|
Housed in a dark-wood oval frame
a bit more than ten centimeters long, the coil of fine brown and
gray hair was sealed between two pieces of glass, one of which was
convex. On the brittle paper that was sealed to the flat back of
the frame, someone named Paul Hiller long ago had written the following
words in German, then added his signature beneath them: This hair
was cut off Beethoven's corpse by my father, Dr. Ferdinand v. Hiller
on the day after Ludwig van Beethoven's death, that is, on 27 March
1827, and was given to me as a birthday present in Cologne on May
1, 1883. While Ira Brilliant and the others watched with fascination,
Dr. Guevara and conservator Nancy Odegaard-both dressed in green
surgical scrubs and wearing masks and gloves-worked at a sterile
table, measuring with calipers the glass and the frame that surrounded
it, calling out a series of numbers as well as their impressions
of the locket's condition before Guevara wielded a scalpel and prepared
to go inside. This was surgery of a sort, and the doctor proceeded
with careful confidence, describing each cut and every observation
with the kind of commentary he might have made if the subject at
hand had been a human gut and the gathered observers were surgical
interns still prone to getting queasy. "Now I'm slicing through
the last of the glue that holds the paper backing," he announced,
his voice bearing more than a hint of his preoccupation.
"I'll pull the backing away now,
and...let's see, below...here's another layer of paper, with writing
on it, and...the writing's in French, I believe. Can someone verify
that this is in French and translate it for us?" A video camera
designed for recording the intricacies and complexities of rather
more conventional surgeries looked down from overhead and the rest
of the group watched the doctor's work on television monitors placed
around the room, and yes, that was French, someone offered. The
text was set in type, but was difficult to make sense of, and the
room's quick consensus was that the paper was simply newspaper scrap
that had been used for backing. Yet the words written on the next
layer Guevara exposed were both decipherable and surprising. Handwritten
this time, and again in German, they explained that the locket was
"newly pasted" by a picture framer in Cologne in 1911, the resealing
done at a time when Paul Hiller would have been fifty-eight years
old, and presumably about the time when he wrote his explanatory
note on the outer paper. At last the surgeon held nothing more than
the conjoined pieces of glass in his gloved hands, and Odegaard
helped steady the glass on edge as Guevara began to break the seal
with a scalpel. "Wow, could you hear that?" he asked. "I heard a
rush of air like a vacuum when I started to separate the glass."
Two minutes passed as the surgeon's knife slowly circumnavigated
the oval, then finally the pieces were free and Guevara delicately
lifted the domed glass away from its mate, and although no one spoke
for a moment, you could sense the massed excitement.
Exposed for the first time in at
least eight decades, perhaps many more, there was Beethoven's hair-darker
than it appeared under glass, a carefully shaped coil containing
a hundred or two hundred strands, one of the group guessed. When
he had been helped with the straps that held his mask over his nose,
Guevara bent to the table to smell the hair. It was odorless, he
declared, then Ira Brilliant and the others pressed forward to get
close to the remarkable relic themselves. Before the morning ended
and the team adjourned for something of a celebratory lunch, Beethoven's
hair was photographed, weighed, and examined under a high-power
microscope. Forensic anthropologist Walter Birkby declared that
on quick inspection the condition of the hair appeared consistent
with hair that was approximately two hundred years old; he noted
that it appeared to be free of lice-or the carcasses of lice-and
the group was delighted when he noted as well that follicles were
attached to at least some of the strands. Fifteen-year-old Ferdinand
Hiller must have pulled at the hair as he snipped it-that was the
initial supposition-and the fact that the boy inadvertently pulled
a few follicles from Beethoven's scalp meant DNA testing might indeed
be feasible, a possibility that none of the group had dared count
on till that moment. The cameras continued to roll at a press conference
in the early afternoon, and the team outlined publicly for the first
time the array of tests it planned to undertake. Prior to examining
the hair's DNA-if that were done-likely there would be examinations
to determine whether opiates had been in Beethoven's system at the
time of his death.
Other analyses would search for
trace metals in his hair: high levels of zinc might mean that his
immune system had been severely compromised; the presence of mercury
could indicate that he had been treated for an infection, and elevated
levels of mercury might even go some distance toward explaining
Beethoven's notoriously eccentric behavior; an abundance of lead
would point to one potential cause of the composer's deafness, and
even might explain the concert of other maladies that had plagued
him throughout his adult life. Drawing on techniques and testing
procedures that were established when a lock of Napoleon's hair
was studied in the 1970s-tests that concluded that the emperor had
not been poisoned, contrary to what many historians long had suspected-the
Beethoven tests would be designed to destroy or permanently alter
only a very minimal amount of the hair he had just unlocked, Guevara
informed the assembled reporters. And the tests would be carried
out only by highly qualified scientists: "We're going to prepare
a protocol to do the work under strict conditions that are forensic,
sterile, and modern. We plan to tabulate people who have FBI-quality
expertise, then invite them to propose specific tests to us. But
we won't sacrifice the bulk of the hair. The main thing is our hope
that two hundred years from now people won't think that there were
neophytes at work who couldn't get their act together.
Twenty-five or fifty years ago,
this kind of testing wouldn't have been possible. And fifty years
from now, maybe we'll get much more information." But the newspaper
and television reporters wanted to know more: they needed some sense
of what motivated Guevara and his partner to buy the hair and now
begin the process of having it rigorously examined. What was it
about Beethoven that so obsessed them? "My interest in Beethoven
is like a fire burning inside me," answered seventy-three-year-old
Ira Brilliant, his Brooklyn accent diluted only a bit by thirty
years of expatriation in Arizona. "I started collecting his letters
and first editions twenty years ago out of a deep wish to own something
Beethoven himself had touched. It was my way of paying homage to
his greatness." A short man whose dense eyebrows and deep-set eyes
seemed to mirror the composer's, Ira Brilliant explained that on
a November day almost a year earlier, he phoned Guevara, his friend
and fellow Beethoven zealot, soon after he had seen the lock of
hair listed in a Sotheby's catalog, and the two had agreed that
they would try to make it theirs. "This was much more than simply
something Beethoven had touched. The hair is Beethoven. It's a marvelous
relic." And the doctor agreed, of course. A large man with a thick
shock of black hair atop his head, his speech inflected with echoes
of his native Spanish-and "Che" to his friends since his long-ago
college days-Guevara's obsession with both Beethoven's music and
Beethoven the man tumbled out of him with a kind of evangelical
passion.
"Beethoven was deaf, as you know.
He suffered from kidney stones, which is a very painful condition.
He had hepatitis; he had multiple episodes of gastrointestinal infections.
For someone to have that many maladies and to suffer so greatly
and yet produce superhuman music, music that can actually elevate
the spirit to a much different plane than the ordinary plane we
live in, is quite phenomenal." Beethoven's hair-still in the same
coil in which it was wrapped nearly two centuries ago, the hundreds
of separate strands still waiting to be counted-had been removed
for safekeeping, but Che Guevara spoke of it as though it remained
in the room: "To get this close to a man who was able to do this...for
me it's a personal triumph. Acquiring the hair already has changed
my life." On a warm May afternoon a hundred and seventy years before,
Beethoven's hair would have spread wildly out from his head and
the dark eyes beneath it would have appeared small but piercingly
bright as he made his daily walk through the city. His complexion
was swarthy, his forehead broad and high, and much of his face had
been pockmarked by smallpox back when he was a boy. He was short,
even by the standards of his day, and because of intestinal troubles
that by 1824 had plagued him for three decades, no longer was he
the stout and stocky man he once had been.
He would have walked with a lumbering
gait that spring, one that evidenced a curious kind of clumsiness,
and he would not have heard the din of the grand and boisterous
city in which he trod-not the constant racket of vendors' carts
and carriages, nor the cacophonous noise of the jugglers, puppeteers,
and street musicians who seemed to clog every corner; neither the
kindly proffered greetings of acquaintances nor the taunts of the
urchins who tagged at his heels. The deafness that twenty years
before had begun to rob him of the subtlest kinds of sounds inexorably
had reduced his world to animated and very isolated silence, and
by now he could hear only what his mind imagined. Yet Ludwig van
Beethoven, this strange and eccentric figure-who once had been arrested
as a vagrant-was at that moment, in fact, the most celebrated composer
in a city filled to its exquisite rooftops with composers. His Ninth
Symphony had been premiered only days before to the most glorious
kind of acclaim. He had become a true legend in Vienna in the three
decades since he had made the city his home, and his bold, passionate,
and altogether revolutionary compositions already seemed destined
to endure. The people who would have greeted or simply recognized
him as walked that afternoon would have understood that Herr Beethoven
was aging quickly and clearly was not well. But at least his music,
they would have warranted, would survive for centuries.
1770-1792 Ludwig van Beethoven had
been his grandfather's name as well, and although he was not quite
three when his grandfather died in 1773, the composer always imagined
that his huge talents had come to him from his much revered namesake-himself
the son of a baker in the Flemish city of Mechelen-who had become
Kapellmeister, music director, of the Bonn court of Maximilian Friedrich
in 1761. Beethoven's father, Johann, was for many years a tenor
in the court choir; he taught singing and was a passably accomplished
pianist and violinist as well, but at the time his father died in
1773, Johann's career was languishing and seemed unlikely to catch
fire in the foreseeable future. His wife, born Maria Magdalena Keverich,
the daughter of a cook at Maximilian Friedrich's summer palace at
Ehrenbreitstein, already had been widowed when she married Johann
in the autumn of 1767, a few days before her twenty-first birthday.
A son by her first husband had died in infancy; so had her second
child, Ludwig Maria, who died six days after his birth in 1769,
the year before the third child, also named Ludwig, was born. Maria
van Beethoven was intelligent, patient, kind, and, it appears, utterly
unassuming, the young family's critical counterpoint to Johann,
who grew increasingly bombastic, erratic, and undependable following
his father's death and the denial of his application to succeed
him as Kapellmeister, his behavior later exacerbated by a severe
dependence on drink.
If Maria was her young son's ready
support, Johann, according to the few accounts that exist, often
was a terror to the boy, bullying him, beating him on occasion as
well as, legends contend, dragging the weeping five-year-old from
his bed to the piano late at night and drunkenly compelling him
to practice. Yet his father's rages and overbearing demeanor somehow
never soured the boy on music, and his remarkable talents quickly
emerged despite them. Young Ludwig was only seven when he gave his
first public performance on the piano; at eight, he began to receive
piano, violin, and viola instruction from a series of noted court
musicians, and by age eleven he had become deputy to court organist
Christian Gottlob Neefe, who had taken the boy under his tutelage
a year before. Beethoven, whose academic education already had ended,
occasionally played the organ at masses and court functions when
Neefe had to be absent, and the tutor was far from reluctant to
heap praise on his young protege. At Neefe's urging, the editors
of the German Magazin der Musik posted a notice in March 1783 heralding
Beethoven as a boy of "most promising talent. He plays the clavier
very skillfully and with power [and] reads at sight very well...This
young genius deserves a subsidy in order to enable him to travel.
He will surely become a second Mozart
if he continues as well as he has begun." It remains unclear whether
it was Neefe or someone else who arranged four years hence for Beethoven
to visit Vienna, seat of the Hapsburg throne, the capital of the
Holy Roman Empire, and the locus also of Europe's cultured passion
for music. Neefe-rather more in the mold of Beethoven's grandfather
than his father-was kind, cultivated, and well-read, as well as
being a multitalented musician, and he presumed that further training
in Vienna, plus a more general sort of exposure to its rarefied
musical climate, would transform the sixteen-year-old's prodigious
talents into mature renown. Neefe even had hoped privately that
the boy might secure an apprenticeship with Wolfgang Mozart, but
it appears instead that the Austrian master-who would be dead in
only four more years-heard the young man play on solely a single
occasion. Mozart's initial reaction on an April afternoon to the
selection the boy from Bonn had prepared for him was decidedly cool-surely
there were dozens of young fellows in Vienna who could master a
single showy piece. But when Beethoven begged to be given a theme
on which he might improvise, Mozart acquiesced and soon was astonished
by the teenager's range and inventiveness and the power with which
he played. The young Beethoven still seemed beguiled by the music
he was drawing out of the master's piano when Mozart finally walked
out of the room and eagerly spoke to a group of courtiers whom he
had kept waiting: "Keep your eyes on that one," he instructed. "Someday
he will give the world plenty to talk about."
Beethoven might have met Mozart again;
he might even have studied with him for a time, but his sojourn
in Vienna was abruptly cut short by news from Bonn that his mother
was gravely ill. He was able to reach her bedside before she succumbed
to tuberculosis, but her death was a terrible blow to the whole
family. Beethoven's infant sister, Maria Margaretha, died a few
months later; two younger brothers now were left in Ludwig's care,
and his father-now without his wife's hardy support and moderating
influence-simply drank himself into a personal and professional
collapse. When Johann was forced to resign his modest position in
1789, Beethoven, who was not yet nineteen, successfully petitioned
the court to grant him half his father's former salary to help him
keep the clan from destitution, becoming in the process the actual
head of the household. But although he now had to attend carefully
to family matters, Beethoven nonetheless also began to blossom socially
in the years that followed his mother's death. He continued to play
viola in the orchestras of the court chapel and court theater, forging
lasting friendships with other young musicians. He met Count Ferdinand
Waldstein, eight years his senior, a music devotee to whom he became
closely attached. And it was within the bonds of the prominent,
progressive, and intellectually curious Breuning family, headed
by the dynamic young widow Helene von Breuning, that Beethoven first
was exposed to a kind of joie de vivre that always had been missing
in his own home.
He became so closely tied to the
Breunings that he often even slept at their home, and along the
way he became something of a beloved stepchild to Frau von Breuning:
she nursed him through bouts of illness, helped battle his recurrent
black moods and sieges of brooding silence, and did her best to
buoy up the self-confidence of the young man who at times was paralyzingly
shy. It was Frau von Breuning, as well as Count Waldstein and Neefe,
who introduced the young man to the thrilling new notions of reform,
freedom, and brotherhood-the Aufklarung, or Enlightenment-that were
becoming common conversation pieces in the cities that flanked the
Rhine and throughout much of central Europe. Yet it was Waldstein
who now did the most to nurture Beethoven's musical development.
He discreetly provided financial support to the young man whom he
openly labeled a musical genius; he commissioned him to compose
the music for his own production of a folk ballet; and he was a
member as well of a larger group of the Bonn nobility who commissioned
Beethoven to compose two cantatas commemorating the death of the
much-loved Emperor Joseph II and the elevation of his successor,
Leopold II. Although neither cantata was performed, Waldstein nonetheless
recognized their brilliance. It is probable that it was he who pressed
the Joseph Cantata into the hands of composer Franz Joseph Haydn
during his visit to Bonn in 1792 in an effort to convince him to
tutor young Beethoven once he was at home in Vienna again, and it
is certain that it was Waldstein who convinced his friend Bonn Elector
Maximilian Franz, Friedrich's successor, both to pay for Beethoven's
journey to Vienna and to support him while he remained in temporary
residence there.
The revolution in France that had commenced
three years before by now had led to rumors of war across much of Europe.
The new French regime had declared war on Austria; French forces already
had reached the Rhine, and Beethoven-despite his father's failing health-had
to hurry to leave Bonn if he were to be relatively assured of safe travel
by coach to Vienna. As he departed, he received enthusiastic farewells
from dozens of friends and admirers, all of whom anticipated his return
to his hometown before too long a time, and in an album filled with their
written good wishes was included this message from his devoted patron:
Dear Beethoven: You are going to Vienna in fulfillment of your long-frustrated
wishes. The Genius of Mozart is still mourning and weeping over the death
of her pupil. She found a refuge but no occupation with the inexhaustible
Haydn; through him she wishes once more to form a union with another.
With the help of assiduous labor you shall receive: Mozart's spirit from
Haydn's hands. Your true friend, Waldstein.
Excerpted
from Beethovens Hair by Russell Martin, Copyright© 2000 by Russell
Martin. Excerpted by permission of Broadway Books, a division of Random
House, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced
or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
|