On Thayer collecting material for his Life of Beethoven.
On March 29th 1860, a party of "five Beethoven enthusiasts" including Thayer and Dr. Gerhard von Breuning(1813-1892), son of Beethoven's lifelong friend Stephan von Breuning, drove through the streets of Vienna, out at the Schottenthor, across the Glacis and to the Schwarzspanierhaus, where Beethoven had died on March 26th, 1827, Thayer reverently recorded this pilgrimage in his "Diary" writing;-
And the strong man (von Breuning), overcome with his emotions, turned away to the window--and we were silent. We passed through the eight rooms, large and small, which belong to the range of apartments, all of which the composer had hired.
Our conversation was in low tones, and there could be but one topic.
The empty rooms, sounding to our steps, became again the abode of the sick man.
We saw him lying there patient and composed, heard him reply to the written questions of doctor, brother or friend, saw the old housekeeper or te servant girl coming at the sound of his bell--in short lived over again with Breuning those last months during the winter of 1827.
We lingered long and then, with touched hearts, left the house and drove to the churchyard at Wahring-but a mile or two away. Spring had not yet come, and the place looked dreary and desolate. But the simple granite monument, with one word, BEETHOVEN upon it, and we clustered around the slab and exchanged thoughts, feeling and recollections upon the Great Soul that once had dwelt in them.
We each took a few of the unfading flowers, in rememberance of the day, and attached the wreath to the weeping willow which shades the grave.
[This message has been edited by lysander (edited March 01, 2003).]
Comment