_27">27</span>
whole he met with sympathetic cooperation. The Elector,
Carl Theodor, welcomed him cordially. The Intendant,
Count Seeau, was helpful, and the women singers declared
themselves pleased with their arias. The chief difficulties
were caused by the aging tenor, Raaff, who had the title role,
and the sixteen-year-old artificial soprano cast for the part
of Idamantes. Mozart, who used to call him “mio molto
amato castrato Del Prato,” deplored the poor boy’s lack of
stage experience, musicianship, and vocal method. Nevertheless,
<i>Idomeneo</i>, when brought out late in January 1781,
was warmly acclaimed, and the Elector, who had followed
the rehearsals from the first, marveled that “so small a head
should contain such great things,” insisting he had never
been so stirred by any music.</p>
<p>He had reason for his enthusiasm. The score of <i>Idomeneo</i>
is one of its composer’s most superb achievements and, if it
lives on today chiefly as a museum piece, it does so because,
like <i>Mitridate</i>, <i>Lucio Silla</i>, and <i>Il Re pastore</i> before it and
<i>La Clemenza di Tito</i> after it, the work is a specimen of <i>opera
seria</i>—a form that had lost every trace of vitality and dramatic
punch. Yet to the end of his days its creator valued it
highly and made some unavailing efforts to reanimate it.</p>
<h3 class="generic"><span class="sc">Mozart’s Break with Salzburg</span></h3>
<p>Mozart had reason to suppose that the work might gain
him a permanent and rewarding position. Once more he was
disappointed; and a short time after the production he received
a summons from Salzburg to join the Archbishop in
Vienna, whither Colloredo had gone with a part of his musical
staff. Leopold, it should be added, was left at home.
Wolfgang boiled inwardly at the prospect of “having the
<span class="pb" id="Page_28">28</span>
honor once more of sitting above the cooks at table.” His
father begged him to be patient, but to no avail. In a way
he welcomed the present call to Vienna and seemed to sense
his impending liberation, if without knowing exactly how
it was to come. “It seems as if good fortune is about to welcome
me here,” he wrote his parent not long afterwards
from the capital, “and now I feel that I must stay. Indeed,
I felt when I left Munich, that, without knowing why, I
looked forward most eagerly to Vienna.” He was seeking
an opportunity to break forever with his detested chief, to
whom he alluded as an “Erzlümmel” (“Archbooby”).</p>
<p>He soon found his chance. The archbishop at first refused
Mozart permission to appear at the Tonkünstler-Societät,
about which he wrathfully wrote to his father (yet a postscript
added that, in the end, he got it). That his place at
table was between the valets and the cooks is, Alfred Einstein
says, rightly shocking both to the composer and to us.
But Mozart’s rank as court organist was actually that of
personal servant, and according to eighteenth century etiquette,
which knew nothing of special treatment for genius,
this seating at table was formally correct. In the end the
threatened explosion did occur. Colloredo ordered him back
to Salzburg on a certain day. Alleging some “important engagement”
in Vienna, he refused and, when the archbishop
told him he could “go to the devil,” he applied for his dismissal
from the cleric’s service. Three times he presented
applications. Finally, when he made an effort to enter Colloredo’s
apartment to hand him the paper personally, Count
Arco, son of the court chamberlain, kicked him out of the
room. But Mozart <i>did</i> get the discharge he had demanded.</p>
<p>The tale of the kick is familiar even to people who have
<span class="pb" id="Page_29">29</span>
not the vaguest familiarity with eighteenth-century codes.
We might be well advised, however, to suspend our judgment
till we know both sides of the celebrated story.</p>
<p>“No more Salzburg for me!” Wolfgang gaily wrote his
father. Barring repeated journeys to different cities, Vienna
was to be his home for the rest of his days. He was not to
find the material rewards and the secure position he had
sought for so long, but he had that freedom his spirit craved.
And in Vienna he was to absorb those creative impulses that
Haydn had known before him and Beethoven was to know
after him. In a mood of elation he begged his father to leave
Salzburg and join him in Vienna. But Leopold was no longer
young and, besides, he was made of other clay.</p>
<h3 class="generic"><span class="sc">Marriage</span></h3>
<p>Mozart renewed his ties with the Webers once more. Aloysia,
indeed, was now out of his reach, but there were three
other daughters, the youngest still a child, to be sure. The
oldest, Josepha, had a good voice but she left Wolfgang cold.
He was more attracted to Aloysia’s sister, Constanze, a fact
that was not lost on the scheming Mother Weber, now a
widow, content to rent rooms and take in boarders. In May
1781, he settled in the Weber house, <i>Zum Auge Gottes</i>, just
off the Graben. Needless to say, Leopold was greatly upset,
for he had as low an opinion of the Webers as ever. But
Wolfgang was no longer disposed to let his father’s tastes
sway him and, when he felt that he really loved Constanze,
he determined to make her his wife regardless of parental
wishes. The unscrupulous Madame Weber, pleased at the
turn of affairs, took care that gossip should spread, and
people began to talk about the probability of the marriage.
<span class="pb" id="Page_30">30</span>
Mozart, yielding to Mother Weber’s “advice,” left the <i>Auge
Gottes</i> in September 1781, though returning for daily visits.
Constanze’s mother played her cards cleverly so as to compromise
her daughter and enjoyed the satisfaction of having
Mozart ask his father for his “approval.” A Weber for a
daughter-in-law was the last thing Leopold wanted. Finally
on August 4, 1782, the couple married, the elder Mozart’s
reluctant consent not arriving in Vienna until August 5. He
never forgave his son, however, for this step. No more did
Nannerl, who had quite as little use for her brother’s wife.</p>
<p>Later, after the composer’s death, Schlichtegroll’s necrology
said of Constanze: “Mozart found in her a good mother
for the two children she bore him, who sought to restrain
him from many follies and dissipations...”—the rest of
which passage Constanze was subsequently moved to make
illegible. Be all of which as it may, there is no use pretending
that Mozart was, earlier or later, in the least indifferent
to feminine allurements. Sometimes it was the women who
plagued him with attentions, a capital instance of which was
his pupil, the pianist Josephine Aurnhammer, a talented but
exceedingly repulsive person, of whom he left us a gruesome
picture in a letter dated August 22, 1781: “She is as fat as a
farm wench, perspires so that you feel inclined to vomit,
and goes about so scantily clad that you really can read as
plain as print: ‘Pray, do look here.’” It was for this same
Aurnhammer, nonetheless, that he wrote the adorable
clavier concerto, K. 453.</p>
<p>Alfred Einstein maintains that Constanze owes her fame
“to the fact that Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart loved her, and
in so doing preserved her name for eternity, as a fly is preserved
in amber. But this does not mean that she deserved
<span class="pb" id="Page_31">31</span>
either his love or the fame it brought her.” Certainly, she
could not follow his flights of genius; neither was she always
above reproach in her private conduct. Before their marriage
her “honest and devoted” lover was writing to point out
her thoughtless behavior in allowing some man “to measure
her leg” in a game of forfeits; and nearly a decade later he
was begging her “to consider appearances,” to be “careful
of her honor,” and to keep away from the Baden casino because
“the company is ... you understand what I mean!”
Einstein believed that the only woman of whom Constanze
had a right to be jealous “was Nancy Storace, his first Susanna....
Between Mozart and her there must have been a
deep and sympathetic understanding. She was beautiful, an
artist and a finished singer....”</p>
<h3 class="generic"><i>Die Entführung aus dem Serail</i></h3>
<p>The composer was probably delighted to have the chance
to place on the stage a character named Constanze; and in
the summer and autumn of 1781 he began the music of his
next major opera, <i>Belmonte und Constanze</i> or <i>Die Entführung
aus dem Serail</i> (“The Abduction from the Seraglio”).
This <i>Singspiel</i>, the book of which was originally the work of
Christian Friedrich Bretzner, had been presented a year
earlier in Germany with a score by Johann André. Under
Wolfgang’s careful supervision the three-act piece underwent
dramatic and textual modifications by Christian Gottlob
Stephanie the Younger. Mozart had written his father:
“The book is good; the subject is Turkish and is called ‘The
Abduction from the Seraglio.’” Rehearsals did not start till
June 1782, and on July 16 of that year the work was produced
in Vienna with extraordinary success. The stimulus
<span class="pb" id="Page_32">32</span>
back of Stephanie’s revisions was unquestionably the penetrating
theater sense of the composer himself. Into the love
songs of the tenor, Belmonte, Mozart poured all his tender
feelings for Constanze Weber, whom he was shortly to lead
to the altar. The characterizations throughout have a life, a
diversity, and a psychological truth that had not been met
with in any previous Mozartean operatic effort.</p>
<p>The Emperor, though he recognized the genius in the
work, thought it necessary to warn Mozart that the music
seemed to him “too good for the Viennese” and contained “a
powerful quantity of notes”—whereupon the ready-witted
Mozart retorted, “Just as many as are necessary, Your Majesty!”
His older contemporary, Gluck, was himself stirred to
enthusiasm by the work (in which he unquestionably detected
the influence of his own exotic <i>Les Pèlerins de la
Mecque</i>) and invited the composer to dinner. <i>Die Entführung</i>—which
Carl Maria von Weber was to say was such
a work as Mozart could have written only once in his lifetime—quickly
spread through most other theaters of Central
Europe, where, after close to two hundred years, it still leads
a lusty existence. The more amusing, therefore, is a notice the
disgruntled Bretzner inserted in a Leipzig newspaper: “A
certain person in Vienna named Mozart has had the effrontery
to misuse my drama ‘Belmonte und Constanze’ for an
opera libretto. I herewith protest most solemnly that I reserve
the right to take further steps against this outrage.”</p>
<p>On the surface the newly married couple were happy. Yet
it might be inquiring too closely to ask whether Wolfgang
did not, as time passed, suffer from that deep-seated
loneliness and lack of understanding that are sooner or later
the lot of a genius of this caliber. Under today’s conditions
<span class="pb" id="Page_33">33</span>
we have reason to assume that a triumph like <i>Die Entführung</i>,
and the numberless other treasures he was giving the
world, would lift him above material cares. Instead, financial
troubles began to thicken about him and grew continually
more burdensome. They were, indeed, to beset him to his end.</p>
<p>For all the stir it created, the opera did not bring its composer
the appointment he expected. And money was becoming
a pressing necessity. Constanze’s pregnancies were
frequent during her married life and, though only two children
survived infancy (to become, it is ironic to reflect,
wretched but fairly long-lived mediocrities), her various
confinements and her slow recovery from them did not help
to further her housewifely qualities. It is not wholly surprising
that Mozart’s religious conviction, which had earlier
been a sort of childlike faith, weakened little by little—the
more so because he was brought into growing contact with
men who were profound thinkers and of whom many belonged
to the secret society of Freemasons. Freemasonry
had political implications and was frowned upon by the
Church. Frederick the Great had been a Freemason, Goethe
was one, likewise Joseph II, Gluck, and Joseph Haydn.
Eventually Mozart persuaded his father to join the society.
Who shall say that its principles and philosophies did not
serve Wolfgang as a protective armor, enabling him the more
bravely to endure his social and material tribulations?</p>
<h3 class="generic"><span class="sc">Pupils and Friends—Haydn</span></h3>
<p>Mozart took his wife to Salzburg in the summer of 1783.
He had made a vow the previous year that when he married
Constanze and presented her to his father he would bring
along a newly composed mass for presentation in his native
<span class="pb" id="Page_34">34</span>
town. The superb one in C minor was the outcome, but for
some reason it remained unfinished. We cannot speculate
here on the reasons for its incompleteness. The torso (or
shall we say patchwork?) was rehearsed in St. Peter’s
Church in Salzburg, and Constanze sang some of the soprano
solos. Despite its incompleteness the C minor Mass is a
soaring masterwork, the music of which Mozart later put to
use in the oratorio <i>Davidde Penitente</i>.</p>
<p>The relentless dislike for the Webers that both Leopold
and Nannerl continued to harbor was not mollified by this
visit, which proved uncomfortable as long as it lasted. Wolfgang
and his wife were relieved when the troublesome “duty
call” came to its chilly end and they were back in Vienna
once more. There was no end of professional business for
Mozart to transact—composition in flooding abundance, lessons
to give, concerts (“academies”) to organize, musical
personages to cultivate. Just now, at least, there were no
interminable travels such as had filled Mozart’s boyhood
years. His pupils were sometimes talented, sometimes the
reverse. A few striking names stand out among them—Johann
Nepomuck Hummel, Xaver Süssmayr, Thomas Attwood.
Of the composers and executants with whom he came
in contact we must mention Clementi, Salieri, Paisiello,
Righini, Haydn. With Clementi he appeared as a pianist in
a contest before Joseph II and some visiting Russian blue-bloods.
So evenly were the two players matched that the
competition was declared a draw. Paisiello, composer of
<i>The Barber of Seville</i>, was a lovable character for whom
Wolfgang developed a great liking. Salieri, a disciple of
Gluck and a teacher of Schubert, appears to have criticized
some of Mozart’s works, and Viennese gossip did what it
<span class="pb" id="Page_35">35</span>
could to make the matter worse. The result was that Salieri
lives on in history largely because of a wild slander that he had
given Mozart a poison causing the latter’s untimely death!</p>
<p>The meeting with Joseph Haydn resulted in one of the
noblest and most rewarding friendships the records of music
afford. Artistically their creations benefited inestimably from
the mutual influence of their works and personalities. Haydn,
says Dr. Karl Geiringer, “was fascinated by Mozart’s quicksilver
personality, while Mozart enjoyed the sense of security
that Haydn’s steadfastness and warmth of feeling gave
him.” It was as if the two men kindled brighter sparks in
each other’s souls. They played chamber music together
whenever Haydn made a trip to Vienna, and the younger
man was quick to acknowledge that it was from his older
colleague he first really learned to write string quartets. The
six that he composed between 1782 and 1785 and dedicated
with moving words to his “beloved friend Haydn” are doubtless
among the finest he wrote. It was on a visit of Leopold
Mozart’s to Vienna that Haydn made to him the oft-quoted
remark: “I tell you before God and as an honest man that
your son is the greatest composer known to me either in
person or by reputation!” And later, when someone questioned
a detail in <i>Don Giovanni</i> and asked Haydn’s opinion,
he replied: “I cannot settle this dispute, but this I know: Mozart
is the greatest composer that the world now possesses....
It enrages me to think that the unparalleled Mozart has not
yet been engaged by some imperial or royal court! Do forgive
this outburst; but I love the man too much!” It is heartbreaking
that Haydn was not able, as he would have loved
to be, to secure a post for Mozart in England.</p>
<p>Mozart had another encounter of a different sort at this
<span class="pb" id="Page_36">36</span>
period in Vienna—acquaintance with the music of Johann
Sebastian Bach. Through the Baron van Swieten he had an
opportunity to know the scores of Bach and Handel and
later even to write for certain Handel oratorios “additional
accompaniments” for use in performances Van Swieten was
in the habit of giving on Sundays at the Imperial Library
and in some private homes. And the depth, the grandeur,
and the polyphony of these masters he assimilated to the
added greatness of his own most mature works.</p>
<h3 class="generic"><span class="sc">“Haffner” Symphony</span></h3>
<p>With his concerts, teaching, clavier playing, and miscellaneous
composing Mozart may well have felt, as he remarked
on one occasion, that “people sometimes expected
impossibilities of me.” The Haffner family in Salzburg, for
instance, asked Leopold to write a symphony for some family
festivity, to be ready in something like a fortnight! Wolfgang,
at that time up to his ears in a quantity of other
schemes, found the labor shifted to his own shoulders by
his father, who was otherwise busied. Somehow or other he
contrived to turn out (in a trifle over the appointed time, it
is true) the work we now know as the “Haffner” Symphony.
The excellent Salzburg burgomaster, Sigmund Haffner appears
to have been well pleased. The composer himself instantly
forgot the work and was astonished and delighted
when, a considerable time afterwards, his father sent him
the score. He worked at several operatic projects but nothing
lasting came of them—not even of <i>The Goose of Cairo</i>,
which contains charming passages and which, now and
then, people have attempted to revive. There was, indeed,
an amateur performance in Vienna of <i>Idomeneo</i>. But these
<span class="pb" id="Page_37">37</span>
and several other schemes must all be dismissed as transient
compared with the masterpiece we now approach—<i>Le Nozze
di Figaro</i> (The Marriage of Figaro).</p>
<h3 class="generic"><span class="sc">Le Nozze di Figaro</span></h3>
<p>Mozart had longed for years to write a German opera.
He boasted of himself as a thoroughly patriotic German and
longed for the day when “we should dare to ‘feel as Germans
and even, if I may say so, to sing in German.’” The
nearest he had come to composing a German <i>Singspiel</i> was
when as a child he had produced his little song-play <i>Bastien
und Bastienne</i> and again when, in 1782, he turned out the
inimitable <i>Die Entführung aus dem Serail</i>. But his ambitions
soared even higher and he consumed no end of time
and energy perusing the countless opera books sent to him
without finding anything that suited his true artistic and
dramatic purposes. For a while he had dreamed of accomplishing
something in his Mannheim days, even listening
with interest, but nothing more, to stuff like Holzbauer’s
<i>Gunther von Schwarzburg</i>. Though he briefly thought of a
<i>Rudolf von Habsburg</i>, he had no choice, in the end, but
to return to Italian models—now, however, with a difference!</p>
<p>Soon after the amateur presentation of <i>Idomeneo</i> in
Vienna he had the good fortune to be brought together with
Lorenzo da Ponte, whose real name was Emmanuele Conegliano
and who belonged to a Jewish family in Ceneda, near
Venice. The youth entered a theological seminary and became
an industrious student with a poetic bent, which resulted
in quantities of Italian and Latin verse. An outspoken
adventurer, with countless amorous escapades <i>à la</i> Casanova
to his credit, he began his theatrical career in Dresden, went
<span class="pb" id="Page_38">38</span>
to Vienna where he was to enjoy the favor of Joseph II, and
in the process of time went to London and finally to America,
where he became a teacher of languages, a liquor merchant,
a theater enthusiast, and what-not. He died in New
York many years after Mozart but, like him, was buried in
a grave of which all traces have been lost.</p>
<p>Mozart suggested to his picturesque collaborator (who
cheerfully wrote opera books for Salieri, Martin, Righini,
and others) a libretto to be adapted from Pierre Augustin
Caron de Beaumarchais’ <i>Les Noces de Figaro</i>, of which
Paisiello had recently composed Beaumarchais’ predecessor,
<i>Le Barbier de Seville</i>. But <i>Figaro</i> had been prohibited in
France because it reflected on the morals of the aristocracy
and the same ban had been in effect in Vienna. Da Ponte, altering
it for Mozart’s purposes, adroitly eliminated its barbed
satire and then, tactfully explaining his alterations to the Emperor,
secured his permission for the performance. The composer,
who limited his teaching to the afternoon in order to
complete the score, had been “as touchy as gunpowder and
threatened to burn the opera” if it were not produced by a
certain time. To Joseph II’s credit it must be said that the music
delighted him as soon as Mozart played him a few samples.</p>
<p><i>Figaro</i> was produced at the Burgtheater on May 1, 1786.
A lucky star shone on its birth in spite of intrigues set in motion
against it. Its success was tremendous and was abundantly
foreshadowed during the rehearsals. The Irish tenor,
Michael Kelly (Italianized as “Occhelly”), left us in his
memoirs a striking account of the delight with which the
singers and orchestra joined the listeners at the end of the
first act in acclaiming the composer. “I shall never forget,”
he says, “his little animated countenance when lighted up
<span class="pb" id="Page_39">39</span>
with the glowing rays of genius; it is as impossible to describe
as it would be to paint sunbeams.” Father Mozart wrote to
Nannerl that, not only had almost every number to be repeated,
but that, at the following performance, five were encored,
the “Letter Duet” having to be sung three times. In
the end the Emperor forbade repetitions. That season <i>Figaro</i>
received nine hearings—and for the two following years not
a single one! Mozart’s opponents, after a momentary check,
had conspired successfully once more.</p>
<h3 class="generic"><span class="sc">Prague</span></h3>
<p>Luckily, the incorrigibly musical Czechs championed
Mozart to the limit! With <i>Die Entführung</i> he had won them
heart and soul, and by the time <i>Figaro</i> reached Prague, that
city was on the way to becoming the true Mozart capital of
Europe. From that moment nothing seemed greatly to matter
but that opera. In the composer’s own words, people
would listen to nothing else and talk of nothing else. Its
melodies were worked up into dance arrangements. Players
in beer gardens and even the wandering street musicians
who begged for pennies on corners had to sing or strum
their <i>Non piu andrai</i> and the rest of the tunes if they wanted
any passer-by to pay attention to them. “Truly a great honor
for me,” mused the composer. Prague, now a high altar of
Mozart worship, was for some time to remain so.</p>
<p>The creator of <i>Figaro</i> had valued friends in Prague. Among
the dearest of these were the Duscheks, whom he had known
in Salzburg—Franz, a gifted pianist and composer, and his
wife, Josefa, both older than Mozart. Josefa, an excellent
musician, became an exceptional singer, and for her Wolfgang
was to compose some superb though difficult concert
<span class="pb" id="Page_40">40</span>
arias. She was well-to-do and, with the money an admirer
lavished on her, she bought herself an estate known as the
<i>Bertramka</i>—still one of the show places of Prague, despite the
vicissitudes of more than a century and a half. Here Mozart
was often an honored guest, and to this day the villa and the
hilly gardens surrounding it seem to breathe his spirit.</p>
<p>The permanent Italian company that supplied opera to
the people of Prague, though not large, was exceedingly
capable. At this time it was managed by a certain Pasquale
Bondini. Its two efficient conductors (both of them Bohemians),
Josef Strobach and J. B. Kucharz, were heart and
soul devoted to Mozart. The intensely music-loving Czechs
jammed Mozart’s academies and could not hear enough of
his symphonies and clavier works. Small wonder, therefore,
that Bondini resolved to take advantage of the heaven-sent
opportunity of Mozart’s presence to commission him to write
a new opera for the company next season. The fee was the
usual sum of 100 ducats (no more!), the opera—<i>Don Giovanni</i>.</p>
<p>Actually, much more could be said of this Prague visit of
Mozart’s. At one of his concerts he presented for the first
time the D major Symphony which sent its hearers into
such raptures that the world has forever named it the
“Prague” Symphony. When he arrived from Vienna it had
been arranged that he was to stay with the Duscheks, but,
Josefa being away, Mozart accepted the hospitality of the
aristocrat, Count Thun, and sat as an honored guest among
the great of the land. He doubtless remembered how at
Colloredo’s court his table companions had been cooks and
grooms! He was taken to the sumptuous dwelling of still
another local patrician, the Count Canal. And so it continued
from day to day. Yet he found time to write a piece
<span class="pb" id="Page_41">41</span>
for a wandering harpist, which the latter played everywhere,
boasting that Mozart had specially composed it for him.</p>
<h3 class="generic"><span class="sc">Death of Leopold Mozart</span></h3>
<p>In February 1787, Mozart was back in Vienna in a joyous
frame of mind. One may question that this jubilant mood
was of long duration. That the new opera was to be ready
as early as the following October was hardly the greatest
of his worries, for Mozart, like Haydn, Bach, and other
masters of that century, was accustomed to a speed of
creative production that puts our machine age to shame.
The welcome the Viennese accorded the returning traveler,
flushed by the recollection of his recent triumphs, was
frosty. Also, there came the news that his father’s health
was failing. “Naturally,” reflected Leopold, “old people do
not grow younger!” Wolfgang wrote his parent in words
that nobly convey the essence of his own mature philosophy:</p>
<p>“<i>I need not tell you with what anxiety I await better news
from you ... although I am wont in all things to anticipate the
worst. Since death is the true goal of our lives, I have made
myself so well acquainted during the past two years with this
true and best friend of mankind that the idea of it no longer
holds any terror for me, but rather much that is tranquil and
comforting. And I thank God that He has granted me the good
fortune to obtain this opportunity of regarding death as the
key to our true happiness. I never lie down in bed without
considering that, young as I am, perhaps I may on the morrow
be no more. Yet not one of those who know me say that I am
morose or melancholy, and for this I thank my Creator and
wish heartily that the same happiness may be given to my
fellow men.</i>”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_42">42</div>
<p>One is moved to think of Shubert’s words to his father
a few years later when, looking upon the lakes and peaks
of the Austrian Alps, he wrote:</p>
<p>“<i>As if death were the worst thing that could befall one ...
could one but look on these divine lakes and mountains ... he
would deem it a great happiness to be restored for a new life
to the inscrutable forces of the earth!</i>”</p>
<p>All the same, Mozart was profoundly shaken when, on
May 28, his father passed away without the opportunity
to see his son once more. “You can realize my feelings,” he
wrote his friend Gottfried von Jacquin. We shall not go far
wrong when we surmise that these deep and solemn emotions
colored to a considerable degree some of the more
tragic pages of the nascent <i>Don Giovanni</i>, the book of
which Da Ponte was now writing for him while working at
the same time on librettos for Salieri and Martin!</p>
<p>In the spring of 1787 the composer had a brief but memorable
encounter; for at this time there came briefly to Vienna
from Bonn a sixteen-year-old youth—Ludwig van Beethoven,
a protégé of the Count Waldstein—presumably to study
with Mozart. The latter heard his visitor improvise and
was at first unimpressed because he believed the extemporization
had been “memorized,” but was converted as soon
as he gave the young Rhinelander a complicated theme
to treat on the spot. The originality and seriousness of what
he heard stirred the older musician to the prophecy: “This
young man is going to make the world talk about him!”
But Mozart had, at the moment, no leisure for this prospective
pupil, who returned shortly to Bonn and on his later
trip after Mozart’s death placed himself under the direction
of Haydn.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_43">43</div>
<h3 class="generic"><span class="sc">Don Giovanni</span></h3>
<p>In mid-September Mozart and Constanze went to Prague,
bringing the partly finished <i>Don Giovanni</i> score. Bondini
had found the composer lodgings at the house on the Kohlmarkt
called the “Three Lion Cubs.” Across the way, at
the inn <i>Zum Platteis</i>, rooms were engaged for Da Ponte
and, as the windows faced each other, composer and librettist
had long discussions across the narrow street about
details of the book, in the preparation of which Mozart,
with his keen dramatic instincts, played a dominating role.
He and Constanze appeared, however, to have spent quite
as much time with the Duscheks at the <i>Bertramka</i> as at the
“Three Lion Cubs.” Rehearsals consumed a great amount
of energy, there were numerous modifications to be made
in the music (the young baritone, Luigi Bassi, who had the
title role, demanded <i>five</i> recastings of the duet <i>La ci darem</i>
before he was satisfied with the music), and Mozart had all
manner of trouble with Catarina Micelli, the Elvira. In addition,
the singer of Zerlina, Caterina Bondini, could not utter
the peasant girl’s shriek in the first finale to the composer’s
satisfaction until he terrified her by grasping her roughly
and thus causing her to scream exactly as he wanted. After
one of the last rehearsals the conductor, Kucharz, being
asked by the master for his candid opinion of the opera,
replied encouragingly: “Whatever comes from Mozart will
always delight in Bohemia.” “I assure you, dear friend,
I have spared myself no pains to produce something worthy
for the people of Prague!” declared the composer, who had
already boasted that “my Praguers understand me.”</p>
<p>Here is the place, no doubt, to tell once more the oft-repeated
<span class="pb" id="Page_44">44</span>
tale of the overture, put on paper, according to a
hoary legend, the night before the première while Constanze
kept the master awake by plying him with punch
and telling him stories. As a matter of fact, the overture
was written the night before the dress rehearsal—and it
was nothing unusual for Mozart to write down at the last
moment a work mentally finished in every detail.</p>
<p>A few days after the first performance the Prague <i>Oberpostamtszeitung</i>
published a review that probably excels
anything ever written about the opera. It read simply: “Connoisseurs
and musicians say that nothing like it has ever
been produced in Prague.” The opinion is probably as true
today as in 1787. For there is literally nothing like <i>Don
Giovanni</i>, either among its composer’s creations or elsewhere.
One can only share the emotion of Rossini when,
being shown the manuscript score, he said to its owner,
the singer Pauline Viardot-Garcia: “I want to bow the knee
before this sacred relic!” And echo the words of Richard
Wagner: “What is more perfect than <i>every</i> number in
‘<i>Don Giovanni</i>’? Where else has music won so infinitely
rich an individuality, been able to characterize so surely,
so definitely and in such exuberant plentitude as here?”</p>
<p><i>Figaro</i> is, if you will, the more perfect artistic entity of
the two; <i>Don Giovanni</i> is looser, less consistent, on the surface
even grossly illogical. But so, too, is human nature.
And if all the world’s a stage, what more than a <i>dramma
giocoso</i> is the experience of life? Whatever the narrow intent
of Lorenzo da Ponte, when he carpentered the book out of
well-worn odds and ends, it was with a profound knowledge
of the sorrows and absurdities of humankind that Mozart
breathed into it an abiding soul.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_45">45</div>
<p>“Long live da Ponte, long live Mozart!” had written the
stage director, Domenico Guardasoni. “All impresarios, all
artists must exalt them to the skies; for as long as such men
live there can be no more question of theatre miseries!”
The Duscheks outdid themselves to make life pleasant for
their guests. Mozart found time to compose several songs
and even a superb concert air, <i>Bella mia fiamma, addio</i>, for
Josefa after that lady had locked him up in the garden house
till he had finished the promised music.</p>
<p>On November 15, 1787, which virtually coincided with
the composer’s return to Vienna, Gluck died. Less than a
month later Joseph II appointed Mozart to the older master’s
post of Kammerkompositeur, with an annual salary of
800 Gulden. Gluck had received 2000; and before long
Mozart was complaining that his pay was “too much for
what he did, too little for what he could do.” What he did
was principally to supply minuets, contradances, and
<i>Teutsche</i> for court balls and similar occasions.</p>
<p>The year 1788 dawned in gloomy fashion for Mozart.
To be sure, <i>Don Giovanni</i> had its first Viennese hearing
on May 7, with a cast including his sister-in-law, Aloysia
Lange, as Donna Anna, Catarina Cavalieri (the original
Constanze in <i>Die Entführung</i>) as Elvira, and Francesco
Benucci, the first Figaro, as Leporello. Mozart had cut out
some numbers, replacing them with new ones, eliminated
the platitudinous epilogue, and ended the work with the
prodigious hell music of Don Giovanni’s disappearance.
The Emperor remarked: “The opera is divine, perhaps
even finer than ‘<i>Figaro</i>.’ But it is a rather tough morsel for
the teeth of my Viennese”—to which Mozart replied, “Let
us give them time to chew it!”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_46">46</div>
<h3 class="generic"><span class="sc">Symphonies in E flat, G minor, and C major</span></h3>
<p>Yet from now on he was to pay for his Prague triumphs.
With a kind of fateful persistence things seemed to go
wrong. That an infant daughter died was a rather familiar
affliction (of the children of the Mozart couple only the
sons, Karl and Raymund Leopold, survived infancy). Money
troubles plagued him unremittingly. Again and again he
had to appeal for loans to Michael Puchberg, a merchant
and brother Mason, and later to Franz Hofdemel, a jurist
of his acquaintance whose wife was one of his pupils. But,
by and large, these pupils were becoming scarcer and there
seemed steadily less patronage for the academies he planned.
To make matters worse Constanze’s management of the
household appeared to go from bad to worse. The arrangements
of works like Handel’s <i>Acis and Galathea</i> and <i>Messiah</i>,
which he was making about this time for the parsimonious
Baron van Swieten, brought in as good as nothing. Mozart’s
affairs were falling into a sordid, not to say a tragic, state.</p>
<p>Small wonder, therefore, that he grasped at the opportunity
to settle outside of Vienna proper in a house in the
Waehring district, where the air was purer than in the
heart of the city and where he had the added advantages
of quiet and a garden. A change of residence had never
been a particular hardship for the Mozarts. In the space
of nine years they moved eleven times in Vienna alone.</p>
<p><i>“Their life,” says Alfred Einstein, “was like a perpetual tour,
changing from one hotel room to another.... In one of the
handsomer dwellings, Schulergasse 8, the ceiling of Mozart’s
workroom had fine plaster ornamentation with sprites and
cherubs. I am convinced that Mozart never wasted a glance
<span class="pb" id="Page_47">47</span>
on it. He was ready at any instant to exchange Vienna for
another city or Austria for another country.... He was thinking
of a trip to Russia, as a result of conversations with the Russian
ambassador in Dresden in 1789. But he had to be satisfied with
smaller journeys, and with ‘journeys’ within Vienna.”</i></p>
<p>In his Waehring surroundings, however, he boasted of
being able to accomplish more work in a few days than
elsewhere in a month. The finest fruit of this suburban
sojourn is the glorious symphonic trilogy, the masterpieces
in E flat, G minor, and C major, composed in June, July,
and August, respectively—the third, the sublime “Jupiter,”
the last of Mozart’s forty-one symphonies and given its
deathless name no one knows exactly by whom or why.
The three, which have a profound psychological connection,
were written, in all probability, for a series of academies
that never took place. However this may be, they are the
crown of Mozart’s symphonic compositions and rank indisputably
as the greatest symphonies before Beethoven.</p>
<h3 class="generic"><i>Così fan tutte</i></h3>
<p>In April 1789, a ray of hope suddenly appeared to illuminate
his depressing horizon. A friend and pupil, the young
prince Carl Lichnowsky, who had estates in Silesia and
an important rank in the Prussian army, invited Mozart
to accompany him on a trip to Berlin. Lichnowsky enjoyed
influence at the court of the music-loving Prussian king,
Frederick William II, and seemed ready to recommend his
teacher to the good graces of the monarch. At last Mozart
had reason to anticipate a well-paying post! The pleasure-loving
Constanze resigned herself with the best grace possible
to remain behind. The travelers stopped off in Prague,
<span class="pb" id="Page_48">48</span>
in Dresden, in Leipzig (where Mozart played the organ
in St. Thomas Church in so masterly a fashion that Bach’s
erstwhile pupil, the aged cantor, Johann Friedrich Doles,
believed for a moment that his old master had come back
to life and hastened to show his delighted guest one of the
Bach motets the church possessed). On April 25 Mozart
arrived at the court in Potsdam, where the King gave him 100
Friedrichsdor, ordered six string quartets and some easy
clavier sonatas for his daughter, but did nothing about a
Kapellmeister position or a commission for an opera! Mozart
did go to the theater in Berlin where he heard his own
<i>Entführung</i>, was applauded by the audience, and audibly
scolded a blundering violinist in the orchestra!</p>
<p>But his fortunes had not materially changed and in May
he was writing to Constanze: “My dear little wife, you will
have to get more satisfaction from my return than from
any money I am bringing.” When he reached home and
found her suffering from a foot trouble he sent her, regardless
of his depleted purse, to near-by Baden for a cure—at
the same time admonishing her to beware of flirtations!
Then he set to work on the quartets for the Prussian king,
of which he finished three (the last he was to write), and a
single “easy” sonata, instead of the promised six, for the
Princess Friederike. In September 1789, he was to compose
for his friend, the clarinet virtuoso Anton Stadler, the celestial
Clarinet Quintet (K. 581), which for sheer euphony
is almost without parallel in its composer’s writings.</p>
<p>The success of a revival of <i>Figaro</i> in August 1789 appears
to have moved the Emperor to approach Mozart with a
commission for a new opera. The outcome was <i>Così fan
tutte</i>, the incentive to the plot being an incident said to
<span class="pb" id="Page_49">49</span>
have taken place in Viennese society. Once again Lorenzo
da Ponte was called upon to put the piece into shape. The
fundamentals of the story are to be found in Boccaccio and
it may well have been in the <i>Decameron</i> that Da Ponte
discovered the real basis of his dexterous and amusing,
though highly artificial, comedy. We know little about the
circumstances surrounding the composition of the piece.</p>
<p>On January 21, 1790, <i>Così fan tutte</i> was performed at the
Burgtheater. The reviews, if middling, were not outright
unfavorable. “The music of Mozart is charming, the plot
amusing enough,” wrote Count Zinzendorf in his diary; and
the <i>Journal des Luxus und der Moden</i> remarked: “It is
sufficient to say of the music that it was composed by
Mozart!” Until the following autumn the work achieved
only ten performances. It is not unreasonable to explain
this by the fact that in 1790 Joseph II, who for some time
had been ailing, died and was succeeded by a ruler of very
different tendencies—his brother, Leopold II.</p>
<h3 class="generic"><span class="sc">Later Works</span></h3>
<p>With the accession of the new emperor, Mozart briefly
imagined the “gates of his good luck were about to open.”
He was quickly disillusioned. Leopold II was hard, cold,
unmusical. He instantly dismissed some of his predecessor’s
most faithful artistic servitors. Da Ponte, for one, was
dropped. Mozart’s opponent, Salieri, cautiously withdrew
into obscurity and waited behind the scenes for a new
opportunity. Van Swieten tried to obtain for Mozart a position
as teacher of the Archduke Franz, but nothing came
of the well-meant effort, and presently the composer found
his pupils reduced to two. His health began to trouble him
<span class="pb" id="Page_50">50</span>
alarmingly, with headaches and tooth troubles. He had the
mortification of being ignored when the King of Naples visited
Vienna, while Salieri and Haydn enjoyed special honors.</p>
<p>He was not even asked to participate in the musical festivities
in connection with the Emperor’s coronation in
October 1790, or to travel to Frankfurt, where the ceremony
was to take place. So he decided to make the journey at his
own expense, hoping against hope for some distinction or
reward. Though he did not obtain either, he at least had
the satisfaction of knowing that his <i>Don Giovanni</i>, <i>Figaro</i>,
<i>Entführung</i>, and even the early <i>Finta giardiniera</i>, were
relished in neighboring Mainz. The opera chosen for the
actual coronation was Wranitzky’s <i>Oberon</i>. However, the
Frankfurt town council “graciously” allowed Mozart to give
a concert “on his own responsibility” at a local theater,
October 13 at 11 in the morning! “Plenty of honor, but little
money,” he wrote. He played two concertos (probably the
F major, K. 459, and the D major, K. 537) and a rondo.
As ever, his improvisation impressed deeply—only a royal
luncheon party and a maneuver of Hessian troops were
counter attractions that cut down the attendance. On the
way home he stopped off in Mannheim and Munich, saw
his old friends Cannabich and Ramm, played at an academy
the Elector Carl Theodor gave for the returning King of
Naples, and went home to Vienna, where Constanze had
moved their effects into a new apartment in the Rauhensteingasse—destined
to be his last home on earth!</p>
<p>In his new dwelling the composer completed by December
two superb works—the String Quintet in D (K. 593)
and the stunning Adagio and Allegro in F minor (K. 594)
“for an organ cylinder in a clock.” About that same time
<span class="pb" id="Page_51">51</span>
the director of the Italian Opera in London, one O’Reilly,
suggested that he come for half a year to England, to write
two operas for that theater and give concerts, and promised
him 300 pounds sterling. Nothing stood in the way of
O’Reilly’s suggestion, except operas that the master was
soon to provide for Vienna and Prague. Soon afterwards,
Haydn on his way to London took leave of his younger
friend who bade him farewell with the heart-shaking words:
“I fear, Papa, this is the last time we shall see each other!”
Salomon, Haydn’s manager, had planned to bring Mozart to
England on the older composer’s return to the Continent.</p>
<p>To be sure, there was other work to be done, if in large
part trifling. But early in January 1791, Mozart completed
his last clavier concerto, the singularly affecting one in
B flat (K. 595), which harks back to earlier models and
lacks some of the more original and dramatic elements of
the incomparable ones in D minor, E flat, A major, C major,
and C minor. And in June 1791, on a visit to Constanze in
Baden (where she had gone for another cure!), he wrote for
a local choirmaster, Anton Stoll, that short <i>Ave Verum</i> motet,
than which nothing of Mozart’s is more unutterably seraphic.</p>
<h3 class="generic"><i>The Magic Flute</i></h3>
<p>He was ill and despondent but his activity was untiring.
It is an infinite pity that he did not take the hint of Da
Ponte and others who were urging him to come to England,
where he might easily have made a fortune and become
a British idol like Handel before him and Haydn and Mendelssohn
after him. He went on writing because, as he
was soon to say, “composition tires me less than resting.”
In the spring of 1791 he was commissioned to compose
<span class="pb" id="Page_52">52</span>
another opera, which was to be his last and, in a number
of respects, his most epoch-making—<i>The Magic Flute</i> (<i>Die
Zauberflöte</i>). And with it he was to write one of the most
extraordinary works of operatic history, to create German
opera in accordance with a long-cherished ambition of his
but, like Moses, never to do more than cross the frontier of
the promised land he had beheld in vision.</p>
<p>Emanuel Schikaneder, who had known Wolfgang and
Leopold Mozart in Salzburg, was a wandering actor and a
playwright of sorts. The head of a traveling company, which
gave Shakespeare, Goethe, Schiller, Lessing, and, for better
or worse, operas by Gluck and <i>Singspiele</i> by Haydn and
Mozart, he had like numberless barnstormers a keen knowledge
of the tastes of audiences, particularly of the plebeian
ones to which his players catered. In his own way as adventurous
a person as Da Ponte, Schikaneder took over in 1789
the direction of a playhouse on the Starhemberg estates,
the Freihaus-Theater, in the Wieden district. There he
produced comic shows, <i>Singspiele</i>, and operettas. With his
grasp of suburban tastes he combined a thorough understanding
of what could be done with his brother Mason
and old acquaintance, Mozart. A business rival of the impresario
Marinelli, who ran a theater in the Leopoldstadt quarter
and made a specialty of “magic plays,” he now approached
the composer with his own <i>Singspiel</i>.</p>
<div class="fig"> id="fig4"> <ANTIMG src="images/img006.jpg" alt="" width-obs="500" height-obs="648" /> <p class="caption">Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in 1789 <br/><i>Drawing in silver on ivory by Dora Stock</i></p> </div>
<div class="fig"> id="fig5"> <ANTIMG src="images/img007.jpg" alt="" width-obs="500" height-obs="580" /> <p class="caption">Mozart’s wife, Constanze, about 1783 <br/><i>Lithograph from a drawing by Joseph Lange, Constanze’s brother-in-law</i></p> </div>
<div class="pb" id="Page_53">53</div>
<p>We cannot here examine the sources from which he
assembled his libretto. There ran through it a powerful
strain of Masonic influence, love interest, low comedy in
abundance (Schikaneder took care to tailor to his own
measure the role of the wandering bird-catcher Papageno),
and other surefire theatrical ingredients. He asked Mozart
to supply the music, and the latter, after warning him that
since he had never yet written a “magic opera” he hesitated
to court failure in this sphere, at length complied. Between
March and the end of September 1791, <i>The Magic Flute</i>
was written. Schikaneder, aware of the glorious bargain
he had struck, strove to be the soul of complaisance. He
supplied the composer with every comfort at his disposal—a
charming summerhouse on the grounds of the theater
where he could work at the score, with food, wine, and
pretty actresses to divert him—in short, whatever promised
to humor the musician and promote the flow of inspiration.
He even hummed or sang the sort of tunes he considered
appropriate to the role he designed for himself.</p>
<p>Let us at this stage dispose of a few legends that, in the
course of 160 years, have accumulated about the work. One
is that the play is a farrago of childish nonsense, made tolerable
only by the variety and grandeur of Mozart’s music;
another, that the plot was altered at a late hour because
another manager was about to produce a work similar in
its story; a third, that the piece was a failure. As a matter
of fact, the book of <i>The Magic Flute</i> happens to be one
of the best librettos in existence from the point of view of
good theater. The imagined “revision” never took place,
for considerations of “parallels,” let alone plagiarisms, never
bothered theater directors at this epoch. On the contrary,
if a play or opera had one feature that pleased its public,
a rival manager was quick to copy this very point on an
even broader scale. Although at the first performance <i>The
Magic Flute</i> did not achieve such an overwhelming triumph
as its composer had hoped, before many months had passed
it was attracting throngs; and not many years later Schikaneder
<span class="pb" id="Page_54">54</span>
was able to build out of the wealth it brought him
that famous Theater an der Wien which still stands and
was to become the cradle of various storied masterworks.
As for the much-maligned book, it appealed so powerfully
to none other than Goethe that he set out to write a sequel!</p>
<p>While the sick and harried Mozart worked with still inexhaustible
fertility at the score of his magic opera he was
interrupted by a sufficiently distasteful order from Prague
for an opera to be produced there at the coronation of
Leopold II as “King of Bohemia.” With no more than
eighteen days to compose the music and assist in the production
of this “occasional piece,” he was ordered to set
an old text of Metastasio’s (retouched, it is true, by one
Caterino Mazzolà)—<i>La Clemenza di Tito</i>, an antiquated
specimen of <i>opera seria</i>, such as the composer had not
bothered with since the period of <i>Idomeneo</i>. The available
time being so short, Mozart took along with him his pupil
Süssmayr, who was asked to perform the almost secretarial
job of writing the <i>secco</i> recitatives, leaving the more important
parts of the music to the master. His good friend,
the impresario Guardasoni, mounted the opera in sumptuous
fashion. But good will did not supplant genuine inspiration
and, for all its craftsmanship, <i>La Clemenza di Tito</i>
did not strike fire. The Empress dismissed it as <i>porcheria
tedesca</i> (German rubbish). A correspondent of <i>Studien
für Tonkünstler und Musikfreunde</i> reported that the “beloved
Kapellmeister Mozard” did not obtain this time the
applause he had a right to expect! For once, clearly, “his
Praguers did not understand him.” Doubtless, <i>Tito</i> is not a
<i>Figaro</i> or a <i>Don Giovanni</i>, but those unfamiliar with the work
may well ask themselves if it is as bad as history paints it.
<span class="pb" id="Page_55">55</span>
Anyway its reception did not raise the master’s spirit. And he
took leave of his friends with tears.</p>
<p>He was now seriously ill. He had fainting fits and accesses
of exhaustion. On September 28, 1791, he finished <i>The
Magic Flute</i>—the March of the Priests and the overture
being the last numbers set down. The Masonic symbols and
meanings with which the opera is filled (comprehensible,
however, only to initiates) are heard in the thrice-reiterated
three chords at the opening of the superb tone piece. This
overture is a fully developed sonata movement built on a
fugal plan, the mercurial subject having been borrowed from
a clavier sonata of his old friend and rival, Clementi. At
the first performance the composer Johann Schenk (later,
one of Beethoven’s teachers) crept through the orchestra to
Mozart, who was conducting, and reverently kissed his hand,
while the composer, continuing to conduct with his right
hand, affectionately patted Schenk’s head with his left. He
took pleasure in playing the glockenspiel during Papageno’s
air “Ein Mädchen oder Weibchen” and once, in fun, introduced
an unexpected arpeggio which threw Schikaneder
completely out for a few minutes.</p>
<h3 class="generic"><i>The Requiem</i></h3>
<p>As he was boarding his coach on the trip to Prague, Mozart
was startled on being accosted by a gaunt, gray-clad
stranger of mysterious mien who asked him if he were willing
to undertake, for a certain sum, the composition of a
requiem mass to be delivered at a specified time. He
agreed but from this moment the weird visitor, whose identity
he was admonished not to try to discover, gave him no
rest. He became convinced that a messenger from the
<span class="pb" id="Page_56">56</span>
Beyond had sought him out, that the incident had a supernatural
aspect, that he was, indeed, ordered by a higher
power to compose a death mass for <i>himself</i>! And the certainty
that his time was at hand grew steadily upon him.</p>
<p>The incident, in reality, had nothing macabre or mysterious
about it. The “gray messenger” was a certain Leutgeb,
steward of the Count Walsegg zu Stuppach who had
lately lost his wife and who, aspiring to be known as a
composer, planned to perform the requiem as his own work.
But Mozart knew nothing of this. He had a letter from his
old friend, Da Ponte, entreating him to join him in England.
But it was too late and Mozart’s tragedy had to be played
out to the bitter close that was now swiftly approaching. To
Da Ponte he dispatched this pathetic missive:</p>
<p>“<i>I wish I could follow your advice, but how can I do so? I
feel stunned, I reason with difficulty, and cannot rid myself of
the vision of this unknown man. I see him perpetually; he
entreats me, he presses me, he impatiently demands the work.
I go on writing.... Otherwise I have nothing more to fear.
I know from what I suffer that the hour is come; I am at the
point of death; I have come to the end before having had the
enjoyment of my talent. Life was so beautiful, my career stood
at first under so auspicious a star! But one cannot change one’s
destiny!</i>”</p>
<p>What tortured him more than anything was the thought
that, as furiously as he worked, the <i>Requiem</i> might remain
unfinished at the death he knew was imminent. He had
numberless discussions with his pupil, Xaver Süssmayr, but
it was daily becoming clearer to him that he had small
chance of completing the mass himself. On a walk in the
Prater with Constanze in the early autumn he exclaimed:
<span class="pb" id="Page_57">57</span>
“It cannot last much longer ... Certainly, I have been
given poison; that is a feeling I cannot shake off!” And this,
presumably, is the basis of the age-old slander that Salieri
had been his murderer! At all events growing weakness
forced him to take to his bed on November 20. He was
never to leave it. “I know,” he had said shortly before, “that
my music-making is about at an end. I feel a constant chill
which I cannot explain. I now have no more to do save
with doctors and apothecaries!”</p>
<p>His hands and feet were beginning to swell. Yet he
struggled desperately to get on with the composition of
the mass. The visits of a few friends seemed to comfort the
sick man, and he asked them to try over in his presence
certain completed pages of the score. At the beginning of
December he himself struggled to sing some of the alto
part of the work. When the <i>Lacrymosa</i> was reached he gave
up the attempt after a few measures and, overcome by the
certainty that he was doomed never to finish the music, he
broke down in a fit of weeping. And in these days, with tragic
irony, there dawned a promise of better things! The rapidly
growing popularity of <i>The Magic Flute</i> augured a carefree
future; a group of Hungarian nobles began to raise a subscription
that would have assured Mozart an annual income
of 1000 Gulden; and from Holland there came, almost at the
twelfth hour, news of an even more gratifying project.</p>
<h3 class="generic"><span class="sc">Mozart’s Death</span></h3>
<p>In the last hours his sister-in-law, Sophie Haibl, lent what
assistance she could. Constanze, grief-stricken and stupefied,
was helpless. The sick man, tortured to the last by the
thought of his unfinished <i>Requiem</i>, was shaken by the
<span class="pb" id="Page_58">58</span>
chills and fires of fever. It was found necessary to take a
canary out of the sickroom because the singing of the bird
seemed to cause the sufferer physical pain. He appealed to
Sophie to remain with him, to comfort Constanze, and to
“see me die. I have the taste of death on my tongue already
and who is to care for my Constanze when I am gone?”
A doctor who attended him was at the theater when summoned
and, realizing the hopelessness of the case, promised
to come “when the play was over.” Sophie was dispatched
to call a priest. When she returned she found the dying
man bending over some sketches of the <i>Requiem</i> and giving
Süssmayr some final directions about the work. At last he
lapsed into unconsciousness, a few moments before the end
puffing out his cheeks and making what the tearful bystanders
imagined to be an effort to imitate the sound of
the drums in his unfinished score. And five minutes before
one on the morning of December 5, 1791, he died.</p>
<p>Of what illness did Mozart die? Typhus say some; a result
of childhood illness, say others, complicated by the
strain of overwork, traveling, disappointments, and deprivations.
The most plausible medical explanation would appear
to have been supplied by a modern Salzburg physician,
Dr. H. Kasseroller, who diagnosed the cause of the master’s
early demise as uremia resulting from Bright’s disease. And
this may explain the composer’s persistent idea in his last
weeks that he had been administered poison.</p>
<p>The rest of the pitiful story need not detain us. The
parsimonious Baron van Swieten advised Constanze to observe
economy in making the funeral arrangements; and so
Mozart was buried in a pauper’s grave. On December 6,
the body was taken to the cemetery of St. Marx. A handful
<span class="pb" id="Page_59">59</span>
of mourners who followed the hearse dispersed when a
heavy snowstorm made progress difficult. The stricken Constanze
found it impossible to accompany the pathetic little
cortege; and when some time later she attempted to discover
her husband’s resting place, a new gravedigger who replaced
the earlier one had no idea whatever where he lay.</p>
<p>What matter that posterity has never discovered the
whereabouts of his sepulcher? Mozart, the incessant wanderer,
the infinitely lonely, now lives more fully and
gloriously than ever in the hearts and souls of all true worshipers
of the divinest in music. And if his earthly tragedy
has never seemed so poignant as it does today, we can take
consolation from the circumstance that our generation has
learned to prize the greatness, elevation, and beauty of his
art more, perhaps, than did any of our predecessors.</p>
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