MOZART.
It was in 1762 that Leopold Mozart, father of the two musical
prodigies, Maria Anna and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, first began to turn
to account his children's talent. Wolfgang was then six years old, and
his sister between four and five years older. By easy stages the
family journeyed to Vienna in the month of September, and it is told
that upon their arrival the wonderful boy-musician saved his father the
payment of customs duties. He made friends with the custom-house
officer, showed him his harpsichord, played him a minuet on his little
fiddle, and the thing was done,—"Pass—free of duty."
The imperial family were sincere lovers of music. Charles VI., the
father of Maria Theresa, had two passions, hunting and music, and was
an accomplished musician. He used to accompany operatic or other
performances at court upon the clavier, and also composed pieces. At
one time he wrote an opera, which was performed with great splendour in
the theatre of his palace. On this occasion the emperor led the
orchestra, and his two daughters, Maria Theresa and Maria Anne, danced
in the ballet. Lady Mary Wortley Montagu speaks of an opera which she
saw at Vienna in 1716, the decorations and dresses of which cost the
emperor thirty thousand pounds. He called Metastasio from Italy to
compose the operas for his court. Maria Theresa inherited this love of
music, and in 1725, when only seven years old, sang in an opera by Fux,
at a fête given in honour of her mother, the Empress Elizabeth.
Alluding to this, she once said in a joking way to the celebrated
singer, Faustina Hasse, that she believed herself to be the first of
living vocalists. In 1739 she sang a duet with Senesino so beautifully
that the famous old singer was melted to tears. Her husband, Francis
I., was also a lover of music, and her daughters were carefully
instructed in singing, and often appeared in operatic performances at
court. Maria Theresa's son, afterward the Emperor Joseph, also sang
well, and played both the harpsichord and the violoncello.
Mozart and His Sister before Maria Teresa. From painting by A. Borckmann.
"With a court so favourably disposed toward music, it is not surprising
that Leopold, a few days only after his arrival, should have received a
command to bring his children on the 13th of October to Schönbrunn, an
imperial palace near Vienna, and this without any solicitation on his
part. The children remained three hours with the court, and were then
obliged to repeat their performance. The Emperor Francis I., the
husband of Maria Theresa, took a peculiar interest in the little
'sorcerer.'
"He made the little fellow play with only one finger, in which he
perfectly succeeded. An attempt which little Mozart made at the
special request of the emperor, to play with the keys covered by a
piece of cloth, was also a brilliant success. It was, perhaps, owing
to the imperial fancy that this species of artistic trick obtained
considerable celebrity, and played a not unimportant part in the little
'sorcerer's' repertoire on all his long journeys. Wolfgang entered
readily into any joke that was made with him, but sometimes he could be
very serious, as, for instance, when he called for the court composer,
Georg Christoph Wagenseil, a thorough connoisseur of the harpsichord,
and himself a performer. The emperor stepped back and made Wagenseil
come forward, to whom Mozart said, quite seriously, 'I play a concerto
by you: you must turn over the pages for me.' The emperor ordered a
hundred ducats to be paid to his father. The empress was very kind to
the Mozarts, and sent them costly dresses. 'Would you like to know,'
writes Leopold to Hagenauer, his host at Salzburg, 'what Wolferl's (a
pet name for Wolfgang) dress is like? It is of the finest cloth,
lilac-coloured, the vest of moire of the same colour. Coat and
top-coat with a double broad border of gold. It was made for the
Hereditary Duke Maximilian Franz.' In the picture which is preserved
in the Mozart collection at Salzburg, Mozart is painted in this dress.
Wolfgang never showed the least embarrassment in the society of the
great."
"At court, as elsewhere, Mozart was a bright, happy child. He would
spring on the empress's lap, throw his arms around her neck, and kiss
her, and play with the princesses on a footing of equality. He was
especially devoted to the Archduchess Marie Antoinette. Once, when he
fell on the polished floor, she lifted him from the ground and consoled
him, while one of her sisters stood by. 'You are good,' said Wolfgang,
I will marry you.' The empress asked him why. 'From gratitude,'
answered he; 'she was good to me, but her sister stood by and did
nothing.'"
Nor was he shy with the Crown Prince Joseph, who, in after years, when
emperor, reminded him of his playing duets with Wagenseil, and of
Mozart's standing in the audience and calling out, "Fie!" or "That was
false!" or "Bravo!" as the case might be.
As was to be expected, the children became the rage in society, and all
the ladies fell in love with little Mozart. No musical entertainments
could be given without him and Maria Anna, and they appeared in company
with the most celebrated performers, being everywhere petted, feasted,
and flattered, and receiving many costly gifts.
Their successes induced Leopold Mozart to plan a more extended tour,
and in the summer of the next year he and his children set out on a
journey which was intended to include visits to Paris and London. The
trio arrived in Paris in November, and were greatly befriended by their
countryman, Grimm, the encyclopaedist, secretary to the Duke of
Orleans. Leopold wrote home thus, about the help this powerful friend
had been to them: "He has done everything; he has introduced the matter
at court, and arranged the first concert. He, alone, paid me eighty
louis-d'ors, then sold three hundred and twenty tickets, and, moreover,
bore the expense of lighting with wax. We burnt more than sixty
candles. It was he who obtained permission for the concert, and now he
is getting up a second, for which a hundred tickets have already been
distributed. You see what one man can do, who possesses sense and a
kind heart. He is a native of Ratisbon, but has been more than fifteen
years in Paris, and knows how to guide everything in the right
direction, so that all must happen as he intends."
Mozart and Madame de Pompadour. From painting by V. de Paredes.
Little Wolfgang had played before Maria Theresa; now he performed
before her ally, Madame de Pompadour, then within a few months of her
end, for the all-powerful favourite of Louis XV. died in the following
April. Leopold Mozart, writing home to Salzburg, speaks thus of the
Pompadour; "She must have been very beautiful, for she is still comely.
She is tall and stately; stout, but well proportioned, with some
likeness to her Imperial Majesty about the eyes. She is proud, and has
a remarkable mind." Mozart's sister remembered in after days how she
placed little Wolfgang on the table before her, but pushed him aside
when he bent forward to kiss her, on which he indignantly asked: "Who
is this that does not want to kiss me? The empress kissed me." The
king's daughters were much more friendly, and, contrary to all
etiquette, kissed and played with the children, both in their own
apartments and in the public corridors.
As before at Vienna and afterward in London, the little Mozarts made a
great hit in Paris, and performed before the most distinguished
audiences. Grimm relates in his correspondence "a truly astonishing
instance of the boy's genius." Wolfgang accompanied a lady in an
Italian air without seeing the music, supplying the harmony for the
passage which was to follow from that which he had just heard. This
could not be done without some mistakes, but when the song was ended he
begged the lady to sing it again, played the accompaniment and the
melody itself with perfect correctness, and repeated it ten times,
altering the character of the accompaniment for each. On a melody
being dictated to him, he supplied the bass and the parts without using
the clavier at all; he showed himself in all ways so accomplished that
his father was convinced he would obtain service at court on his return
home. Leopold Mozart now thought the time was come for introducing the
boy as a composer, and he printed four sonatas for the piano and
violin, rejoicing at the idea of the noise which they would make in the
world, appearing with the announcement on the title-page that they were
the work of a child of seven years old. He thought well of these
sonatas, independently of their childish authorship; one andante
especially "shows remarkable taste." When it happened that, in the
last trio of Opus 2, a mistake of the young master, which his father
had corrected (consisting of three consecutive fifths for the violin),
was printed, he consoled himself by reflecting that "they can serve as
a proof that Wolfgangerlf wrote the sonatas himself, which, naturally,
not everyone would believe."
Mozart at the Organ. From painting by Carl Herpfer.
Less than thirty years had passed since these triumphant days in the
life of the child Mozart, when there came the end of that wonderful
career. In the summer of Mozart's last year,—1791,—he was at work on
the concluding portions of "The Magic Flute," when one day he received
a visit from a stranger. This man, tall, gaunt, and solemn in manner,
clad all in gray, handed the composer an anonymous letter, sealed in
black, requesting him to write a "Requiem" as quickly as possible, and
asking the price. Mozart agreed to do the work and received from the
messenger fifty (some say a hundred) ducats, with a promise of more
upon completion of the piece, he agreeing to make no effort to discover
who his patron was. The unknown messenger then went away, saying, "I
shall return when it is time."
It is known now that this mysterious go-between was Leutgeb, the
steward of Count Franz von Walsegg of Stuppach, who often obtained
musical compositions in this way, copied them, and had them performed
as his own. The count desired the "Requiem" for his wife, who had died
in the preceding February, and it was sung as his own production and
under his direction on the 15th of December, 1793.
But Mozart knew nothing of patron or steward; his spirits were
depressed by trouble, and he grew superstitious over the strange
affair. Near the end of August, he was about to set out for Prague to
attend the coronation of Leopold II., upon which occasion the
composer's music to Metastasio's festival opera was to be performed.
Just as he was stepping into the carriage the mysterious messenger
appeared suddenly and inquired as to the "Requiem," to which Mozart
answered by excuses. "When will it be ready?" "I will work on it
without ceasing on my return." "Good," said the stranger, "I shall
rely on your promise." True to his word, upon again reaching home,
Mozart, though feeling melancholy and far from well, worked steadily
upon the "Requiem." Always cheerful until now, his low spirits
increased, and he imagined that he was writing his own death-mass. In
November, his illness grew alarming, and a consultation of physicians
was held. "Mozart's only consolation during his suffering was to hear
of the repeated performances of 'Die Zauberflöte.' He would follow the
representations in spirit, laying his watch beside him, and saying,
'Now the first act is over. Now they are come to the place, "The great
Queen of Night,"' etc. Only the day before his death he expressed a
wish that he might hear 'Die Zauberflöte' once more. He hummed to
himself the song, 'Der Vogelfänger bin ich ja.' Capellmeister Roser,
who happened to be with him, went to the harpsichord and played and
sang the song, which appeared greatly to cheer Mozart. Nevertheless,
the 'Requiem' occupied him continually. As soon as he had finished a
piece, he had it rehearsed by the friends who happened to be present.
At two o'clock in the afternoon of the day before his death, Schack,
who was the first 'Tamino,' sang soprano, Mozart himself contralto,
Hofer, his brother-in-law, tenor, and Geri, who was the first
'Sarastro,' bass. At the 'Lacrymosa' Mozart began to weep violently,
and laid down the score. Toward evening, when his sister-in-law,
Sophie Haibl, came in, Mozart begged her to remain and help Constance,
as he felt death approaching. She went out again just to tell her
mother and to fetch a priest. When she returned she found Mozart in
lively conversation with Süssmayer. 'Did I not say that I was writing
the "Requiem" for myself?' he said; and then, with a sure presentiment
of approaching death, he charged his wife instantly to inform
Albrechtsberger, on whom his post at St. Stephen's would devolve. Late
in the evening he lost consciousness. But the 'Requiem' still seemed
to occupy him, and he puffed out his cheeks as if he would imitate a
wind instrument, the 'Tuba mirum spar gens sonum.' Toward midnight his
eyes became fixed. Then he appeared to fall into slumber, and about
one o'clock in the morning of the 5th of December he died."
The Last Days of Mozart. From painting by Herman Kaulbach.
The "Requiem" was left incomplete, and Mozart's widow entrusted to
Süssmayer the task of finishing the imperfect portions. But the
greatest part of it is the work of Mozart.
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