cahn: (Default)
[personal profile] cahn
Check out the opera clips at Rheinsberg!

(both the real-life place, which [personal profile] selenak found out hosts a festival for young opera singers! and the community [community profile] rheinsberg)

Also! our fandom has been producing lovely fic at a rapid clip (okay, well, [personal profile] selenak has):

Sibling dysfunction: Promises to Keep and My Brother Narcissus

Sibling dysfunction PLUS sibling M/M love triangle: The moon flies face to face with me

VOLTAIRE! Between the hour and the age

Re: (not much) Katte! (but much Lehndorff)

Date: 2020-04-24 05:17 am (UTC)
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)
From: [personal profile] mildred_of_midgard
Absolutely - as long as there's no question that they're both devoted more to Fritz than to each other.

Yes *exactly*. The plan is for them to negotiate exactly those boundaries. It helps that they hooked up while *trying to find Fritz and fearing he was dead*, because Katte will be able to tell Fritz, "Of *course* I bonded with him, he was the only one as motivated as I was to find you!" And they will continue in that vein.

I know my Fritz. ;) So does Katte, I might add.

a friend advises him to try a prostitute, Lehndorff does so and concludes it's just not worth it because it's v.v. awkward afterwards (is it more gentlemanly to wait or to send her away immediately?),

Huh, I don't remember this, but then Lehndorff was also several months ago, so if you told us, I might have forgotten.

sexual licence at court didn't start when nephew FW2 took over, there, gulp, actually lots of affairs among the Prussian nobility before that

LOL

doesn't appear to have had the type of sexual identity struggle we are almost conditioned to expect about all of this. When he angsts, it's about questions like "will I never get out of this dead-end job?" or "it's all over between Heinrich and me, I just know it!", "why doesn't the King ever notice me?", "why does Heinrich keep going for jerks?". Not "is there somethign wrong with me for loving whom I love?"

Yeah, that is really interesting.

So: how much of this matter-of-factly bisexuality was Lehndorff-specific, and how much was Rokoko age? (Not a rethoric question, I haven't made up my mind.)

Yes, a very interesting question. I wonder how much of it was class-based: Lehndorff and his ilk are classically educated and have lots of Greco-Roman models if they want them; pamphlet readers are maybe not?

I've also wondered how much to have my characters worry about their sexuality. Katte and Suhm (Dresden!) are worldly enough to be cool with it, Fritz is like, "Hey, it pisses Dad off, how bad can it be?" but I wonder about the uneducated, minor nobility, brought-up-at-FW's-court Peter.

I feel like I saw someone on DW whom I don't normally follow reviewing a book that talks about exactly this...ah, yes, it was Men In Love: Masculinity and Sexuality in the Eighteenth Century. I haven't read it, have no idea if the author's any good at history, but it might be relevant to your current interests worth checking out.

Re: (not much) Katte! (but much Lehndorff)

Date: 2020-04-24 06:28 am (UTC)
selenak: (James Boswell)
From: [personal profile] selenak
Huh, I don't remember this, but then Lehndorff was also several months ago, so if you told us, I might have forgotten

No, you haven't, I didn't mention it then.

Lehndorff and his ilk are classically educated and have lots of Greco-Roman models if they want them; pamphlet readers are maybe not?

True. I mean, middle-class education became more and more a thing - one generation later, the entire French Revolution VIPs are well educated middle class citizens, and on the non-revolutionary side, there's good old Goethe (who btw did read Voltaire's pamphlet as well as the later memoirs, the former with a mixture of being appalled and amused, and the later just being amused, what with several years and De La Literature Allemande in between), who with his sister got a fantastic classical education as the son of a Frankfurt lawyer - but so did middle class morality. Les Liasons Dangereuses was such a bestseller partly because of the "see what the depraved nobility is up to!!!!!" factor, Lessing's tragedy Emilia Galotti has a licentious prince aiming at forcing the titular middle class heroine to become his mistress, and the entire genre of the "sentimental novel" in England as inaugurated by Richardson revolves around the "depraved aristo vs virtuous middle class people" construct.

(And speaking of Voltaire's memoirs, remember, Lehndorff has a great time listening to Heinrich reading them out loud to him in Rheinsberg, complete with commentary, but is SHOCKED that they get sold in bookshops to the people at large in Berlin.)

Thank you for the reading tip! A quick googling tells me the author is specialized in English literature, and the summary only mentions English and French examples, so the use for my current purpose might be limited, though.

I wonder about the uneducated, minor nobility, brought-up-at-FW's-court Peter.

Good point. There's also this: if FW, who as you point out transfers Peter to Wesel the same day he gives orders for Keyserlingk to sleep in the same room with Fritz all the time and not to leave his side, thought Peter was the guilty and experienced party in whatever had happened, why doesn't anything worse than a transfer to Wesel happen to Peter? It's not like the Keiths are of such great influence in Prussia, and Peter is a fourth son, right? Why doesn't he simply get dismissed from the service? Unless, at this point, FW sees him and Fritz as equally culpable and Peter doesn't have a reputation for sexual license, or any kind of experience.

Re: (more) Katte! (some Lehndorff) (more Keith)

Date: 2020-04-24 07:32 am (UTC)
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)
From: [personal profile] mildred_of_midgard
Huh, I don't remember this, but then Lehndorff was also several months ago, so if you told us, I might have forgotten

No, you haven't, I didn't mention it then.


Aha. Well, as [personal profile] cahn says, it's delightful to always be getting new and endearing stories about Lehndorff. :)

middle-class education became more and more a thing...but so did middle class morality.

Very true. And I should clarify: while I expect that the depraved nobles educated classes *also* read pamphlets, what with society being a pyramid, I imagine the bulk of pamphlet readership (viz. sales) is going to come from lower down, smack in the midst of middle-class morality. And gossipy sensationalism about Potsdamites is thus going to sell.

Thank you for the reading tip! A quick googling tells me the author is specialized in English literature, and the summary only mentions English and French examples, so the use for my current purpose might be limited, though.

Ah, too bad. It makes sense, though, as the context in which I saw it reviewed was someone in the Jacobite fandom. If there were still libraries, I would endorse checking out the bibliography in case it had materials more suited to your interests, but alas. No libraries at the present time.

Oh, wait, I just remembered. I do have a reference of translated-into-English primary sources on sodomy in 18th century France on my wishlist (perhaps waiting for my next book bribe, or at least the return of my concentration). Despite the different law and religion, for the Francophilic Hohenzollerns, the French context might be at least relevant as part of the cultural milieu (as I recall, it does have a Voltaire passage!), and this book might also have bibliographic references of use. Much of it is police reports, so less relevant as far as Prussian law and enforcement thereof, but possibly there are some insightful comments into the mindsets of people in different classes.

If not relevant enough now, then it may still be of interest after real life lets up a little.

Also, maybe if we click on enough of these books on Amazon, their algorithm will have some suggestions about 18th century manly unchaste Prussians. ;)

Unless, at this point, FW sees him and Fritz as equally culpable and Peter doesn't have a reputation for sexual license, or any kind of experience.

I absolutely always assumed FW always saw them as at least equally culpable, if not Peter as the victim. I mean, one, Peter is Fritz's age. Two, granted we have little data on Peter's personality, but between Wilhelmine and Lehndorff, I get the impression of Fritz as the driver in that relationship and Peter as kind of sedate, not especially strong-willed, and future family man. Three, FW's opinion of his son couldn't be lower.

Four, well, there's this 1731 passage with which you're very familiar:

"Did you seduce Katte, or did Katte seduce you?" Whereupon the Crown Prince replied without hesitation: "I seduced him", to which his royal majesty returned: "I am pleased that you finally speak the truth for a change."

Regardless of whether that's seduce sexually or just seduce into treason (I think it's both), FW is absolutely convinced Fritz is at fault. I assume the same was true of Peter. Even regardless of whether there really was a sexual peccadillo, as I think there was, or just plotting to defy FW and escape.

It's not like the Keiths are of such great influence in Prussia, and Peter is a fourth son, right? Why doesn't he simply get dismissed from the service?

Fourth child, but yes, a second or younger son iirc, which is the salient point. As to your second question, well, one, we don't know what they got caught doing. Two, FW would probably want to take the legal route, as he later did with Katte, and even if he doesn't mind dragging Fritz's name through the mud for sex, Fritz and Peter might not have done anything that would stand up in a court martial as grounds for dismissal.

I don't know exactly what counted as "sodomy," but FW hated masturbation, so even if the two were talking and flirting and maybe kissing/touching a bit in Fritz's room, and they both went back to their separate chambers, and the next morning the servants found evidence of Fritz having ejaculated in bed or in his breeches, that might be enough for FW. Especially given that Peter is *also* BFFs with wretched son and supporting his general defiance.

Btw, something occurs to me about that seducing Katte quote. It makes total sense if Fritz was frantically blaming Katte the whole time in 1730 and FW didn't believe him, and despised him as a coward. But as we've seen, from August 10 to the very end, Fritz was steadfastly trying to take all the blame and absolve Katte as the one who tried to talk him out of it and got pressured (seduced) into it.

It's been a year by August 1731. I wonder if FW has selective memory and is remembering what he wants to remember.

Bastard.
Edited Date: 2020-04-24 07:46 am (UTC)

Re: (more) Katte! (some Lehndorff) (more Keith)

Date: 2020-04-25 07:03 am (UTC)
selenak: (Wilhelmine und Folichon)
From: [personal profile] selenak
Also, maybe if we click on enough of these books on Amazon, their algorithm will have some suggestions about 18th century manly unchaste Prussians. ;)

A valid goal!

I don't know exactly what counted as "sodomy," but FW hated masturbation

Did he ever. I see elsewhere you've now read his instructions for his younger sons as well. Complete, of course, with Ziebura pointing out that FW with his unerring hiring instinct managed to get a gay-as-gay-can-be governor to carry out his anti-masturbation agenda for the divine trio.

Btw, something occurs to me about that seducing Katte quote. It makes total sense if Fritz was frantically blaming Katte the whole time in 1730 and FW didn't believe him, and despised him as a coward. But as we've seen, from August 10 to the very end, Fritz was steadfastly trying to take all the blame and absolve Katte as the one who tried to talk him out of it and got pressured (seduced) into it.

It's been a year by August 1731. I wonder if FW has selective memory and is remembering what he wants to remember.

Bastard.


Quite. I mean, FW's opinion of his oldest son had its ups as well as its downs in the 1730s, but for all "here stands one who will avenge me" you get a "I don't like fops despite having one in the family, I know very well which one, but that one is too old to be improved", for every "Fritzchen" (as reported by other Seckendorff) there's a rant about how FW's money will be spent on theatre and mistresses. No wonder Fritz' subconscious as late as the 7 Years War wants a "well done, son" from the dead man.

In terms of this particular quote during the big submission, though, I offer the alternate (to selective memory) explanation that FW expected Fritz to lie to him by default, not just re: Katte; see also the part of the submission day rant about how Fritz lied to him about the extent of his debts even after FW promised to cover them (which Fritz did) and of course the FW quote which Valory includes in his report on Fritz from 1753, with no date given as to when FW said this (though it must have been during the 1730s, not earlier, since Valory got AW to verify it as a second source): When you are lord and master here, you will betray everyone, for you can't help yourself. You are false to the core of your being, and a betrayer. Be careful, Friedrich! Make that first betrayal as complete as possible, for you won't manage to fool them a second time.

As we've said before, the (most) infuriating thing here is that FW never acknowledges he was a big reason why Fritz became such a default liar to begin with. Nor, and this brings us back to Katte again, does he acknowledge Fritz is quite capable of being loyal. (To Katte, to Suhm, and also to his mother and sister, though FW and Grumbkow tried their best to destroy the trust between Fritz and Wilhelmine and make Fritz come across as disloyal there, too.) I think he - FW - needed to believe Fritz was incapable of this because otherwise he'd have to wonder about his own responsibility for how his son acted towards him, and he just was incapable of admitting that he'd been anything but the perfect father.

Re: (more) Katte! (some Lehndorff) (more Keith)

Date: 2020-04-26 12:30 am (UTC)
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)
From: [personal profile] mildred_of_midgard
Also, maybe if we click on enough of these books on Amazon, their algorithm will have some suggestions about 18th century manly unchaste Prussians. ;)

A valid goal!


Okay, I laughed. :P

I see elsewhere you've now read his instructions for his younger sons as well.

Indeed! I also notice that Heinrich was 12 when these instructions were given. (And that's assuming that they hadn't been given to other governors earlier.) And Fritz was 18 when he got the "governor sleeping in his room" order.

What I'm thinking is that FW might not have been on guard against silent sins with his oldest son, until Fritz got caught with Peter. And then with the younger sons, FW was proactive rather than reactive.

And if it *was* solitary nocturnal ejaculation after hanging out with Peter that Fritz got caught at, that might explain why FW was content to banish Peter.

Our "who tops, who bottoms?" discussion has become a "who tops, who bottoms, who masturbates?" discussion, lol.

with Ziebura pointing out that FW with his unerring hiring instinct managed to get a gay-as-gay-can-be governor to carry out his anti-masturbation agenda for the divine trio.

I wonder if FW's logic here was "Immune to the temptations of women" -> "Good role model for my sons."

In terms of this particular quote during the big submission, though, I offer the alternate (to selective memory) explanation that FW expected Fritz to lie to him by default

True. I would still see that as selective memory--FW remembering things as they what happened but according to his preconceptions of Fritz--but I think you're right, it's not Fritz as disloyal coward that's the salient preconception here, it's Fritz as lying liar who lies.

does he acknowledge Fritz is quite capable of being loyal. (To Katte, to Suhm

The part that always strikes me as speaking louder than words about Fritz's feelings for Suhm was the way he kept trying to get him to come back from St. Petersburg, even though it was only after he arrived there that he started being able to send Fritz copies of the Life of Eugene. Those are some priorities right there.

The flip side, of course, is Suhm requesting resignation the day he hears about FW's death, before even hearing from Fritz, and then of course setting out even when deathly ill.

I think he - FW - needed to believe Fritz was incapable of this because otherwise he'd have to wonder about his own responsibility for how his son acted towards him, and he just was incapable of admitting that he'd been anything but the perfect father.

That makes perfect sense.

Re: (more) Katte! (some Lehndorff) (more Keith)

Date: 2020-04-27 06:45 am (UTC)
selenak: (Sternennacht - Lefaym)
From: [personal profile] selenak
Our "who tops, who bottoms?" discussion has become a "who tops, who bottoms, who masturbates?" discussion, lol.

Clearly not FW, though, if he needed an oldest son to discover boys do that. Seriously, how can a man be so obsessed with soldiers and discover the "silent sins" concept so relatively late in life?

I wonder if FW's logic here was "Immune to the temptations of women" -> "Good role model for my sons."

Probably!

Incidentally, and considering FW's default assumption that Fritz and Wilhelmine are lying to him (which he doesn't assume from the younger kids): given that all three younger princes were completely aware that "Kreutz"(en) the gay governor was gay and AW had no problem writing explicit letters referring to this once Dad was dead, one has to conclude that not only were the younger kids good at keeping secrets from Dad, but doing so with a straight (ahem) face.

It's almost two generations later and from the opposite camp in terms of German speaking territories, but if you read the letters from the Mozart clan, but it's not just Wolfgang Amadeus himself who makes sex and scatological jokes. His mother writing to her husband Leopold does it, too, and while Leopold was a strict father in the sense of not wanting Wolfgang to marry one of the Webers (because a young musician in search of a well paying job should not tie himself to what Leopold, somewhat unfairly, sees as a clan of leeches), what you don't have is endless paternal control issues re: his son's sex life in general. I'm thinking of this every time I read nineteenth and early 20th century biographers argue FW was just being "ein deutscher Hausvater". Look, 19th century people, they don't get more micromanaging than Leopold "my son was given to me by God so that I may foster and promote his genius to the world and BY GOD THAT IS WHAT I AM GOING TO DO!" Mozart. And he still had no hang up about his kid's every small or larger sign of sexuality.

Re: (more) Katte! (some Lehndorff) (more Keith)

Date: 2020-04-27 06:58 am (UTC)
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)
From: [personal profile] mildred_of_midgard
Our "who tops, who bottoms?" discussion has become a "who tops, who bottoms, who masturbates?" discussion, lol.

Clearly not FW, though


See, that's exactly what I'm thinking. Although by the time Fritz was 18, FW knew that his son hadn't turned out exactly like him, who had a French governess and still managed to discover the superiority of everything German, at some level I think FW was still being caught off guard by unexpected behaviors that wouldn't occur to *him*. (Not being tempted, of course, but to give into temptation when God is watching. If there was one thing the man had, for all his faults, it was self-denial when it stemmed from principles that mattered to him.)

Seriously, how can a man be so obsessed with soldiers and discover the "silent sins" concept so relatively late in life?

The soldiers presumably kept their mouths extremely shut around Scary Monarch, but I wonder how the tobacco parliament managed when they were all drunk and being informal and vulgar and Rococo. :P

every time I read nineteenth and early 20th century biographers argue FW was just being "ein deutscher Hausvater".

*cough* Preuss

Look, 19th century people, they don't get more micromanaging than Leopold "my son was given to me by God so that I may foster and promote his genius to the world and BY GOD THAT IS WHAT I AM GOING TO DO!" Mozart. And he still had no hang up about his kid's every small or larger sign of sexuality.

Indeed. I think FW is such a visible strict father to people writing about Fritz (*cough* Roes) that people assume he was more representative than he was, instead of a fish out of water in his time and place and class.

Re: (more) Katte! (some Lehndorff) (more Keith)

Date: 2020-04-27 09:33 am (UTC)
selenak: (CourtierLehndorff)
From: [personal profile] selenak
The soldiers presumably kept their mouths extremely shut around Scary Monarch, but I wonder how the tobacco parliament managed when they were all drunk and being informal and vulgar and Rococo. :P

No kidding. I mean, given the sheer quantities of what they drank, and the spirit of the age! (And btw, it's not like FW didn't have the vocabulary. See also Other Seckendorff reporting that remark when FW isn't even drunk: June 13th: Voit from Bayreuth gets an audience with the King. - "Should I congratulate or send my condolences? My daughter has to let herself be f... better.") I guess they weren't drunk enough to forget that only m/f type of sex talk is allowed?

*cough* Preuss

Him and Koser. I mean, I'm eternally grateful for all the original work they did, especially Koser, but when I summarized the Hinrichs for you, I did some quick compare and contrast to Koser's "Fritz the Crown Prince", and was reminded again of Koser, when describing the August 1731 submission, talking about with "mit welch tiefem sittlichen Ernst" - with what deep moral seriousness/sincerity - FW behaved on that occasion, and how his attitude to Fritz throughout that encounter was tough but loving. Having read Grumbkow's entire protocol, that's... not my impression. (Mind you, Koser when describing it and quoting from the Grumbkow protocol carefully leaves out the entire "here's what I'd have done to your mother and sister and Hannover if you'd have succeeded" rant, and any "nobody cares if you live or die" remarks. And he concludes that all FW ever wanted from Fritz was being loved and respected by him and for Fritz to tell him the truth, all of which happened on that occasion, so finally, happy ending to that dark chapter in our hero's life.

I think FW is such a visible strict father to people writing about Fritz (*cough* Roes) that people assume he was more representative than he was, instead of a fish out of water in his time and place and class.

Even if you look at the other spectacularly dysfunctional royal/princely father-son relationships of the era - any Hannover/Hannover combination will do (I'M not writing George/George because in one case it was George/Frederick) - they don't come with FW's dose of Calvinism and his freaking out about Fritz having hobbies and interests other than he does, which are normal to everyone else. I mean, the one father/son pairing that tops FW/Fritz in dysfunction remains Peter/Alexeji, and that's because physically torturing your son to death will top anything else, but in that combination, the religious factor was on the other foot, so to speak.

And what Roes ignores is that it does make a difference whether we're talking royals or nobles (let alone middle class people like the Goethes or the Mozarts). One big reason fueling FW's paranoia was the idea that Fritz would ruin his life's work by being a default money wasting prince. A nobleman like Hans Heinrich might have some concern about the estate, sure, but not to that degree, and especially not with Hans Herrmann not being a big gambler/debt maker. And since he wants his son to have a career and be well educated, he won't object to his son being musical simply that's actually expected of any well educated nobleman who's not a son of FW!

Lehndorff, btw, as a younger son who was the unfavorite of his mother (with his father dead) got a somewhat atypical education for a Prussian nobleman in that there was no military in it due to his handicap, but he still was expected to know his way around French literature, history, geography etc. And definitely listen to music.

Re: (more) Katte! (some Lehndorff) (more Keith)

Date: 2020-04-29 09:04 am (UTC)
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)
From: [personal profile] mildred_of_midgard
Speaking of Koser, there's now a 4-volume Fritz bio by him in the library.

Note: this is NOT a royal reader request! It wasn't going to be (I've been meaning to do this for a little while now) even *before* you said real life was going to take over for a few months.

It's there as a reference, since Koser is so good at certain things, like dates, and in case, if someday you have the time or I have the German, it turns out to be like Volz, where flipping through reveals something neat, like the dead hussar story!

Re: Leopold Mozart

Date: 2020-04-29 06:53 am (UTC)
selenak: (Émilie du Chatelet)
From: [personal profile] selenak
That does sound like an infuriating article, and yes, WA Mozart of all the people was the ultimate tiger-parented child. Though I would take exception to your entry saying Leopold forced his kids to play instruments as soon as possible. He didn't. Cause and effect are a bit reversed there. Having read Michael Lemster's "Die Mozarts: Geschichte einer Familie" in December, and having it here with me right now I'm relatively confident of my Leopold facts in this regard, and they were these: Leopold himself was the first of his family to take to music, and to have a good education. He was the son of an Augsburg bookbinder and attended the Jesuit school in Augsburg until his father died (when Leopold was 15), and he had to work for his living. The Jesuit education, which included music, left Leopold not just with the (radical for his time, where you followed the footsteps of your father, professionally) decision to become a professional musician, but also with a far better education than most Austrian middle class people had at the time (remember, it wasn't until Joseph's reforms that a) attending school was made obligatory for kids, and b) the language changed from Latin to German), a love for books (he remained an avid reader through his life) and it left him with educational principles.

Now, in Salzburg, where was we know he ended up and got a job in the Salzburg Prince Bishop's orchestra, schools for normal citizens like the one he had attended in Augsburg weren't a thing yet. Leopold taught both his children himself as a result, not just in music but also in everything else, because he wanted them both to have the best education he could give them (and he didn't have money for a house teacher). This for a daughter was highly unusual. Now, you can blame Leopold for neglecting Nannerl as a musician once she hit puberty, absolutely, but not before that, and he was very unusual for his time and class. We don't know when exactly he started; the "Notenbuch für Nannerl Mozart" was written by him when she was eight. We do know that young Wolferl was intrigued enough by all the musical goings on to get involved, to imitate, and then, famously, at age four stun Leopold by writing down a composition, changing all their lives forever. That Leopold noticed his younger kid wasn't just imitating big sister almost immediately was not somthing that would have happened with most fathers in the era, because most fathers did not spend this amount of time with their two young children. Mothers did for poorer families, and of course governesses for the richer ones. But not fathers. His response - to intensify the the music lessons and then to take them on the road, first with and then without his wife - similarly made for a very atypical childhood for the era. You simply did not spend this much amount of time with your children.

Mind you: compared with present day parents, of course Leopold was not just micromanaging but also authoritarian (and we're talking childhood and puberty, not the later clashes once Wolfgang is an adult and has his own ideas about how his career should go). But as an 18th century dad, he was very open minded. (He also was the ultimate stage dad. This was not mutually exclusive.)

Writes Lemster: (Leopold)'s idea of a family wasn't so much that of a state with a clear above and below, but of a friendship based on the principle of reason and voluntarily cooperation. His lament in letters for his wife speaks volumes: "A family has been torn apart which did not live as parents and children but as friends with each other." Leopold never intended to break his children preventively in order to prepare them for their future roles as subject or wife, as had been the educational principle of many of his contemporaries.
His thinking had not just been formed by his Jesuit education but his reading of the French and German writers of the enlightenment like Rosseau, Gottsched or the today nearly forgotten pedagogic writings by Fénelon. He put such books into the hands of his children as well and thus provided them with an educational horizon which surpassed that of most musicians of the era. For the Grand Tour through Western Europe, he chose a road through the Picardie and Cambrai where the Mozart family admires Fénelon's tomb monument.


The other side was that Leopold really did think he had a mission from God.

This mission was: God has accomplished a miracle in my son, the miracle of a talent which never existed before. I owe it to God and humanity to promote this miracle. And I owe it to God and humanity to bring this talent to its highest fruition.
This sounds like good advertisement to sceptical observers, and undoubtedly Leopold was a gifted ad man. In addition to his ability as a musical pedagogue, this was his other surpassing talent. Wolferl's musical and Leopold's pedagoic and promoting talents had to join together to create the "miracle" Mozart. But any promotion works best if the advertiser believes his own message. And Leopold did believe. For nearly twenty years, he gave all he had in the service of this message. And he gave his family who supported him - in the case of his wife till her miserable death in a foreign city she hated.


Going on tour with your musically gifted kid wasn't unprecedented - Gertrud Schmeling/Elisabeth Mara's father did this as well, remember - but for someone as naturally cautious as Leopold to risk his livelihood (as a musician for the Prince Bishop - this wasn't yet Colloredo, the one with whom an adult Wolfgang would clash, but still, the predecessor could have done the same thing and told Leopold that either he stayed at home in Salzburg or that he was fired) by taking his entire family (his wife didn't stay at home until the later journeys) on the road for years was. And yes, they got paid by the princes they played for, and got presents. (For example, on that famous occasion when they played for MT and little Wolferl prosposed to young Marie Antoinette, they got what Leopold earned in Salzburg in a year, plus the two children got discarded robes from the little archdukes and archduchesses). But as opposed to modern concert tours they had to pay all travel expenses and the rent for wherever they were staying themselves, not to mention pay the doctors for when a family member got sick. Leopold didn't earn a fortune via his kid(s), which is what modern day stage parents are (not unjustly) frequently accused of. It evened out, more or less. (For example, Wolferl got sick after that glorious appearance in Vienna. Leopold paid 50 ducats for the doctor, which was half the salary the Mozarts had received gone again.) (All in all, the first "Grand Tour" cost Leopold 20 000 Gulden. The ill fated last tour, the one Wolfgang and his mother did alone, to Paris, where Maria Anna Mozart died, still cost 700 Gulden; Leopold had to take credit in Salzburg to finanze it and was years later still paying interest. When he responds so badly to Wolfgang moving in with the Webers and suggesting to go on tour with Aloysia - the first Weber sister he fell in love with, years before Constanze -, that is one big reason why.)
Edited Date: 2020-04-29 09:59 am (UTC)

Re: Leopold Mozart

Date: 2020-05-01 05:50 am (UTC)
selenak: (Wilhelmine und Folichon)
From: [personal profile] selenak
Well, the Leopold of Amadeus wasn't invented out of the blue - it's true that he reacted badly to Wolfgang asserting his independence, that he was unfair to the Weber family in general and Constanze in particular (especially ironic since after Wolfgang's death Constanze turnedo out to be the other advertising genius in the family after Leopold), that he grew bitter about losing that intense closeness which had existed between him and his son. And, see below, that after Nannerl became 15, he was 18th century style patriarchal to his daughter (which isn't FW style patriarchal, but it's still an illustration of Virginia Woolf's Shakespare's Sister argument). But that's not all he was, and when Shaffer lets Salieri say early in the movie that as a boy, he envied Mozart such a father, this would have probably been a sentiment shared by a great many children of the time, even those not musically gifted and in need of encouragement and teaching.


I read (in a not-particularly-reliable source) that Nannerl was considered a top musician of her day before she hit puberty; is this true?


She was. Writes Lemster: In her first 15 years, so until the end of the Grand Tour through middle and Western Europe 1766, Nannerl gets the same education and treatment as her younger brother. (...) At first as equally treated as an 18th century girl could be, Nannerl has to find out after the return of the Grand Tour ( which had lasted from 1763 - 1766), that she and her mother - as if it were self evident - had to step back now. No longer is it mentioned that Nannerl should display her enormous skill as a pianist in public, though she had been able to collect a following: acquaintances of the family remember her virtuousity and ask about her. At first, the women object to having to stay at home now when the men go on tour again. For example, they want to join in 1770 on the tour to Italy, but Leopold tries to dissuade them from such wishes by badmouthing the country due to its heat and by pointing out the travel expenses. As a comforting band-aid, he'll bring back expensive presents for them.

Nannerl's rsistence soon fades, and she obeys the paternal dispositions, allows herself to be lectured and commanded. Behind this obedience, we lose more and more a sense of her personality. In the big arguments about Wolfgang's independence eight years later, she'll be, if not Leopold's partisan, at least Leopold's echo. Wolfgang's suggestion that she should leave with her unofficial fiance for Vienna as well and thus force Leopld by creating facts to move there, too, is rebuffed by her. A certain enstrangement between them gets tangible, though their correspondance remains friendly and, especially on Wolfgang's side, joking.
As joking as Nannerl's letters or that what she hastily scribles beneath the longer letters from their parents. What we have of Nannerl is thoroughly immesersed in the Mozart family style: worried, full of devotional addresses, very emotional and vulgar. Like her 1777 letter to Wolfgang, currently in Munich:

So kiss Mama's hands and you you scoundrel! and villain! I give a hearty kiss to you. And I remain Mama's obedient daughter and your sister living in hope - Marie Anne.
Miss Pimpes - their dog still lives in hope and stands and sits all half hours in front of the door and believes you two will arrive at any moment. Still, she is healthy, likes to eat, drink, sleep, shit and piss.

Why only such short letters, though? She was smart. She could coin a phrase. As far as we know, she loved her family as intensely as all the Mozarts loved each other. Was she overburdened with housework -
since in her mother's absense and after her death, she was expected to run the household -and simply did not have the time to write down all that was running through her mind? (...)

Thus Nannerl presents herself: similar to her father in her caution and care. Despite her great musical talent, she's limited for most of her life to the role of supporter of her brother's success. A life typical for the era, not much different than in the bookbinding workshop of her grandfather. She will never rebell. The affectionate Nannerl will never develop into a fighting Maria Anna, as opposed to the child Wolferl turning into an independent Wolfgang. Her father rejects a love match for her. She accepts it and later will marry for support with a successor to her maternal grandfather as head of the St. Wolfgang community. She lives with him for a few years in her mother's birth house in St. Gilgen and then as his widow returns to Salzburg.


Like I said: a real life illustration of Virgina Woolf's thesis re: the real reason for the lack of female Shakespeares (and Mozarts!) in art as of 1921. I mean, we don't know, of course, whether Nannerl could have made it as an adult pianist, had her father continued to support her in this instead of expecting her to run his household for him. But she never got the chance to find out.
Edited Date: 2020-05-01 05:53 am (UTC)

Re: Leopold Mozart

Date: 2020-05-01 05:12 pm (UTC)
selenak: (Clara Oswin Oswald by Magickira)
From: [personal profile] selenak
Also, guess what had its premiere today?

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/EW6XLJDWoAAYAEi.jpg

Re: Leopold Mozart

From: [personal profile] selenak - Date: 2020-05-03 05:37 am (UTC) - Expand

Re: (more) Katte! (some Lehndorff) (more Keith)

Date: 2020-04-26 08:28 am (UTC)
selenak: (Pumuckl)
From: [personal profile] selenak
Does he ever admit fault for anything?? (

Thinking long and hard about this, I can come up with two sort-of/maybe examples:

1) As you'll recall, FW having a go at Wilhelmine and shouting his rage to all and sunder was eventually stopped by Frau von Kamecke, SD's stewardess, who either

according Wilhelmine: told him not to do a Philip of Spain and Peter the Great with his son

or
according to whoever was Henri de Catt's source in Heinrich's camp: told him to stop terrorizing his children,

but in both versions of the story, it ends with FW calming down, telling her she was a courageous woman to speak thus to him, and that she was right. It's not quite the same as "I was wrong" or "I'm at fault", but it comes close.

2.) Getting punched by Frau von Pannewitz for attempting to grope her did not result in FW doing the usual male thing (of any period) of saying "she led me into temptation" or "she wanted me to!" but in backing off and resigning himself to celibacy since SD had stopped sleeping with him, and not doing anything against her. This, too, isn't quite the same as saying "this was my fault/I was wrong", but it's as close as he'd get, I suppose.

Re: (more) Katte! (some Lehndorff) (more Keith)

Date: 2020-04-27 02:59 am (UTC)
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)
From: [personal profile] mildred_of_midgard
You know, I've given this some thought before, and these are the only two examples I've been able to come up with.

Oh, wait...I guess he backtracked on Wolff at the end of his life, but did he admit fault? I don't know the documentary evidence well enough to say. Still, at least he went from "This guy needs to hightail it out of my kingdom upon pain of death!" to "Everyone needs to read this guy!" and trying to get him back.

Re: (more) Katte! (some Lehndorff) (more Keith)

Date: 2020-04-29 08:08 am (UTC)
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)
From: [personal profile] mildred_of_midgard
That's what Wilhelmine says!

"I know at this point in my bleak, bleak memoirs you all are in need of comic relief, and also some catharsis, so here's Dad getting punched! Back to the time I married under duress to save my brother from Dad..."

Re: (more) Katte! (some Lehndorff) (more Keith)

Date: 2020-04-27 08:06 am (UTC)
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)
From: [personal profile] mildred_of_midgard
and resigning himself to celibacy since SD had stopped sleeping with him

By the way, anyone know what the Calvinist take on marital rape and the rights of a husband is/was? Because legally, marital rape wasn't criminalized until what, the 1990s?

I mean, there's always the Lysistrata approach of "if he forces the issue, lie still like a board and make sure it's not any fun," but given how much SD hated FW, unless she was really into hate sex, I have to wonder how much she had been enthusiastically participating in the first place.

I'm just wondering if we should be even a little impressed with him for hypothetically respecting her no? I know insistence on marital rights in the face of wifely resistance varied by husband even in pre-criminalization days, but from the man who got counseled by pastors that forcing his daughter into marriage was a no-no, if he was actually going without in 1733...

Who tops, who bottoms, who masturbates, who rapes? :P

Re: (more) Katte! (some Lehndorff) (more Keith)

Date: 2020-04-27 04:52 pm (UTC)
selenak: (Wilhelmine)
From: [personal profile] selenak
I honestly have no idea about a specific 18th century Protestant/Calvinist position regarding martial rape. What I dimly recall was that refusal to have sex on the woman's part and impotence on the man's part were grounds for an annullment for 18th century Catholics, same with non-consummation in general, but *crickets* about enforced sex with one's wife if she says no.

(In the 19th century, I know at least one Protestant clergyman who actually advised a woman whose husband was a no-good drunk not above forcing her to sex to leave him, contrary to the cliché about Protestant priests, but that man was the Reverend Patrick Bronte, father of the writing siblings, and he was an original in other regards, too.)

Anyway, FW: I think while he had enough capacity for self delusion re: having sex with SD when she was non-enthusiastic through their marriage, if she explicitly said "no" post Küstrin, as we speculate she did, I do not believe he would have forced her. He could not have kidded himself then that it was anything but force, even if he or for that matter she would probably not have used the term rape, given the world into which they were born. Also, I suspect all this insisting that Fritz was to be told his mother didn't love him anymore and was disowning him was in fact projection.

Mind you, I don't think SD would have refused to have sex with him before that year, and not just because of all the children she kept giving birth to. As I recall, at one point she was afraid he'd divorce her due to the schemes of G & S, and there was much drama. Now sure, she hated him, and Queen of Prussia so wasn't what she'd dreamed off, but being divorced was the ultimate failure. (Which had happened to her mother. G1 did divorce SD the first, and still kept her prisoner.) FW telling her he wouldn't divorce her on that occasion was one of those quotes where he uses "Fieke" - "Fieke, now we've gone together thus far" etc.

But once he puts her favourite son into prison, terrifies her by saying he's dead, too? With four living sons securing her position as a wife who has done her duty? I think she would, and did, and that the fact no more babies, stillborn or otherwise, existed after Ferdinand and FW after a life time of "no whores!" preaching strays and gropes (or attempts to) a lady-in-waiting are too closely happening not to be connected.

Re: (more) Katte! (some Lehndorff) (more Keith)

Date: 2020-04-27 06:40 pm (UTC)
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)
From: [personal profile] mildred_of_midgard
(In the 19th century, I know at least one Protestant clergyman who actually advised a woman whose husband was a no-good drunk not above forcing her to sex to leave him, contrary to the cliché about Protestant priests, but that man was the Reverend Patrick Bronte, father of the writing siblings, and he was an original in other regards, too.)

Yes, he was, and that is interesting, especially given The Tenant of Wildfell Hall. As I recall, a woman leaving her husband wasn't even legal in England at the time?

Anyway, FW: I think while he had enough capacity for self delusion re: having sex with SD when she was non-enthusiastic through their marriage

Agreed, especially given attitudes toward female sexuality. A woman who's just doing her procreative duty is doing it right.

Mind you, I don't think SD would have refused to have sex with him before that year, and not just because of all the children she kept giving birth to.

Oh, I agree. I have never imagined she did, except possibly for playing ill on particular occasions, but never in general. She may not have wanted him or the sex, but she needed the marriage and the kids.

But once he puts her favourite son into prison, terrifies her by saying he's dead, too? With four living sons securing her position as a wife who has done her duty? I think she would, and did, and that the fact no more babies, stillborn or otherwise, existed after Ferdinand and FW after a life time of "no whores!" preaching strays and gropes (or attempts to) a lady-in-waiting are too closely happening not to be connected.

I agree. Your arguments about the chronology are very compelling.

Let's see, so far, the gossipy sensationalists with scholarly instincts have come up with convincing chronological arguments for:

- Fritz and Peter got caught doing *something* January 21, 1730.
- FW didn't masturbate (and Fritz did).
- SD stopped sleeping with FW in 1730 and FW was desperate by 1733.

Heee!

Oh, and Lehndorff and Heinrich had sex on various specific occasions, such as that one stag night.

Bronte excursion

Date: 2020-04-27 08:14 pm (UTC)
selenak: (Emily by Lotesse)
From: [personal profile] selenak
Yes, he was, and that is interesting, especially given The Tenant of Wildfell Hall. As I recall, a woman leaving her husband wasn't even legal in England at the time?

Not sure, but the case in question was one of Anne's inspirations for The Tenant of Wildfell Hall. The Woman asking Patrick for advice was one Mrs. Collins, wife of a curate in Keighley who was not under Patrick's supervision, but the pastor for Keighly was not helpful, and so Mrs. Collins came to Patrick instead. Writes Charlotte about Mrs. Collins: She asked Papa's advice; there was nothing, she said, but ruin before them. They owed debts which they could never pay. She expected Mr. Collins' immediate dismissal from his curacy; she knew, from bitter experience, that his vices were utterly hopeless. He treated her and her child savagely; with much more to the same effect. Papa advised her to leave him for ever, and go home, if she had a home to go to. She said this was what she had long resolved to do and that she would indeed leave him directly (...).

Mrs. Collins a few years later showed up in Haworth again and was thankfully far better off, sans husband. But just in case you need a precedent for a Victorian clergyman to advise a wife to leave her abusive husband, the Reverend Patrick Bronte is your man. He was a Tory (his hero worship of the Duke of Wellington was something all of his children inherited), but one who was simultanously full of liberal goals when it came to the poor. Of course, transforming himself from poor Irishman to respected Yorkshire Reverend via effort and brains alone already made for takes-nothing-for-granted start. He had the proverbial Irish temper, and nothing aroused it as quickly as seeing injustice. Writes Patrick, in one of the many letters he wrote to newspapers:

Consider, moreover, the inadequacy of punishment. A man will be hanged for stealing a fat sheep, though he be hungry; - he will incur no greater punishment for murdering twenty men! In the name of common sense, what is the necessary tendency of this?
Edited Date: 2020-04-27 08:14 pm (UTC)

Re: Bronte excursion

From: [personal profile] mildred_of_midgard - Date: 2020-04-29 08:10 am (UTC) - Expand

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