New Mozart Theory - Chapter 2
The immortal genius of music, W.A.Mozart, who was destined to live only
35 years in this world, had left a vast amount of debts behind when he
passed away.
The total amount of his debts, which was well over 4,000 florins, was more
than eight times of that of the annual salary for a middle-class government
employee. These debts had been piled up for three years from mid 1788 to
mid 1791.
As to his debts, there have been to date four opinions to explain the reason
why Mozart had to pile up such crazy debts.
One is that he became poor due to sharp drop of his income. The second
is that he continued to live a dissipated life for all his Vienna era.
The third is asked for the medical and hot-spring cure expenses for Constanze.
And the last is asked for his gambling.
These opinions seem to have plausible reasons for explaining Mozart's debts
in a sense, however, the true reason is not found in such points, I suppose.
The reason why I think so is that these past opinions got their results only from watching Mozart's ordinary life and his character. And at the same time, I found these four opinions contained a number of serious errors and oversights, details of which are described below.
According to my opinion, which is based on far from the traditional viewpoints,
Mozart had been involved in some incident and the reason why he needed
so big money existed in it.
On December 11,1791 when it was only six days after Mozart's death, his
widow Constanze was given an audience with the Emperor Leopold the second,
by help of a noble lady who was an excellent Mozart's piano pupil.
Her purpose for the audience was to deny certain wicked rumors on Mozart
that had been spread in the Vienna court and to be a widow's pensioner
as well.
In point of fact, she had no right to receive such pension regularly. Since
Mozart had served only four years, while ten years service were necessary
to receive the pension.
However she dared to apply and stated to the Emperor like this.
"Our merciful Emperor ! The court people talked wildly about my husband. They exaggerated his debts as being ten times as large as the one he actually left behind. I hereby make an oath that I can clear all the debts made
by Mozart with around 3,000 gulden. "(Franz Niemetschek)
By her statement, we see that she recognized the total amount of Mozart's
debts was about 3,000 gulden(= florins). However it actually was well over
4,000 florins based on the materials which are to be described soon later
in this paragraph.
At that opportunity, she stated only the supposed amount of his debts,
but did not mention the reason why her husband had to pile up so much debt.
Even after that she never told it to anyone, and then the reason for Mozart's
debts became an enigma.
After a while from her statement in the court, Mozart's inheritance records
were made duly by the administrators of property (The details are explained
in Property left by Mozar).
However, the total debt of Mozart shown on the official records was only
918 florins, of which details were as follows :
296 florins for two tailors
208 florins for an interior decorator
214 florins for two pharmacies
100 florins for two merchants
59 florins for a retailer
32 florins for a shoemaker
9 florins for a surgeon.
According to this inheritance records, the purposes of Mozart's debts seem
to be very clear.
However, the total debt of 918 florins shown in this records is not consistent
with what Constanze stated in front of the Emperor.
But this is not necessarily an enigma since we know other Mozart's three
big debts by following documentation, though they were not listed on the
inheritance records.
(1) A written acknowledgement of debt
This was signed by Mozart on October 1, 1790 and was handed to Heinrich
Lackenbacher, a money lender in Vienna, when Mozart borrowed 1,000 florins
from him. The term of repayment was October 1, 1792 and the interest was
settled at 5 percent annually. All his movables were offered as security that time. (Major part of this
written acknowledgement is quoted in Mozart's Death and Burial)
Reading his three letters from Frankfurt to his wife dated on September
28, 30 and October 8,1790, we can know that Mozart was seriously in need
of money (at least 1,000 florins) to repay somebody at this time. But we
can not know the person's name clearly since Mozart did not make it clear
in his letters. This is an enigma of Mozart's debts.
On February 1,1792, the Vienna City Office announced publicly that any
person who had financial claim against Mozart had to request it by March
19,1792.
However, curiously enough, Rackenbacher did not request to the City Office
though having such a big outstanding credit against Mozart. The reason
why he did not request is one of several enigmas on Mozart's debts.
(2) IOU ( 21 letters to Michael Puchberg)
The name of Puchberg is well known as the person who helped poor Mozart
with lending money frequently. He was a textile merchant in Vienna and
was a Freemason as well as Mozart, though he belonged to a different lodge.
Puchberg loved music very much. Mozart composed a number of musical works
for him.
Mozart sent 21 letters in all to him between mid 1788 to mid 1791 mainly
asking for money. We see, by these letters, Mozart could borrow from him
15 times and the total amount of the money borrowed was 1,415 florins.
Mozart repaid some of them during his lifetime. However, the remainder
was still as much as 1,000 florins when Mozart passed away. ( George Nikolaus
Nissen)
It has been said for a long time that the reason why Mozart asked money
to Puchberg was on account of medical treatments and hot-spring cure expenses
for his wife Constanze. That was because Mozart sometimes touched on his
wife's illness/treatments in his letters to Puchberg.
However, examining his letters carefully, we find that such kind of letters
existed only a few, and most of his letters did not make it clear for what
purpose Mozart wanted to borrow so frequently.
On the contrary, it seems that Mozart's letters were written as if he intended
to hide the real purpose of such borrowing, utilizing Constanze's disease
sometimes as a cover. In support of this, we find curious and incomprehensive
sentences here and there in his letters, details of which are described
below.
Why did Mozart not make the use of such money clear ?
Mozart's attempts to obscure the use of money is also another enigma on
Mozart's debts.
Puchberg also did not request to the City Office by March 19,1792 though
having such a big credit against Mozart. This too is surely an enigma on
Mozart's debts.
(3) The decision by the Austrian Court
The debts of Mozart were not restricted to above mentioned ones. There
was one more debt decided by the Austrian Court in November 9,1791.
This legal decision was brought to light in 1991. However, only the decision
by the Court was left, and the principal trial records like petition and
testimony have been lost, to our regret.
It turned out by this decision that Mozart had a debt of 1,435 gulden and
32 kreuzers* to Carl Lichnowsky at the time of November 1791, and he was
ordered by the trial court to pay it back to Lichnowsky by making sacrifice
of half of his salary. This is all the fact that we can currently know
by this published decision. (* 60 kreuzers make 1 florin)
As a result, we can not know such important matters as
(1) how much money in total he had borrowed from Lichnowsky at first
(2) when and why he had to borrow such a big amount of money
(3) what the agreed repayment terms were, etc..
These questions are left unknown until now. This is also a big enigma on
Mozart's debts.
No one could solve this enigma so far. But I would like to show my own
opinion separately at the end of this chapter, as a postscript.
By these three documentation, we can know the total remainder of Mozart's
debts were 4,353 florins including the debts on the inheritance records.
As described above, Mozart's debts contained various enigmas, the greatest
of which is surely his use of money.
I believe that clues to solve these enigmas exist in Mozart's letters to
Puchberg.
However, I suppose that the past four opinions did not necessarily reflect
the Mozart's letters to get their results, and did not answer to the enigmas
described above.
Then, I would like to show my opinion from now on.
However, before showing my own opinion, I would like to begin with describing
my objections against the past four theories one by one .
All the past theories have blamed Mozart's debts either on his misfortune or his supposedly dissipated character.
Some said that Mozart became very poor losing his popularity in Vienna
during the latter half of his Vienna era. Furthermore, to make things worse,
his wife became sick in her legs in 1789 and he therefore had to rely on
continuous borrowings.
Others have suggested that Mozart's debts were due to his supposedly dissipated
character. By that bad character, he would not stop living in luxury or
he had exhausted his money by gambling, and then he had to pile up a vast
amount of debts, they said.
Anyway, they insisted that Mozart became very poor due to his income drop,
or Constanze's disease, or continuous luxurious life, or gambling, and
he therefore had to pile up a vast amount of debts.
However, I can not agree with any of these opinions at all.
If we check his annual earnings and his way of life carefully, and analyze
his letters to Puchberg thoroughly, we will be able to know that things
were quite different, and the past theories were all merely made-up stories.
Yes, Mozart was never in poverty through his Vienna era nor a dissipated
person basically.
In fact, he had a serious use of money, and for that purpose he had to
pile up a vast amount of debts.
The important point to solve this enigma is why he tried to hide the use
of money in his letters to Puchberg, or he would not like it to come to
light which is to be explained later.
It is allegedly said that the annual salary for a government employee in
late 18 century was around 400 to 500 florins.
More in detail, 300 florins for a university professor, 400 florins for
a secretary of the trial court, and 400 to 600 florins for a parish priest,
for example, were the standard those days.
At the bottom of the scale, full-time servants received 60 florins per
year, and a chambermaid 20 or at most 30 florins annually according to
Braunbehrens's survey.
It was also said that people could live a simple life with their family
by 500 florins annually, and a rather comfortable life by 800 florins a
year.
The meal costs for a family were less than 1 florin a day and typical expenses
for rent, lighting and fuel have been estimated to be around 50 florins
a year respectively. Then people could spend the life together with their
family by 500 florins a year.
Under these economic circumstances, Mozart earned a considerable amount
of money, say more than 2,000 florins every year, even after 1788 when
the mysterious Mozart's borrowings began.
Mozart's main income resources in the second half of his Vienna era were
fees for composing, publishing fees for musical scores and fees for his
piano lessons.
In the first half of his Vienna era, undoubtedly he could earn much money
from piano concerts.
However he lost these opportunities in the latter half because of a sharp
drop of his popularity among Viennese.
Mozart, as a pianist, indeed could neither appear on the stage of the Burg Theater nor be invited to any houses of aristocracy in Vienna after April, 1786 up to his death.
In place of income from piano concerts, he got a job from the Vienna court
as the court musician( a chamber composer, not as the court composer) at
the end of 1787.
His duty was only to compose dance musics for the court. His annual salary
for this position was only 800 florins though the court composer Christoph
Willibald Gluck was given 2,000 florins annually.
Speaking frankly, it is difficult to know exact Mozart's annual earnings
year by year, since his publishing fees for musical scores and piano lesson
fees were not necessarily announced officially.
However, such Mozart scholars as Volkmar Braunbehrens, Joseph Heinz Eibl,
Uwe Kraemer, Peter Davies and Maynard Solomon made their own researches
on Mozart's income.
After their researches, it becomes more and more common today that Mozart
earned in excess of 3,000 florins annually on average through his Vienna
era.
For example, Braunbehrens estimated that Mozart's average income between
1782 and 1791 was 3,000 to 4,000 florins, at a very conservative estimate.
Peter Davies described in his book that Mozart's averaged annual income
for seven years before his death was more than 3,500 gulden.
Now, let us take a close look at an estimated Mozart's annual income by
year during the latter half of his Vienna era.
Estimation of Mozart's annual income (1786 - 1791)
| Year | Details of Mozart's income | fl. |
| 1786 | Composing fee for 'Der Schauspieldirektor' | 225 |
| Composing fee for 'Le nozze di Figaro' | 450 | |
| Piano concert at the Burg Theater | 600 | |
| Sales of music to von Fürstenburg | 119 | |
| Performance fee for 'Idomeneo' at von Auersperg's residence | 225 | |
| Publishing fee for music | 385 | |
| * | Piano lesson fee | 432 |
| Total | 2,436 | |
| 1787 | Composing fee for 'Don Giovanni' | 450 |
| His share for the performance of 'Don Giovanni' | 600 | |
| Income from the concert in Prague (January) | 1,000 | |
| Publishing fee for music | 205 | |
| * | Piano lesson fee | 324 |
| Inheritance | 1,000 | |
| Salary from Vienna court (as of December) | 66 | |
| Total | 3,645 | |
| 1788 | Performance fee for 'Don Giovanni ' in Vienna | 225 |
| * | Performance fee for ' Auferstehung und Himmelfahrt Jesu (C.P.E..Bach) at Esterhazy residence and the Burg Theater, and for 'Acis and Galatea'(Händel)
atJahn's residence. Concert at Dolfin residence |
450 |
| Arrangement fee for 'Acis and Galatea' from Associerte Kavaliere | 225 | |
| Publishing fee for music | 210 | |
| * | Piano lesson fee | 432 |
| Salary from Vienna court | 800 | |
| Total | 2,342 | |
| 1789 | Fee for piano playing in the imperial presence (Dresden) | 450 |
| * | Commission fee from Prussian King | 700 |
| * | Public concert in Dresden and Leipzig | 300 |
| * | Performance fee for 'Messiah' at Esterhazy residence | 225 |
| Arrangement fee for 'Messiah' from Associerte Kavaliere | 225 | |
| Publishing fee for music | 233 | |
| * | Piano lesson fee | 324 |
| Salary from Vienna court | 800 | |
| Total | 3,257 | |
| 1790 | Composing and supplementary fee for 'Cosi fan tutte' | 900 |
| ** | Fee for piano playing in the imperial presence (Mainz) | 165 |
| Public concert in Frankfult | 200 | |
| * | Fee for piano playing in the imperial presence (Munich) | 450 |
| Publishing fee for music | 141 | |
| ** | Arrangement fee for 'Alexander's Feast' and ' Ode for St. Cecilia's Day'
from Associerte Kavaliere |
450 |
| Piano lesson fee | 324 | |
| Salary from Vienna court | 800 | |
| Total | 3,430 | |
| 1791 | Composing fee for ' Die Zauberflöte' | 900 |
| ** | Composing fee for ' La clemenza di Tito' and the travel expenses | 1.125 |
| Advanced payment for the composing fee of 'Requiem' | 225 | |
| Piano lesson fee | 297 | |
| Salary from Vienna court | 800 | |
| ** | Remittance from noble men in Hungary and Amsterdam | - |
| Total | 3,347 |
Above table is mainly based on Solomon's research. Exceptions are the star-marked
items.
* items are not employed in Solomon's research. Those additions are based
on my own
estimation and/or other material.
** items are employed by Solomon too. However, different figures are employed
according to
other sources and/or my own estimation.
According to this research, he earned more than 2,000 florins a year at least for each year even after 1788 when his lot of borrowing began.
These annual incomes were, of course, not poor earnings.
Be sure that the income of 2,000 florins a year compared with those of
Gluck's and Antonio Salieri's ( 2,050 florins as the Kapellmeister of Vienna court
) .
If we regard Mozart as a poor person with this high income, then Salieri
and Gluck must also be regarded as poor musicians. Of course, that would
not be sensible.
Thus, even in the latter half of his Vienna era, he could have kept high
level earnings each year though he had lost his popularity in Vienna as
a pianist
With these high earnings, Mozart's family, of course, could easily live
their life every year. They were never in the midst of poverty, though
Constanze told a lie that they were poor those days.
It is very likely that his wife Constanze saved a considerable amount of
surplus money those days.
In addition to this income research, the following facts show some grounds
that Mozart family was never poor in his late Vienna era..
1) In 1786, Mozart volunteered to take care of Johann Nepomuk Hummel in
expectation of his great talent for piano playing. Generous Mozart taught
him for two years under the condition that charges like lesson fee, room
rent and meal were all free.
This fact will prove that Mozart lived his life comfortably without fear
for money even after the fading out of his popularity as a pianist.
2) His son Carl Thomas was educated at Häger's educational facilities
through the year from his three years old (1787) to his father's death(1791),
where 400 florins were necessary in a year for the educational fee.
Speaking of 400 florins, this amount was roughly equal to the annual living
expenses for an average Vienna family.
The educational fee there was so expensive, but this fact proved well that
Mozart was rich enough to pay such a high educational fee during these
years.
3) It turned out from his inheritance records that Mozart had 800 florins
of credit in total to Anton Stadler and Franz Gilowsky.
This fact brings us the suspicion in our mind why he could lend such a
big amount of money, if he were so poor as has been suggested.
This evidence again suggests that Mozart was never really in poverty in
his Vienna period. Here I merely point out the fact, but the details of
which is to be explained in Property left by Mozart.
4) There was no evidence that Constanze began to work to earn money after
the death of Mozart. She was only idling everyday without having a work.
This fact proves that Constanze, contrary to popular myth, was not in the necessity of earning money after Mozart's death. In reality, her income source was only the 266 florins of widow's pension annually, but she did not work. Yes, that was because she had plenty of money.
5) After the death of her husband, Constanze continued to live in an apartment
at Rauhensteingasse ( so called the"Little Kaiserhaus") for a
few years( probably until late 1793). This too is quite incomprehensive
if she was really in a state of poverty.
This apartment was as wide as 145 square meters including four bed rooms
and the rent was expensive, 275 florins annually which was five times that
of common apartments.
( I wonder why she could manage to pay the 275 florins of rent with the
266 florins of widow's pension, if she had not plenty of money.)
Constanze could not have lived in such an expensive apartment with her
baby ( elder son Carl was sent to Niemetschek's care in 1792) if she had
not abundant money. Details of this item will be explained again in Property left by Mozart.
By these facts as well as the research results on Mozart's earnings, his
family was not in poverty for all their Vienna era. Then, the poor Mozart
theory due to his income drop has completely lost its ground by these explanations..
And so scholars have sought other reasons why Mozart became poor.
The other suggested explanations are that;
- he spent dissipated life through all his life.
- he needed a lot of money for the expenses of Constanze's disease and
her hot-spring cure.
- he exhausted his money by gambling.
Scholars seem to be eager to regard Mozart as a poor person somehow. But
I do not think so.
Then let's examine whether they are correct or not.
It is true that Mozart spent a luxurious life in the first half of his
Vienna era.
At that time he jumped to stardom in Vienna as an excellent pianist. The
theaters were full to the doors every time when he appeared on the stages.
Not restricted to frequent appearance on the stages of theaters, he was
often invited to many aristocratic houses in Vienna to play the piano there.
Then he could earn a vast amount of money by piano playing in those days.
As a result of his high earnings and his fame, his way of life became a
little excessive in these first few years in Vienna.
He moved to the 'Figarohaus' in September 1784 whose annual rent was as
much as 460 florins.
Surprisingly enough, the amount was equal to his father Leopold's annual
salary (450 florins as a deputy Kapellmeister in Salzburg court).
He owned gorgeous billiards facilities there which cost several hundred
florins. Also he got a carriage and six( though they were six Polish ponies
for Mozart's case) and a horse for riding. And he employed such servants
as a lady's maid and a cook there.
Thus Mozart spent his rich life during the first half of his Vienna era.
However his popularity in Vienna sharply dropped from around 1786 somehow.
He barely could have a chance to appear on the stage of the Burg Theater
in April 1786, but after that, as I mentioned before, he could not appear on the Burg Theater as a pianist until he passed away.
To make things worse, any Viennese aristocracy also would not invite him
to their houses as a pianist.
Mozart's pianist life came to an end as early as 1786 in Vienna.
As far as I know, there have been no definite opinions why his popularity in Vienna dropped so suddenly and sharply in mid 1780's.
But I guess that the reason might have existed in the fact that Mozart
kept remaining a Freemason, even after the imperial ordinance on the control
of Freemasonry published in December 1785.
It is well known that the party became hated among Viennese after the ordinance. This is also the very time when people in Vienna
started to turn a cold shoulder towards Mozart.
He was no more a super star in Vienna after 1786.
Then he changed his way of life drastically from the second half of his
Vienna era.
Here, I would like to show some samples that his life changed to a simple
one.
However, please don't take his simple life for his poverty since he earned much even those days as described before.
(Following first two sentences belong to the first half of his Vienna era.
But I dared to add them here since they seem to show Mozart's basic attitudes
toward his life well.)
1) Mozart kept household accounts by himself from 1784 and he made entry
in the ledger like this :
May 1, 1784, 1 kreuzer for two mayflowers,
May 27, 1784, 34 kreuzer for starling bird, etc..
This tells us that Mozart was the person who could control expenditures
of money by himself. However, Mozart let Constanze do keeping books in
place of him after a year later. But this was not good for Mozart family
since Constanze was a lady who was entirely unskillful for it, and she
ignored keeping books by her negligence. As a result, their livelihood
became disorder.
2) Leopold sent a letter on March 19,1785 from Vienna to her daughter Nannel,
where the following statement were described. ( The letter itself was lost.
But we can know the following by Nissen's memorandum. )
"My son Wolfgang has enough money in hand to be sure and he could
have saved 2,000 florins in bank if he had not owed debts. In spite of
his high earnings, his eating and drinking are modest to the maximum extent."
Leopold visited Vienna in those days to watch the success of his son there.
He stayed there for more than two months and observed the way of his son's
life.
It was worthy of notice that his son's eating and drinking were modest
to the maximum extent though Mozart were in the midst of his great success
that time.
This paragraph however indicates that Mozart had already owed debts those
days.
As to his debts that time, I suppose that they might not have been brought
by his dissipated life.
Most probably his debts were caused by purchasing expensive Anton Walter's piano ( Leopold described about this piano in his previous letter to Nannel dated on March 12, 1785) and the betrothal money to Constanze ( 1,000 florins of betrothal money from Mozart to Constanze was written in the marriage vows).
3) In April 1787, Mozart left the Figarohaus and transferred to a humble
apartment house at Landstrasse in response to the decrease of his income.
The rent there was only 50 florins in a year which was one ninth of the
previous one.
This proves that Mozart had an ordinary economic sense to cut living expenses
in response to income drop. It has been said for a long time that Mozart
sent a dissipated life all the time, however it was just a wicked rumor.
4) The following sentence can be seen in Mozart's letter to Puchberg (written
before June 17,1788).
'' In case I must go to the city, though the opportunities don't occur
every day, I can utilize the street coach any of which brings me to the
city of Vienna by 10 kreuzers only."
This sentence teaches us that Mozart had sold off his carriage as well
as his riding horse at that time. He utilized a far less expensive street
coach for his traffic.
He should be blamed as a fast liver if he was attached to keep on living
at the Figarohaus and having a carriage/riding horse for his traffic after
1788. But he did not do so. He changed his life style largely in the second
half of his Vienna era.
5) Immanuel Hermann Fichte wrote the following in his book.(Mozarts Reliquien in Salzburg)
"The way of Mozart's life was suitable to his frugal living, and was
the simplest. It was not unusual that all his meals were such simple home
cooking as rice gruel or half a dozen of steamed dumpling. People often
spoke behind Mozart's back that he was fond of champagne very much. But
it was not true. He loved the punch at the very most."
Fichte obtained this information directly from Sophie Haibel (Constanze's
younger sister) who had close contact with Mozart in Vienna.
The way of Mozart's life in the latter half of his Vienna era was really simple just like this topic.
In fact, he himself was obliged to spend a simple life in his boyhood since
Leopold's salary was as low as 250 florins annually for a long time. And
then he has originally gotten used to live simply.
6) We can also see from his inheritance records that Mozart's life must
have been simple.
So frequently and for a long time, it has been said that Mozart spent a
dissipated life and then had to pile up so much debts.
However, when we take a close look at his inheritance records, we can know
that such story was quite a made up story. Almost all his property were
modest.
Details of his property is to be described in Property left by Mozart.
Then I will only give a statement here that the total amount of his property
was so low as 592 florins, which was no more than the annual salary for
a middle-class government employee.
Examining like these, we can conclude that Mozart was by no means the man
who pursued only the pleasure of life and luxurious goods naturally despite
the fact that he fell in epicureanism for a while in the first half of
his Vienna era.
However, if things were really like this, his vast amount of debts becomes more and more mysterious. Because he had earned much money on one hand, but his life was so simple on the other. Then, why the need to borrow? ! What made him borrow such a big amount of money ?
Was it Constanze's illness, Gambling, both, or what ?
This theory seems to be the majority opinion to explain the cause of Mozart's
debts at present.
Braunbehrens described in his book that the sole cause of this (Mozart's
debt) was his wife's expensive illness, which began in early summer of
1789.
The reason why this theory has been proposed may exist in the point that Mozart wrote miserable letters to Puchberg, where he referred to the condition of Constanze's illness (a varix in her leg).
However, this theory seems quite suspicious to me from the following considerations.
Before entering into my explanation, I would like to make it clear here in advance the number of times and actual amounts borrowed by Mozart from Puchberg.
It was twice, and the amount lent was 300 florins in total in 1788, two
times and 450 florins in 1789, nine times and 610 florins in 1790, and
two times and 55 florins in 1791.
Borrowings in 1788
It is very clear that Mozart's borrowings from Puchberg in 1788 were by
no means for medical expenses for Constanze since the problem in her legs actually occurred
in 1789.
This year, he sent four letters to Puchberg in June and July. He could
borrow two times, 100 florins and 200 florins respectively
In the second letter (June 17,1788), he asked 1,000 to 2,000 florins to
borrow with one to two years' repayment term. But he did not describe the
use of money.
After that, he requested to lend him several hundred florins by next morning,
if he could not borrow such a big amount that time.
As described in his letter (June 17,1788), he was involved in rent trouble
with the landlord of Landstrasse that time. Puchberg sent 200 florins to
Mozart to solve the trouble.
Excluding this rent trouble, Mozart did not write the use of money anywhere
in his four letters.
It was clear that Mozart was in need of vast amount of money (1,000 to
2,000 florins) this year.
However, Constanze's illness has not yet occurred in this year. And then Mozart's use of money was obviously other purpose than his wife's
supposed medical expenses.
What purposes were these ? It was certain that he had been financially
involved in some project and he needed to get his hands on this considerable
amount of money.
We will come back again to these questions a little later.
Borrowings in 1789
This year, Mozart sent four letters to Puchberg in which he touched on
the condition of Constanze's illness. These letters can be read in a sense
as if the borrowing was on account of this. However, this can not possibly
be the main reason..
1) In his letter in early July 1789 ( exact date unknown), he asked Puchberg
to borrow 500 florins assuming an air of his wife's illness.
However he was certainly not poor that time and could have paid her medical
expenses by his ordinary income. In addition, he must have brought back
a considerable amount of money by the travel to Dresden, Leipzig and Berlin
about a month earlier.
In Dresden, he was given 450 florins by Karl August for his piano playing,
and 700 florins from Friedrich Wilhelm the second in Berlin as fee for
several commissioned works.
In addition, he held a public concert in Dresden and another in Leipzig,
and a private concert at the house of Russian ambassador in Dresden, though
it is not known how much money he got from these.
Thus he earned much money at this time and brought back a lot of money
to his home.
Despite being under favorable economic circumstance, he nevertheless asked loans to Puchberg.
There must have been an extraordinary affair other than his wife's illness,
because 500 florins he asked to Puchberg was too big for medical expenses
from the following reasons.
2) Speaking of 500 florins that Mozart asked, the amount was too big to
believe for her medical expenses that time even if it contained a hot-spring
cure at Baden in August that year.
Remember here that 500 florins was equal to the annual living expenses
for a family.
By the analysis below, we can know he must have not needed such big amount
of money for his wife's medical expenses and hot-spring cure.
Fees for doctor visits and medicines
At that time, she had neither operations nor had she been hospitalized.
She only had several times of house visits by doctor Closset. Then fee
for doctor visits must have not been so expensive.
As to medicines, unlike today, these were not expensive that time since
they were mainly made of such natural goods as herbs.
Probably much more money was necessary for her hot-spring cure at Baden
in August.
However, the expenses for a hot-spring cure, including the travel expenses
and lodging fee for about a month, were not major expenses as we shall
see.
Travel expense :
The mileage from Vienna to Baden is as near as 17 miles.
At that time, people could travel anywhere in Vienna by street coach for
only 10 kreuzers. And then the travel expense must have been almost insignificant.
Lodging fee for a month :
We can not exactly know where she stayed at Baden.
However, I assume that her lodging on each visit (she went there 4 times
in all; one time in 1789, again in 1790, twice more in 1791) was in a private
house. That we know because she stayed at a legal adviser Johann Georg
Grundgeyer's house at Baden with the help of Anton Stoll at her third visit
there.
Of course we can not know the exact lodging fee including meals for a month
there, but we can reasonably guess that this must have cost around 30 florins
a month in the following letters written by Mozart himself.
Mozart's letter to Constanze ( September 30, 1790)
Mozart traveled to Frankfurt in September 1790 with Franz Hofer (his brother-in-law)
to hold his piano concert there. At that time, Mozart wrote to his wife
that they stayed at a leader of troupe Johann Heinrich Böhm's house
under the promise of 30 florins a month for their lodging.
Mozart's letter to Puchberg (June 25,1791)
In June 1791, Mozart sent the following letter to Puchberg asking some
money for Constanze's lodging fee at Baden. In response to this letter,
Puchberg lent 25 florins to Mozart. He immediately sent this to Constanze.
"Reading my wife's letter, she is waiting for the remittance from
me since she thought that the owner of the house would be pleased if lodging
fee including meal costs were paid in advance (though he had not the right
to ask). Regarding this, I hoped I could have settled it before her departure,
but I could not. So I am now in embarrassment."
Puchberg read this letter and lent 25 florins to Mozart. On the other hand,
Mozart was satisfied with that amount of money and sent it directly to
Constanze.
This surely indicates that both Puchberg and Mozart agreed that one month
lodging at Baden would cost that much.
Though my analysis of such expenses is somewhat rough, we can nevertheless
say with certainty Mozart could not have needed as much as 500 florins
for her medical expenses and a hot-spring cure that time. These must actually
have been far less than 100 florins.
Here, we will be back again to the original issue that Mozart's borrowings
in 1789 was not necessarily for Constanze's disease.
3) Mozart's two letters to Puchberg dated on July 12 and 17, 1789 can be
and often have been seen as grounds for the Medical Expenses Theory, since
Mozart touched on her condition in these letters.
However, examining Mozart's sentences in these letters carefully, we noticed
that very curious and incomprehensive expressions were included there,
which smelled quite other incident than Constanze's illness.
An analysis of these letters actually suggests that these written requests
were not made to Puchberg with Constanze's illness as the main reason.
Mozart's letter on July 12,1789
At the beginning of this letter, Mozart described like this.
"I would like to have opened my heart when I visited you the other
day. However I couldn't have had such bravery at that time ! "
This sentence is surely curious if the borrowing request was for medical
expenses for his wife.
Is there anyone who hesitates to ask a borrowing to his intimate friend
on account of his wife's illness if that was the real cause ?
Then it was sure that Mozart had quite another use of money that time which
let him hesitate to discuss openly.
At the same time he concluded the letter like this.
"My only one friend ! It is up to you whether you have the will to
lend me more 500 florins or you can lend me more 500 florins."
This sentence further indicates something unusual.
Because, if the money he needed that time was truly urgent one to cure
Constanze's disease, he would have never used such an easygoing expression.
He must have written like this .
"Be sure to lend me more 500 florins to cure my lovely wife's illness."
However, he did not write like that. That was obviously because his real
use of money was other than the expenses for his wife's illness.
Mozart's letter on July 17,1789
Puchberg did not respond to the previous Mozart's letter (July 12,1789)
somehow.
Then Mozart wrote a letter dated on July 17 again, where we find very curious
expression again at the beginning of this letter.
"Considering that you did not respond to me, you might have become
angry with me ! It is natural that you got angry when the proofs of friendship
and my desire this time were taken into consideration."
I firmly believe that there is no man who would be angry with his friend
who needed to ask money due to his wife's illness, while there of course
may be a stingy man who do not want to lend his money despite knowing such
circumstance.
According to this letter, Puchberg might have gotten angry at first to
read Mozart's previous letter.
This surely proves that borrowing at this time was by no means for medical
expenses.
4) In December 1789, Mozart asked again to Puchberg to lend him more 400
florins (Puchberg remitted 300 florins that time).
He wrote that he had to pay to the doctor and pharmacy before the new year,
although the necessities for both the doctor and medicines came to an end
by that time.
Indeed, her illness was not heavy. It was only a slight illness ( or mere
pastime, I doubt) since she could make merry with men soon after her arrival
at Baden, of which Mozart complained and reproached in his letter in August
1789 ( date unknown)
It is therefore clear that he utilized his wife's illness as a cover so
that someone, who had a chance to read his letter, could not detect his
real use.
For all these reasons, I firmly believe that the major reason for Mozart's
borrowing from Puchberg in 1789 was not for the sake of Constanze's illness.
Borrowings in 1790
It was only one time, in mid May 1790 that Constanze went to Baden for
her hot-spring cure. However Mozart borrowed from Puchberg 9 times this
year, every month from January to August except for July. The sum of money
borrowed this year reached to 610 florins.
Around those days, as shown in Mozart's letter in December last year, there
were no necessities for doctor visits and medicines for Constanze .
And Constanze's visit to Baden was only once in May, while Mozart borrowed
again and again every month. This reveals that he had a different use of
money other than Constanze's medical expenses.
Borrowings in 1791
Mozart borrowed small amount of money twice this year, in April and in June.
Borrowing in June was certainly the one for Constanze's lodging fee at
Baden as described above.
As to the borrowing in April (30 florins), we can not get any clue to know
the use of money from his short letter.
By analyzing like these, I can deny that the main purpose of Mozart's borrowings
from Puchberg during mid 1788 to mid 1791 was by no means for the sake
of medical expenses. Yet, I can admit that only a small portion for that
sake was included in his debts.
Now, we should remember here what Constanze stated in front of the emperor. She said that the court
persons talked wildly this and that about Mozart, and they exaggerated
his debts as being as ten times as large as the one he actually left behind.
If the real cause of his debts were for the medical expenses for his wife's
illness, who could talk wildly about him ? And the exaggerated amount of
debts ( that is 30,000 gulden) were too big to believe that it was medical
expenses.
Thus Constanze's statement also reveals that it was not medical expenses.
In fact, he had a different reason other than his wife's illness, which
he would not like to come to the surface. Then was it gambling ? Now, let's
check it.
This theory was proposed by Uwe Kraemer in Hamburg in 1976.
Kraemer had a question why Mozart became poor in his late Vienna era, although he undoubtedly earned much larger amounts of money than his living expenses.
As a result of his research into both Mozart's annual income and living
expenses, he noticed that there must have been a large surplus in Mozart's
account every year. And his question was where the surplus has gone. He
could not find out the reasonable account of money spent.
Then he put forward the idea that the surplus must have been spent for
gambling since Mozart was crazy about billiards all the time.
This theory does not seem to obtain a majority at present, however there
are persons like Peter Davies who are in favor of this theory.
However, this theory also has its weakness to persuade us to believe.
I shall be able to deny this theory by the following descriptions.
1). Lack of sufficient evidences
It is true that Mozart loved billiards much and there existed some observations, by Michael O'Kelly for example, that Mozart played billiards for money sometime. However, this alone is insufficient evidence.
Who were the supposed gambling circle ?
Peter Davies suggested that they were Puchberg, Lorenzo da Ponte, Anton
Stadler, Emanuel Schikaneder and Giacomo Casanova.
But there were in fact no clear evidences that all of them were gamblers.
2). No remark about gambling is found in any of Mozart's letters to Puchberg
Reading all Mozart's letters to Puchberg carefully, we can not find any
signs in his letters that the borrowings were caused by his gambling.
If the borrowings were caused by gambling, we ought to be able to find
some supporting evidence for it in his letters - a person's name of the
gambling circle, the place name where they met to gamble, and the date
when the gambling was held, for example. But we can not find such words
at all in Mozart's letters.
3). No remark is found anywhere about Mozart's supposed gambling in the
biographies
Constanze talked about Mozart's supposedly dissipated life style to such biographers as Friedrich Schlichtegroll, Franz Niemetschek and Georg Nikolaus Nissen.
She told them he was keen on liquors and on flirting with lady's maids.
She said various negative things about Mozart. However she never spoke
a word about his gambling. She never said that she was distressed by his
gambling. This seems to be a clear evidence that Mozart did not spend a
lot of money for gambling.
4). Constanze's statement at the Court
As mentioned before, with help of a noble lady who was Mozart's piano pupil,
she was given an audience by the Emperor and was granted later to get 266
florins of widow's pension.
As Constanze stated, the rumor about Mozart's debts were spread widely
among the court people.
Therefore, if the reason for his debts was on account of his gambling and
as a result he became poor, there may not have been a lady who suggested
Constanze to apply the pension, nor the Emperor granted to provide it to
her.
From all of the above, I believe I could deny all the past theories on
Mozart's debts.
It has bee said for a long time that it was because Mozart was in poverty
;
-that he often asked to borrow from Puchberg,
-that he had to travel to Berlin in 1789 and to Frankfurt in1790 to earn
money,
-that he unsuccessfully applied the post of deputy Kapellmeister in 1790
which the court did not recruit.
The poor Mozart theory was like a convenient hiding place in a sense where
many scholars sought shelter in when they faced to incomprehensible Mozart's
debts, travels, and asking for the post not recruited. But I believe that
they were wide of the mark.
My opinion is that we will not be able to solve this issue, if we regard
Mozart as a person in poverty. We must question this issue away from poor
Mozart since he really was not poor with his high earnings every year.
Then what was his borrowings for ?
As described at the beginning of this chapter, Constanze was given an audience by the Emperor.
At that time she said some curious things.
That was the court people talked wildly about Mozart this and that, and
they greatly exaggerated his debts to ten times the actual amounts.
So far nobody has paid any attention and has not written about this.
However, her statement tells us that he was involved in some incident which
was talked wildly about by people in Vienna court, and that this incident
cost a lot of money.
Then what was the incident in which he was involved ?
The following Constanze's letters give us the hints what it was. Those
were her letters sent to Breitkopf und Hartel in Leipzig dated on November
27,1799 and July 21,1800.
"You know that Mozart was a Freemason ........... He was going to
establish a new lodge named "Cavern". I found a fragment of his
paper on the new lodge, however I gave it to a person who joined the establishment.
I hereby lend you the paper on the lodge " Cavern" most of which
were written by Mozart, being enclosed now with this letter, so that you
can utilize it when describing the biography of Mozart. I can not explain
about it any further, but the elder brother Stadler who is the court clarinetist
may explain the rest of the paper. However, he has a suspicion to confess
it since he knows that such association or the secret party is hated by
the people."(Paul Nettl)
The paper written by Mozart has been lost and the new lodge was after all
not founded.
Therefore, we can not get any clue as to his purpose, the names of those
who were involved in this project, the scheduled timing of the new Masonic lodge establishment, etc. .
However, these Constanze's letters remind that the thing the court people talked about wickedly this and that must have been his secret activities for establishing a new lodge.
We should remember here that Freemasonry in Vienna that time became hated
as an improper party by the court and church.
As a result, it was also probable that his debts were exaggerated by them
to ten times larger than it really was.
We therefore find a solution in this secret project of Mozart, to establish
this new Masonic lodge.
It is well known that he joined Freemasonry on December 14, 1784, became
a Master Mason soon afterward and remained a devoted Freemason all the
time up to his death.
Even after the time when the party became hated by Viennese, he had a passionate
desire to establish a new lodge. Indeed, his enthusiasm to this party was greater than we have supposed.
Of course, only by Constanze's statement and her letters, I shall not be
able to conclude that Mozart's use of money was for establishing a new
Masonic lodge.
I have other two grounds to think so in addition to this viewpoint.
Many scholars, Solomon for example, regarded Puchberg as only a money lender.
However, their relationship was not such one but was more intimate and
friendly.
In some occasion, Mozart invited Puchberg and his wife to his home concert
where some of his quartets were played. On the other time, Puchberg was
invited to Mozart's house together with Joseph Haydn when the trial of
the "Cosi fan tutte"(K588) was performed.
As described before, Mozart composed and presented his works, Divertimento(K563)
and Piano Trio(K542), to Puchberg.
Mozart himself often visited Puchberg's house having a long talk or a meal
with him. In some occasion Mozart borrowed a barrel of beer from him.
Other unforgettable thing is that, after Mozart's death, Puchberg became the guardian of two sons left behind. Thus it can not
possibly be denied that they were very intimate friends.
Lastly we can not forget that both Mozart and Puchberg were Freemason brothers, which had an important meaning on Mozart's debts.
Mozart borrowed 15 times from him during the three years from mid 1788
to mid 1791, and the total amount was 1,415 florins.
When we think about this loan carefully, we notice that it included many
curiosities as described below.
I guess that the reason why the loan included so many curiosities was because
Mozart's use of money must have been for Freemasonry.
Yes, during the term, he was in charge of the establishing a new lodge
named "Cavern", and he was in need of a lot of money to realize
this project.
Now, let me point out the curiosities about the loan.
1) Mozart did not often write the reasons for borrowings in his letter.
However he could borrow from Puchberg many times without specially giving
any reason.
It was only 3 times that Mozart made the use of money clear to Puchberg
in his letters.
Those were the rent trouble with the landlord of Landstrasse( before June
17,1788. Date unknown), money collection by the shop in Stock im Eisen
(early May 1790) and the remittance to his wife at Baden (June 25,1791).
Other uses were quite obscure even though he wrote this and that plausibly
in his letters.
Yet Puchberg kept on lending his money to Mozart.
This must surely be because Puchberg had already known the real use of
money in advance by verbal talks with Mozart.
The social/political and religious situation of those days required great
discretion to be used in such a project.
This is why the letters are written in this way.
As it is well known, Freemasonry became under the control of the government
after the imperial ordinance published on December 11,1785.
Existing eight lodges in Vienna that time had to be summarized into three
or less.
These new lodges were obliged to submit their member names and meeting
minutes periodically to the police. The police were sniffing at their activities.
And the people in Vienna began to have disgusting feelings to Freemasonry
as an improper party.
In addition, censorship were still in effect at that time despite they
were eased by the policy of the Emperor Joseph the second.
Under these circumstances, Mozart was very careful in writing his letters
to Puchberg so that other persons could not detect the real use of money
when the letters were obliged to be opened.
Thus, no writings on actual use of money in his letters suggest us a secret
purpose, that was for his new Masonic lodge establishment.
2) Mozart had wide acquaintance with rich aristocracy, merchants and musicians.
However, he virtually depended only on Puchberg with few exceptions as
described next.
Generally speaking, the excuse for the use of money would be necessary
when a person ask someone for loan.
However, his use was related to Masonic activities, and then he would not
like to talk it to any other person than Masons. Then he largely depended
on a Masonic brother Puchberg who was in favor of Mozart's idea.
3) There were further two exceptions when Mozart borrowed from persons
other than Puchberg.
These were Franz Hofdemel (the secretary of the Vienna trial court ) and
Heinrich Rackenbacher( a merchant in Vienna).
In March 1789, he borrowed 100 florins from Hofdemel before the departure
of his trip to Dresden, Leipzig and Berlin. This probably was the borrowing
for his travel expenses.
And in September 1790, he asked his wife to borrow 1,000 florins from Rackenbacher
during his trip to Frankfurt The purpose of this debt is still an enigma
now, however people can not find any sign at all in this agreement that
this was the borrowing for his Masonic activity.
Thus he borrowed from outsiders of Freemasonry when the cause seemed nothing
to do with his Masonic activities.
There was however one more person other than Puchberg, on whom Mozart
depended a lot of money for his Freemasonry activities. It was marquis
Lichnowsky.
As to Lichnowsky's case, I would like to describe it later separately as
a postscript.
4) It was a further surprising fact that Mozart could borrow15 times and
1,415 florins from Puchberg only by writing letters, without descriptions
of annual interest, due date, and collateral for the loan.
Moreover, it was also a surprising fact that there existed no evidence
that Puchberg asked Mozart to repay.
Things were very different with Hofdemel's and Rackenbacher's cases.
He drew a four-month promissory note on Hofdemel for 100 florins.
He provided Rackenbacher with a written acknowledgement of debt, in which 5 % annual interest, two years loan term, and collateral for the loan were clearly described, calling two persons as to witnesses.( The major part of this written acknowledgement is quoted in Mozart's Death and Burial.)
However, we can not find such rigid repayment terms anywhere in Mozart's
letters to Puchberg.
There must have been some particular reason there.
I suppose that the loan must have been a kind of monetary support by Puchberg
who was in favor of establishment of the new lodge.
Why I think so is that there existed common stories here and there in the
world that a wealthy merchant gave monetary support to someone who promoted
innovative political activities and/or some specific religions.
Puchberg was in just such a situation. He therefore loaned to Mozart without
any rigid repayment terms or pressures.
5) Having such a big amount of credit, Puchberg did not request it to the Vienna City Office by March 19,1792 although he had entitlement to do so .
It was sure that the background of the loan was related to Freemasonry. Puchberg did not want to publicize this fact. This is why he did not apply to the City Office.
My next viewpoint is that we can find words or sentences related to Freemasonry
frequently in Mozart's letters to Puchberg.
1) Greeting in Mozart's letter
In the first place, I would like to keep my eyes on his greeting in the
letters to Puchberg.
At the beginning of his letters, he often used to begin with such words
as " Dear respectful brother of the Order, and most beloved friend
! " for his greeting.
Not only the word 'respectful brother', but also the word 'real friend',
and 'fraternal love' can be seen frequently in his letters here and there.
Those were the words Freemasonry valued above everything else in their
association.
Mozart aimed to borrow from Puchberg appealing as a Freemason brother and
did so by appealing to him as a Freemason brother. The fact is consistent
with the view that the purpose of these loans was for Freemasonry itself.
Considering from our commonsense, it may be somewhat curious for Mozart
to use such kind of words so frequently in his letters, if his loans were
such private use as his living expenses.
2) Mozart's letter on June 17,1788
We find a number of curious and incomprehensible expressions in this letter
also, in which there are also clues of Freemason activities.
In the first half of this letter, he stated like this.
"If you have the love and friendship that you are willing to lend
me 1,000 or 2,000 gulden for one to two years with a reasonable interest,
it would be a great support for my daily work ..........
Recently I often faced to the opportunities that I had to ask to extend
the repayment date, and after all I had to repay all my incomes at my worst
time."
It would surely be very strange for a man to borrow so heavily over such
a period as part of living expenses.
Common borrowings for living expenses are surely much smaller amount of
money and much shorter time. Then the long term debt like that must have
been for a different use other than his living expenses.
Now, was he in the necessity of money for his living in the middle of 1788
?
The answer is decidedly 'No.'
Remember this was only six to seven months after the successful performance
of the "Don Giovanni "(K.527) in Prague, where he earned a lot
of money.
In addition, he was now employed as a Court musician since December 1787,
and was receiving 800 florins annually from that post.
Of course, he had his original incomes from composing , piano lessons and
publication of his music scores as well.
One further thing to remember is that he received 1,000 florins at the
end of 1787, which was sent from his sister Nannerl as his share of property
left by Leopold Mozart.
Mozart was therefore never in need of money in the first half of 1788.
Now, as to this money, he asked to send it to Puchberg, not to remit to
his bank account. What was the reason for ?
I guess that Mozart would like to keep it from Constanze since he needed money for his Masonic activities getting rid of her interference ( Remember here he did the same thing during his trip to Sachsen. At that
time, he mentioned to Constanze nothing about 450 florins given from Karl
August, only describing that he was given a very beautiful box).
As to this, I can accept another possibility too that Mozart repaid this
1,000 florins to Puchberg which he had borrowed till then.
The sentence "I had to repay all my income at my worst time."
is also strange.
What expenditures did he actually mean ?
This must not have been his living expenses since he lived simply in a
humble apartment house only with Constanze.
Then was it the expenditure related to his job ?
Probably it might not. At that time he could not appear on the stage in Vienna as a pianist.
Therefore he did not need to pay such expenses as orchestra fee, the rent
and the lightning of the theater, printing for the poster and ticket, etc..
He was only composing in his house that time. Then music papers, pens and
ink were the only real expenditure that he needed, if the expenditures
were really related to his job.
As a result, 1,000 to 2,000 florins that he asked was far too big to be
explained as working expenses.
Thus we can deny the borrowing was neither for his shortage of living expenses
nor his music job. Then what was for ?
There is a sign in his letter that the use of money was for his Masonic
activities.
The word 'work' written by Mozart must be a kind of trap to the general
public.
In those days, the 'work ' meant 'the meeting of Freemason', and 'the work
records' was used in place of "the minutes of the proceedings"
in Freemasonry. (Deutsch)
My understanding is that Mozart used "the (daily) work " in that
sense.
Yes, he held the meetings for establishing a new lodge every day that time,
and needed to pay frequently such meeting expenses as room rent, lightning,
transportation, printing, correspondence and meal, etc..
In the middle of this letter, we can find very curious and incomprehensive
sentences.
"And yet, a misfortune came in sight in another aspect ! My best and beloved sworn friend, you know well about my current situation. But you know my future prospect as well. That thing we talked over before is kept unchanged. I am sure I do not need to mention now about it this and that since you
have already known it well"
This sentence suddenly appears in his letter and surprises us, as if it
was a modulations of his musical works.
I would say this sentence means that he was involved in a problem different
than his wife's illness at that time. Because I interpret that above italic
words have close relations to Freemasonry those days.
Taking a look at the history of Freemasonry in Vienna, we discover that
the lodge named "Truth" (to which Puchberg belonged) submitted
their dissolution to the government in April 1789.
As a result, the lodge "New Crowned Hope" ( to which Mozart belonged
) became only one Freemasonry lodge in Vienna. (* In 1788, the name of
"New Crowned Hope" was changed to former name "Crowned Hope"
again. However I still use the name "New Crowned Hope" hereinafter
to avoid confusion).
There must therefore have been a big upheaval in Vienna Freemasonry. And
at the same time, the Vienna Freemasonry seemed to become more and more
shrunken. Moreover, people began to turn away from Freemasonry.
Mozart was afraid that this dissolution (= a misfortune ) would have a bad effect on the establishing of his new lodge(= my future prospect).
However, in spite of being placed under such unfavorable circumstances,
he would never change his mind to establish a new lodge(=That thing we talked over before is kept unchanged).
There must have been such a background behind Mozart's letter, I suppose.
In other Mozart's letters to Puchberg, we can find similar sentences which
suggested his use of money was related to Freemasonry. However, I believe
above two examples are sufficient.
By reading Constanze's statement and her letters, analyzing of curious
loan between Puchberg and Mozart, and interpreting Mozart's letters, I
concluded that the main use of Mozart's debt from Puchberg was for a project
to establish a new Masonic lodge.
Of course I accept that expenses for Constanze's hot-spring cure and at the same time for unexpected shortage of his living expenses were involved in his loans. However, these portions in total must have been far smaller amount of money than was actually borrowed. The main use was indeed for his Freemasonry project.
Mozart had earned much money enough for his living, to be
sure.However, he had to depend on borrowing from someone for this extraordinary
expenses.
That was probably because Constanze,who apparently disliked Freemasonry,
would not have allowed him to use the home finance for his Masonic project
for one thing and tenderhearted Mozart would have considered not to disturb
his family life by spending most of his incomes on these secret activities
for the other.
He therefore had relied on the money from his Freemason brothers.
It is well known that Mozart showed his enthusiastic attitudes toward Freemasonry
from December 1784 to the end of 1785, attending many meetings, composing
often for them, arranging concerts and even inviting his father and Haydn
to join.
However, we could find few signs for his devotion to his lodge "Crowned
Hope" from the beginning of 1786 to mid 1791. During these five years,
his composition for this lodge was none and his attendance to the meeting
became less and less frequent.
Does this mean that he had lost his enthusiasm to Freemasonry ?
My answer is decidedly "No".
He actually kept his devotion to this association in his mind all the time
up to his death.
However, during the term, he was so busy for trying to establish a new
lodge named "Cavern", and then he could not show his devotion
to the lodge "Crowned Hope".
And yet, despite all of this enthusiasm, the new lodge"Cavern"
was never founded.
Probably Mozart faced to practical difficulties in the project from around
the end of 1789 or by the beginning of 1790.
After this date he was busy winding up the affairs of unrealized new lodge.
This winding up would have been settled at around early 1791. Then, in
turn, he began to work for the existing Freemasonry lodge again from mid
1791 up to the time of his death.
During this last period, he composed 'Die ihr des unemesslichen Weltalls
Schöpfer ehrt'(K.619) for the Regensburg lodge, the' Laut verkünde
unsre Freude'(K.623) for his lodge" Crowned Hope",
and the great Freemason opera ' Die Zauberflöte'(K.620) for all mankind.
To ensure my conclusion, the following should be answered with relation to Mozart's project.
- What made him plan to establish a new Masonic lodge ?
- From when to when did he actually work for this project?
- Why wasn't the new lodge after all established ?
- Why was he so enthusiastic to Freemasonry ?
As to these, I will describe separately in the next chapter " Mozart, an enthusiastic Freemason " since they need a considerable amount of space in writing .
Ending this chapter, it may be best to touch on briefly the mysterious
Mozart's debt to Karl Lichnowsky so as not to be accused of making an important
oversight.
As mentioned before, this debt was the largest of all his remaining debts. But, as to its cause, there exists only an implausible opinion that it was gambling
debt since Lichnowsky himself was really a tough gambler. However this
opinion can not show any evidence at all that Mozart was a member of Lichnowsky's
gambling circle.
The fact that Lichnowsky brought Mozart to the Austrian court will also
deny this opinion. As we all know that gambling can not be the cause of
a legal action, in any country and at any time in the world since gambling
itself is illegal.
However, when analyzing Mozart's letters, a solution becomes available.
Let us suppose that Mozart's borrowing from Lichnowsky was also associated
with this project to establish a new Masonic lodge in Vienna. For there
are some reasons to suppose that this is so.
In 1788, he sent four letters to Puchberg.
By the first letter in June that year (date unknown), he could borrow 100
florins from Puchberg. By the second letter also in June 1788 (date unknown,
but supposed to be before June 17), he asked to borrow between 1,000 to
2,000 florins as mentioned before, but could in the end borrow only 200
florins.
Then he sent the third letter on June 27,1788 to Puchberg asking again
for a sizable sum of money with a long term repayment. But Puchberg did
not respond it at all. And so, Mozart sent the fourth letter in July 1788(
date unknown, but supposed to be at the beginning of July) to press Puchberg
by appealing his miserable poverty. However, Puchberg did not respond it
again.
In his third and fourth letters, he blamed such big borrowing on his poverty despite the fact that this is almost certainly a false reason. .
For, as described before, Mozart had benefited in the first half of 1788
by the success of the 'Don Giovanni' in Prague, by his appointment at court,
his inheritance of 1,000 florins, in line with his original incomes from
composition, piano lessons and publishing of music scores.
Since he was in such favorable conditions and there was nothing particular
which required a lot of money, it was clear that he was not in poverty
that time.
A lot of money therefore Mozart needed was never for his living expenses,
but for a particular project - the new lodge establishment.
Anyway, Puchberg did not respond to Mozart's third and fourth letters at
all.
After Puchberg's refusal in July 1788, he, strangely enough, did not write
another letter to Puchberg for a year. The next is dated on July 12,1789.
This must surely raise the question of whether he had given up borrowing from Puchberg or had abandoned his secret project.
It may well be that he simply stopped borrowing from Puchberg.
To continue his scheme, he would have needed another lending source. And
that person, I suggest, was Lichnowsky.
Lichnowsky was a Freemason brother who had once belonged to the very same
lodge "Beneficence" as Mozart himself.
He was a rich aristocracy titled a marquis and was a patron of Mozart's
music.
And then it is likely that Mozart thought that he could confess the use
of money frankly to Lichnowsky since Lichnowsky was also a Freemason.
Thus, after Puchberg's refusal, Mozart talked with Lichnowsky and borrowed
a considerable amount of money from him, with the condition of long term
repayment and reasonable interest.
Probably Lichnowsky lent more than 2,000 florins that time in response
to Mozart's requirement.
Then, Mozart could continue his project without asking Puchberg's help
for a year.
However, this loan worried him badly afterward.
In April 1789, Mozart suddenly traveled to Dresden, Leipzig and Berlin
together with Lichnowsky.
It has been said for a long time that the purpose of this travel was that
Lichnowsky, who felt pity for Mozart's poverty, had arranged Mozart to
meet Prussian King and get his job there.
However this must have been a made-up story.
Because they were refused to meet the King on April 26,1789 when they asked
to have an audience for the first time in Potsdam.
Such refusal would not have occurred if Lichnowsky had made an arrangement in advance.
The real cause of this trip probably consists in the following.
The probable first repayment to Lichnowsky was near in mid 1789. However,
Mozart did not have a sizable amount of money to repay that time. He therefore
would have talked with Lichnowsky over the repayment arrangements. At that
time Lichnowsky would have suggested Mozart to travel with him to his home
Sachsen at his opportunity back home and hold concerts there to get money.
Mozart accepted his proposal and traveled to Sachsen with him.
He could hold piano concerts in Dresden and Leipzig as Lichnowsky suggested.
And more, he could perform his piano playing in front of Carl August and
his princess. Mozart got 450 florin by this performance, though he did
not tell the fact to Constanze, only describing he was given a very beautiful
box. This money must have been repaid to Lichnowsky.
In the same year in December, Mozart again asked Puchberg to lend him more
400 florins, as described before.
Though he wrote plausibly in his letter that he had to pay to the doctor
and pharmacy before the new year, it would have been a transparent lie.
He did not need to pay such a big amount of money that time.
Probable cause of Mozart's request to Puchberg this time was a demand from
Lichnowsky.
Lichnowsky were not satisfied with the small amount of Mozart's repayment
after his travel to Sachsen. Then he again pressed Mozart to repay some
amount of money around that time.
In September next year (1790) , again he had to travel to Frankfurt to hold a piano
concert there.
For a long time, the background of this particular trip was thought to
an attempt to solve his poverty.
However, it also was not. He himself knew well from the beginning that
he could not have such an optimistic expectation for the trip. However,
he had to travel there. So why the trip?
At that time, two years were passing by since Mozart borrowed a lot of money from Lichnowsky.
But his actual repayments were far behind than his promise.
Probably Lichnowsky often requested the repayment to Mozart. But he could
not have met to Lichnowsky's expectation.
Then he had to go out for a concert trip to show his good faith to repay.
Thus, the background of Frankfurt travel was as similar as the trip to
Sachsen; that is to say, Mozart made a trip to make money for repayment
to Lichnowsky.
However, Mozart himself knew well that he would not be able to earn a lot
of money easily in Frankfurt. Then remembering strong pressure from Lichnowsky,
Mozart sent a letter dated on September 28 to his wife in Vienna in which
he suggested to borrow 1,000 florins from Lackenbacher by the help of Anton
Stadler.
Thus I guess that the debt to Lackenbacher was the fund for repayment to
Lichnowsky.
Mozart was always worrying about the repayment in his mind.
However his repayment showed a very slow progress since he could not get
any commissioned work from anyone after the performance of 'Cosi fan tutte'.
Then, in March 1790, he dared to request the post of deputy Kapellmeister of the Vienna court
which was not recruited. His purpose was to get more salary to repay to
Lichnowsky.
However, he failed in getting the post probably by the objection of Kapellmeister
Salieri.
A similar explanation may be founded for his application for the post of
deputy Kapellmeister of St. Stephen Cathedral made in April 1791, which
was not also recruited.
This time, he was successful for getting the post on the surface. But it
was meaningless for him since it was a nominal and unpaid position until
the existing Kapellmeister leaves from that position.
In spite of his struggles, the remainder of Mozart's borrowing from Lichnowsky
was still more than 1,400 florins. Lichnowsky could not put up with Mozart's
nonfulfillment.
There was a rule in the ' Charter of Freemasonry' that a Mason shall not appear in court unless it is inevitable to the Masonic lodge. Therefore Lichnowsky did not appear in court, as long as he was the member of Freemasonry.
However, he was no more a Freemason after the dissolution of his lodge
"Truth" and then he brought Mozart to trial finally.
There must have been such backgrounds behind the decision by the Austrian
trial court.
The following are the bibliographies and other sources to which I have
referred in this chapter.
In writing this and other chapters, I have not referred to the original
texts but have instead used versions translated into Japanese by translators
listed in parenthesis.
I am however responsible for the translation from Japanese into English.
1. Niemetschek, Franz Xaver
Lebensbeschreibung des k.k.Kapellmeisters Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, nach
Originalquellen(translated by Noriko Takano, Ongakunotomo-sha, 1992)
2. Bauer, Wilhelm und Deutsch, Otto Erich
MOZART, Briefe und Aufzeichnungen Gesamtausgabe, Weiterer Nachtrag ( edited and translated by Bin Ebizawa and Hideo Takahashi, Hakusui-sha,
2001)
3. Deutsh, Otto Erich und Eibl, Joseph Heinz
Mozart. Documente seines Lebens. (translated by Koji Imoto, Symphonia, 1989)
4. Volkmar Braunbehrens
Mozart in Vienna 1781 - 1791 (translated by Timothy Bell, Grove Weidenfeld,1990)
5. Solomon, Maynard
Mozart : A life ( translated by Hiroshi Ishii, Shinshokan, 1992)
6. Davies, Peter J
Mozart in person: His Character and Health ( translated by Hiroshi Kawabata, JCC, 1992)
7. Landon, H.C. Robbins
1791 Mozart's last year( translated by Bin Ebizawa, Chuoukouron Shinsha, 2001)
8. Nettl, Paul
Musik und Freimaurerei, Mozart und die königliche Kunst (translated by Bin Ebizawa and Yukiyo Kurihara, Ongakunotomo-sha,1981)
9. Fichte, Immanuel Hermann
Mozart Reliquien in Salzburg (translated by Nobuyo Tsuchida, Ongakunotomo-sha,1991)
10. Kretschmer, Helmut
Mozarts spuren in Wien (translated by Takao Shiraishi, Ongakunotomo-sha,1991)
11. Bin, Ebizawa
Mozart's profile ( Ongakunotomo-sha, 1988)
Author : Shuji Fujisawa
e-mail : ssfuji@mbj.nifty.com
First published : July 27, 2004
Updated : August 15, 2007
All rights reserved