1)Is it not strange that she should request a song to the beloved a few months before Beethoven writes a letter to the Immortal beloved
Not at all. It was not at all strange for him to have written a song about a beloved during this time. The fact that she liked it and asked him for a copy does not mean anything. Solomon was using this as one of his proofs and it's a poor one. If B. had written the song for her, she would not have had to ask him for it. He would have simply given it to her.
2) and also be in Karlsbad at the right time?
But at the time that Beethoven wrote his letter to the IB, he had no intention of being in Karlsbad himself. And in his letter, he said, "We shall surely see one another soon." Other letters he wrote at the time prove that at the time he wrote the IB letter, he was planning to be back in VIENNA, which is not where Antonie was, and where he knew she was not, since he had just met her and her husband in Prague and knew they were on their way to the spas. It was only later, after Staudenheim sent him to Karlsbad, that he changed his plans. And thus met up with Antonie and her husband. There is no irrefutable proof, either, that the "K" Beethoven references in his letter is absolutely Karlsbad.
3) I haven't stated that Antonie Brentano was the immortal beloved, only that she seems the most likely candidate, a view shared by Barry Cooper as well as Solomon.
But Barry does not do his OWN research, he only buys into Solomon's. Which, as I have said, is not based on fact, but on convoluted "proofs" that are mainly concocted by Solomon.
4) Yes you can easily dismiss the evidence, but you cannot provide a stronger case for anyone else
That is certainly not true, because, for instance, Goldschmidt and Tellenbach have provided a strong case for Josephine Brunswick and THEY did not rely on misquotes and other tricks.
Not at all. It was not at all strange for him to have written a song about a beloved during this time. The fact that she liked it and asked him for a copy does not mean anything. Solomon was using this as one of his proofs and it's a poor one. If B. had written the song for her, she would not have had to ask him for it. He would have simply given it to her.
2) and also be in Karlsbad at the right time?
But at the time that Beethoven wrote his letter to the IB, he had no intention of being in Karlsbad himself. And in his letter, he said, "We shall surely see one another soon." Other letters he wrote at the time prove that at the time he wrote the IB letter, he was planning to be back in VIENNA, which is not where Antonie was, and where he knew she was not, since he had just met her and her husband in Prague and knew they were on their way to the spas. It was only later, after Staudenheim sent him to Karlsbad, that he changed his plans. And thus met up with Antonie and her husband. There is no irrefutable proof, either, that the "K" Beethoven references in his letter is absolutely Karlsbad.
3) I haven't stated that Antonie Brentano was the immortal beloved, only that she seems the most likely candidate, a view shared by Barry Cooper as well as Solomon.
But Barry does not do his OWN research, he only buys into Solomon's. Which, as I have said, is not based on fact, but on convoluted "proofs" that are mainly concocted by Solomon.
4) Yes you can easily dismiss the evidence, but you cannot provide a stronger case for anyone else
That is certainly not true, because, for instance, Goldschmidt and Tellenbach have provided a strong case for Josephine Brunswick and THEY did not rely on misquotes and other tricks.
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