From “The Human Condition: A User’s Manual,” by
Arnold Kunst
25 July
Beethoven, whatever else you might say about him,
was not about to be ignored. What other composer, before or since, can match
the following? “He who knows how to listen to my music will be freed from the
troubles that plague others.” For everyone who wrote him off as supremely
arrogant there were others who hung on every sfortzando he ever wrote. That
character trait explains why, on a walk, say, in the fashionable parks of
Vienna he had the advantage - if that's the word I want - of walking right
through the midst of any of the aristocracy he happened to encounter. His
unapologetic attitude was, “you are nobility by virtue of your birth: I am
nobility by virtue of my innate genius.”
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