Beethoven’s Letters 1790-1826, Volume 2 by Ludwig van Beethoven

Beethoven’s Letters 1790–1826, Volume II
by Ludwig van Beethoven
(English edition, traditionally associated with the selection and early editorial work of Ludwig Nohl)
What this second volume contains
Volume II continues the chronological presentation of Beethoven’s correspondence, moving from the years of growing artistic authority into the period of personal crisis and late creativity. While Volume I introduces the young and ambitious composer, Volume II shows Beethoven as a mature, often embattled figure, grappling with deafness, legal conflicts, financial insecurity, and the burden of genius.
The letters span roughly the central and later decades of his life, culminating near his death in 1827. They include correspondence with publishers, aristocratic patrons, close friends, family members, doctors, and legal authorities, and they are indispensable for understanding Beethoven’s inner world.
Main thematic areas
1. Deafness and inner isolation
A dominant thread throughout this volume is Beethoven’s increasing deafness, no longer a distant fear but an irreversible reality. The letters reveal:
- His oscillation between stoic resolve and despair
- Efforts to conceal his condition in public
- A growing reliance on written communication
These documents show how silence reshaped his personality without extinguishing his creative will.
2. Financial struggles and independence
Despite fame, Beethoven’s financial life was unstable. The letters document:
- Continuous negotiations with publishers
- Disputes over fees, copyrights, and editions
- His fierce insistence on artistic autonomy
They illuminate Beethoven’s role as a transitional figure between aristocratic patronage and modern artistic independence.
3. The nephew Karl and emotional turmoil
One of the most dramatic sections concerns Beethoven’s guardianship of his nephew Karl, including:
- Legal battles with Karl’s mother
- Moral rigidity and emotional overinvestment
- Anxiety, control, and paternal obsession
These letters are psychologically revealing and often disturbing, showing Beethoven’s deep need for moral order colliding with human complexity.
4. The late works
Scattered throughout the correspondence are references to:
- The late piano sonatas
- The Diabelli Variations
- The Missa solemnis
- The Ninth Symphony
Though Beethoven rarely explains his music in technical terms, the letters convey the sense of mission and transcendence that underlies these works.
5. Illness, decline, and final years
In the closing letters, Beethoven writes as a man physically exhausted but spiritually unbroken. We see:
- References to chronic illness
- Practical concerns about money and legacy
- A sober awareness of mortality
These final documents are marked by dignity, resignation, and flashes of dry humor.
Style and tone
The letters in Volume II are often:
- Abrupt and unpolished
- Emotionally intense
- Occasionally tender, frequently combative
They show Beethoven without mythologizing—at times difficult, stubborn, suspicious, and yet profoundly humane.
Historical and biographical importance
Volume II is essential for any serious understanding of Beethoven, because it:
- Documents the psychological cost of genius
- Reveals the daily realities behind monumental works
- Complements formal biographies (Thayer, Schindler, modern scholarship) with Beethoven’s own voice
Without these letters, our image of Beethoven would be heroic but abstract. With them, it becomes tragic, complex, and deeply human.
Overall assessment
Beethoven’s Letters 1790–1826, Volume II is not merely a continuation but a deepening. It captures the composer at his most vulnerable and most visionary, making it one of the most valuable primary sources for:
- Biographers
- Performers
- Music historians
- Readers interested in the lived experience of creativity
If Volume I introduces Beethoven the man, Volume II confronts us with Beethoven the destiny.